diff options
author | Bailey Forrest <bcf@google.com> | 2021-06-24 11:06:17 -0700 |
---|---|---|
committer | David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> | 2021-06-24 12:47:37 -0700 |
commit | c6a7ed77ee6334f3a85a0f3db74ca80101e25304 (patch) | |
tree | 1f8de65e427eec2c9ec84bf57cff2f919c20d0cd /Documentation/networking | |
parent | 478890682ff7124bf4eaa6f0af382e9d2c937f73 (diff) |
gve: Update GVE documentation to describe DQO
DQO is a new descriptor format for our next generation virtual NIC.
Signed-off-by: Bailey Forrest <bcf@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Willem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Catherine Sullivan <csully@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/networking')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/networking/device_drivers/ethernet/google/gve.rst | 53 |
1 files changed, 48 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/networking/device_drivers/ethernet/google/gve.rst b/Documentation/networking/device_drivers/ethernet/google/gve.rst index 793693cef6e3..6d73ee78f3d7 100644 --- a/Documentation/networking/device_drivers/ethernet/google/gve.rst +++ b/Documentation/networking/device_drivers/ethernet/google/gve.rst @@ -47,13 +47,24 @@ The driver interacts with the device in the following ways: - Transmit and Receive Queues - See description below +Descriptor Formats +------------------ +GVE supports two descriptor formats: GQI and DQO. These two formats have +entirely different descriptors, which will be described below. + Registers --------- -All registers are MMIO and big endian. +All registers are MMIO. The registers are used for initializing and configuring the device as well as querying device status in response to management interrupts. +Endianness +---------- +- Admin Queue messages and registers are all Big Endian. +- GQI descriptors and datapath registers are Big Endian. +- DQO descriptors and datapath registers are Little Endian. + Admin Queue (AQ) ---------------- The Admin Queue is a PAGE_SIZE memory block, treated as an array of AQ @@ -97,10 +108,10 @@ the queues associated with that interrupt. The handler for these irqs schedule the napi for that block to run and poll the queues. -Traffic Queues --------------- -gVNIC's queues are composed of a descriptor ring and a buffer and are -assigned to a notification block. +GQI Traffic Queues +------------------ +GQI queues are composed of a descriptor ring and a buffer and are assigned to a +notification block. The descriptor rings are power-of-two-sized ring buffers consisting of fixed-size descriptors. They advance their head pointer using a __be32 @@ -121,3 +132,35 @@ Receive The buffers for receive rings are put into a data ring that is the same length as the descriptor ring and the head and tail pointers advance over the rings together. + +DQO Traffic Queues +------------------ +- Every TX and RX queue is assigned a notification block. + +- TX and RX buffers queues, which send descriptors to the device, use MMIO + doorbells to notify the device of new descriptors. + +- RX and TX completion queues, which receive descriptors from the device, use a + "generation bit" to know when a descriptor was populated by the device. The + driver initializes all bits with the "current generation". The device will + populate received descriptors with the "next generation" which is inverted + from the current generation. When the ring wraps, the current/next generation + are swapped. + +- It's the driver's responsibility to ensure that the RX and TX completion + queues are not overrun. This can be accomplished by limiting the number of + descriptors posted to HW. + +- TX packets have a 16 bit completion_tag and RX buffers have a 16 bit + buffer_id. These will be returned on the TX completion and RX queues + respectively to let the driver know which packet/buffer was completed. + +Transmit +~~~~~~~~ +A packet's buffers are DMA mapped for the device to access before transmission. +After the packet was successfully transmitted, the buffers are unmapped. + +Receive +~~~~~~~ +The driver posts fixed sized buffers to HW on the RX buffer queue. The packet +received on the associated RX queue may span multiple descriptors. |