linux-stable/drivers/net/ethernet/intel/ice/ice_lib.c

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// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
/* Copyright (c) 2018, Intel Corporation. */
#include "ice.h"
#include "ice_lib.h"
#include "ice_dcb_lib.h"
/**
* ice_setup_rx_ctx - Configure a receive ring context
* @ring: The Rx ring to configure
*
* Configure the Rx descriptor ring in RLAN context.
*/
static int ice_setup_rx_ctx(struct ice_ring *ring)
{
struct ice_vsi *vsi = ring->vsi;
struct ice_hw *hw = &vsi->back->hw;
u32 rxdid = ICE_RXDID_FLEX_NIC;
struct ice_rlan_ctx rlan_ctx;
u32 regval;
u16 pf_q;
int err;
/* what is Rx queue number in global space of 2K Rx queues */
pf_q = vsi->rxq_map[ring->q_index];
/* clear the context structure first */
memset(&rlan_ctx, 0, sizeof(rlan_ctx));
rlan_ctx.base = ring->dma >> 7;
rlan_ctx.qlen = ring->count;
/* Receive Packet Data Buffer Size.
* The Packet Data Buffer Size is defined in 128 byte units.
*/
rlan_ctx.dbuf = vsi->rx_buf_len >> ICE_RLAN_CTX_DBUF_S;
/* use 32 byte descriptors */
rlan_ctx.dsize = 1;
/* Strip the Ethernet CRC bytes before the packet is posted to host
* memory.
*/
rlan_ctx.crcstrip = 1;
/* L2TSEL flag defines the reported L2 Tags in the receive descriptor */
rlan_ctx.l2tsel = 1;
rlan_ctx.dtype = ICE_RX_DTYPE_NO_SPLIT;
rlan_ctx.hsplit_0 = ICE_RLAN_RX_HSPLIT_0_NO_SPLIT;
rlan_ctx.hsplit_1 = ICE_RLAN_RX_HSPLIT_1_NO_SPLIT;
/* This controls whether VLAN is stripped from inner headers
* The VLAN in the inner L2 header is stripped to the receive
* descriptor if enabled by this flag.
*/
rlan_ctx.showiv = 0;
/* Max packet size for this queue - must not be set to a larger value
* than 5 x DBUF
*/
rlan_ctx.rxmax = min_t(u16, vsi->max_frame,
ICE_MAX_CHAINED_RX_BUFS * vsi->rx_buf_len);
/* Rx queue threshold in units of 64 */
rlan_ctx.lrxqthresh = 1;
/* Enable Flexible Descriptors in the queue context which
* allows this driver to select a specific receive descriptor format
*/
if (vsi->type != ICE_VSI_VF) {
regval = rd32(hw, QRXFLXP_CNTXT(pf_q));
regval |= (rxdid << QRXFLXP_CNTXT_RXDID_IDX_S) &
QRXFLXP_CNTXT_RXDID_IDX_M;
/* increasing context priority to pick up profile ID;
* default is 0x01; setting to 0x03 to ensure profile
* is programming if prev context is of same priority
*/
regval |= (0x03 << QRXFLXP_CNTXT_RXDID_PRIO_S) &
QRXFLXP_CNTXT_RXDID_PRIO_M;
wr32(hw, QRXFLXP_CNTXT(pf_q), regval);
}
/* Absolute queue number out of 2K needs to be passed */
err = ice_write_rxq_ctx(hw, &rlan_ctx, pf_q);
if (err) {
dev_err(&vsi->back->pdev->dev,
"Failed to set LAN Rx queue context for absolute Rx queue %d error: %d\n",
pf_q, err);
return -EIO;
}
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
return 0;
/* init queue specific tail register */
ring->tail = hw->hw_addr + QRX_TAIL(pf_q);
writel(0, ring->tail);
ice_alloc_rx_bufs(ring, ICE_DESC_UNUSED(ring));
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_setup_tx_ctx - setup a struct ice_tlan_ctx instance
* @ring: The Tx ring to configure
* @tlan_ctx: Pointer to the Tx LAN queue context structure to be initialized
* @pf_q: queue index in the PF space
*
* Configure the Tx descriptor ring in TLAN context.
*/
static void
ice_setup_tx_ctx(struct ice_ring *ring, struct ice_tlan_ctx *tlan_ctx, u16 pf_q)
{
struct ice_vsi *vsi = ring->vsi;
struct ice_hw *hw = &vsi->back->hw;
tlan_ctx->base = ring->dma >> ICE_TLAN_CTX_BASE_S;
tlan_ctx->port_num = vsi->port_info->lport;
/* Transmit Queue Length */
tlan_ctx->qlen = ring->count;
ice_set_cgd_num(tlan_ctx, ring);
/* PF number */
tlan_ctx->pf_num = hw->pf_id;
/* queue belongs to a specific VSI type
* VF / VM index should be programmed per vmvf_type setting:
* for vmvf_type = VF, it is VF number between 0-256
* for vmvf_type = VM, it is VM number between 0-767
* for PF or EMP this field should be set to zero
*/
switch (vsi->type) {
case ICE_VSI_LB:
/* fall through */
case ICE_VSI_PF:
tlan_ctx->vmvf_type = ICE_TLAN_CTX_VMVF_TYPE_PF;
break;
case ICE_VSI_VF:
/* Firmware expects vmvf_num to be absolute VF ID */
tlan_ctx->vmvf_num = hw->func_caps.vf_base_id + vsi->vf_id;
tlan_ctx->vmvf_type = ICE_TLAN_CTX_VMVF_TYPE_VF;
break;
default:
return;
}
/* make sure the context is associated with the right VSI */
tlan_ctx->src_vsi = ice_get_hw_vsi_num(hw, vsi->idx);
tlan_ctx->tso_ena = ICE_TX_LEGACY;
tlan_ctx->tso_qnum = pf_q;
/* Legacy or Advanced Host Interface:
* 0: Advanced Host Interface
* 1: Legacy Host Interface
*/
tlan_ctx->legacy_int = ICE_TX_LEGACY;
}
/**
* ice_pf_rxq_wait - Wait for a PF's Rx queue to be enabled or disabled
* @pf: the PF being configured
* @pf_q: the PF queue
* @ena: enable or disable state of the queue
*
* This routine will wait for the given Rx queue of the PF to reach the
* enabled or disabled state.
* Returns -ETIMEDOUT in case of failing to reach the requested state after
* multiple retries; else will return 0 in case of success.
*/
static int ice_pf_rxq_wait(struct ice_pf *pf, int pf_q, bool ena)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < ICE_Q_WAIT_MAX_RETRY; i++) {
if (ena == !!(rd32(&pf->hw, QRX_CTRL(pf_q)) &
QRX_CTRL_QENA_STAT_M))
return 0;
usleep_range(20, 40);
}
return -ETIMEDOUT;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_ctrl_rx_ring - Start or stop a VSI's Rx ring
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @ena: start or stop the Rx rings
* @rxq_idx: Rx queue index
*/
#ifndef CONFIG_PCI_IOV
static
#endif /* !CONFIG_PCI_IOV */
int ice_vsi_ctrl_rx_ring(struct ice_vsi *vsi, bool ena, u16 rxq_idx)
{
int pf_q = vsi->rxq_map[rxq_idx];
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_hw *hw = &pf->hw;
int ret = 0;
u32 rx_reg;
rx_reg = rd32(hw, QRX_CTRL(pf_q));
/* Skip if the queue is already in the requested state */
if (ena == !!(rx_reg & QRX_CTRL_QENA_STAT_M))
return 0;
/* turn on/off the queue */
if (ena)
rx_reg |= QRX_CTRL_QENA_REQ_M;
else
rx_reg &= ~QRX_CTRL_QENA_REQ_M;
wr32(hw, QRX_CTRL(pf_q), rx_reg);
/* wait for the change to finish */
ret = ice_pf_rxq_wait(pf, pf_q, ena);
if (ret)
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"VSI idx %d Rx ring %d %sable timeout\n",
vsi->idx, pf_q, (ena ? "en" : "dis"));
return ret;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_ctrl_rx_rings - Start or stop a VSI's Rx rings
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @ena: start or stop the Rx rings
*/
static int ice_vsi_ctrl_rx_rings(struct ice_vsi *vsi, bool ena)
{
int i, ret = 0;
for (i = 0; i < vsi->num_rxq; i++) {
ret = ice_vsi_ctrl_rx_ring(vsi, ena, i);
if (ret)
break;
}
return ret;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_alloc_arrays - Allocate queue and vector pointer arrays for the VSI
* @vsi: VSI pointer
*
* On error: returns error code (negative)
* On success: returns 0
*/
static int ice_vsi_alloc_arrays(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
/* allocate memory for both Tx and Rx ring pointers */
vsi->tx_rings = devm_kcalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->alloc_txq,
sizeof(*vsi->tx_rings), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!vsi->tx_rings)
ice: Alloc queue management bitmaps and arrays dynamically The total number of queues available on the device is divided between multiple physical functions (PF) in the firmware and provided to the driver when it gets function capabilities from the firmware. Thus each PF knows how many Tx/Rx queues it has. These queues are then doled out to different VSIs (for LAN traffic, SR-IOV VF traffic, etc.) To track usage of these queues at the PF level, the driver uses two bitmaps avail_txqs and avail_rxqs. At the VSI level (i.e. struct ice_vsi instances) the driver uses two arrays txq_map and rxq_map, to track ownership of VSIs' queues in avail_txqs and avail_rxqs respectively. The aforementioned bitmaps and arrays should be allocated dynamically, because the number of queues supported by a PF is only available once function capabilities have been queried. The current static allocation consumes way more memory than required. This patch removes the DECLARE_BITMAP for avail_txqs and avail_rxqs and instead uses bitmap_zalloc to allocate the bitmaps during init. Similarly txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated in ice_vsi_alloc_arrays. As a result ICE_MAX_TXQS and ICE_MAX_RXQS defines are no longer needed. Also as txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated and freed, some code reordering was required in ice_vsi_rebuild for correct functioning. Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-08-02 08:25:21 +00:00
return -ENOMEM;
vsi->rx_rings = devm_kcalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->alloc_rxq,
sizeof(*vsi->rx_rings), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!vsi->rx_rings)
ice: Alloc queue management bitmaps and arrays dynamically The total number of queues available on the device is divided between multiple physical functions (PF) in the firmware and provided to the driver when it gets function capabilities from the firmware. Thus each PF knows how many Tx/Rx queues it has. These queues are then doled out to different VSIs (for LAN traffic, SR-IOV VF traffic, etc.) To track usage of these queues at the PF level, the driver uses two bitmaps avail_txqs and avail_rxqs. At the VSI level (i.e. struct ice_vsi instances) the driver uses two arrays txq_map and rxq_map, to track ownership of VSIs' queues in avail_txqs and avail_rxqs respectively. The aforementioned bitmaps and arrays should be allocated dynamically, because the number of queues supported by a PF is only available once function capabilities have been queried. The current static allocation consumes way more memory than required. This patch removes the DECLARE_BITMAP for avail_txqs and avail_rxqs and instead uses bitmap_zalloc to allocate the bitmaps during init. Similarly txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated in ice_vsi_alloc_arrays. As a result ICE_MAX_TXQS and ICE_MAX_RXQS defines are no longer needed. Also as txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated and freed, some code reordering was required in ice_vsi_rebuild for correct functioning. Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-08-02 08:25:21 +00:00
goto err_rings;
vsi->txq_map = devm_kcalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->alloc_txq,
sizeof(*vsi->txq_map), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!vsi->txq_map)
goto err_txq_map;
vsi->rxq_map = devm_kcalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->alloc_rxq,
sizeof(*vsi->rxq_map), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!vsi->rxq_map)
goto err_rxq_map;
/* There is no need to allocate q_vectors for a loopback VSI. */
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_LB)
return 0;
/* allocate memory for q_vector pointers */
vsi->q_vectors = devm_kcalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->num_q_vectors,
sizeof(*vsi->q_vectors), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!vsi->q_vectors)
goto err_vectors;
return 0;
err_vectors:
ice: Alloc queue management bitmaps and arrays dynamically The total number of queues available on the device is divided between multiple physical functions (PF) in the firmware and provided to the driver when it gets function capabilities from the firmware. Thus each PF knows how many Tx/Rx queues it has. These queues are then doled out to different VSIs (for LAN traffic, SR-IOV VF traffic, etc.) To track usage of these queues at the PF level, the driver uses two bitmaps avail_txqs and avail_rxqs. At the VSI level (i.e. struct ice_vsi instances) the driver uses two arrays txq_map and rxq_map, to track ownership of VSIs' queues in avail_txqs and avail_rxqs respectively. The aforementioned bitmaps and arrays should be allocated dynamically, because the number of queues supported by a PF is only available once function capabilities have been queried. The current static allocation consumes way more memory than required. This patch removes the DECLARE_BITMAP for avail_txqs and avail_rxqs and instead uses bitmap_zalloc to allocate the bitmaps during init. Similarly txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated in ice_vsi_alloc_arrays. As a result ICE_MAX_TXQS and ICE_MAX_RXQS defines are no longer needed. Also as txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated and freed, some code reordering was required in ice_vsi_rebuild for correct functioning. Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-08-02 08:25:21 +00:00
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->rxq_map);
err_rxq_map:
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->txq_map);
err_txq_map:
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->rx_rings);
ice: Alloc queue management bitmaps and arrays dynamically The total number of queues available on the device is divided between multiple physical functions (PF) in the firmware and provided to the driver when it gets function capabilities from the firmware. Thus each PF knows how many Tx/Rx queues it has. These queues are then doled out to different VSIs (for LAN traffic, SR-IOV VF traffic, etc.) To track usage of these queues at the PF level, the driver uses two bitmaps avail_txqs and avail_rxqs. At the VSI level (i.e. struct ice_vsi instances) the driver uses two arrays txq_map and rxq_map, to track ownership of VSIs' queues in avail_txqs and avail_rxqs respectively. The aforementioned bitmaps and arrays should be allocated dynamically, because the number of queues supported by a PF is only available once function capabilities have been queried. The current static allocation consumes way more memory than required. This patch removes the DECLARE_BITMAP for avail_txqs and avail_rxqs and instead uses bitmap_zalloc to allocate the bitmaps during init. Similarly txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated in ice_vsi_alloc_arrays. As a result ICE_MAX_TXQS and ICE_MAX_RXQS defines are no longer needed. Also as txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated and freed, some code reordering was required in ice_vsi_rebuild for correct functioning. Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-08-02 08:25:21 +00:00
err_rings:
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->tx_rings);
return -ENOMEM;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_set_num_desc - Set number of descriptors for queues on this VSI
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*/
static void ice_vsi_set_num_desc(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
switch (vsi->type) {
case ICE_VSI_PF:
/* fall through */
case ICE_VSI_LB:
vsi->num_rx_desc = ICE_DFLT_NUM_RX_DESC;
vsi->num_tx_desc = ICE_DFLT_NUM_TX_DESC;
break;
default:
dev_dbg(&vsi->back->pdev->dev,
"Not setting number of Tx/Rx descriptors for VSI type %d\n",
vsi->type);
break;
}
}
/**
* ice_vsi_set_num_qs - Set number of queues, descriptors and vectors for a VSI
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @vf_id: ID of the VF being configured
*
* Return 0 on success and a negative value on error
*/
static void ice_vsi_set_num_qs(struct ice_vsi *vsi, u16 vf_id)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_vf *vf = NULL;
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
vsi->vf_id = vf_id;
switch (vsi->type) {
case ICE_VSI_PF:
vsi->alloc_txq = min_t(int, ice_get_avail_txq_count(pf),
num_online_cpus());
pf->num_lan_tx = vsi->alloc_txq;
/* only 1 Rx queue unless RSS is enabled */
if (!test_bit(ICE_FLAG_RSS_ENA, pf->flags))
vsi->alloc_rxq = 1;
else
vsi->alloc_rxq = min_t(int, ice_get_avail_rxq_count(pf),
num_online_cpus());
pf->num_lan_rx = vsi->alloc_rxq;
vsi->num_q_vectors = max_t(int, vsi->alloc_rxq, vsi->alloc_txq);
break;
case ICE_VSI_VF:
vf = &pf->vf[vsi->vf_id];
vsi->alloc_txq = vf->num_vf_qs;
vsi->alloc_rxq = vf->num_vf_qs;
/* pf->num_vf_msix includes (VF miscellaneous vector +
* data queue interrupts). Since vsi->num_q_vectors is number
* of queues vectors, subtract 1 (ICE_NONQ_VECS_VF) from the
* original vector count
*/
vsi->num_q_vectors = pf->num_vf_msix - ICE_NONQ_VECS_VF;
break;
case ICE_VSI_LB:
vsi->alloc_txq = 1;
vsi->alloc_rxq = 1;
break;
default:
dev_warn(&pf->pdev->dev, "Unknown VSI type %d\n", vsi->type);
break;
}
ice_vsi_set_num_desc(vsi);
}
/**
* ice_get_free_slot - get the next non-NULL location index in array
* @array: array to search
* @size: size of the array
* @curr: last known occupied index to be used as a search hint
*
* void * is being used to keep the functionality generic. This lets us use this
* function on any array of pointers.
*/
static int ice_get_free_slot(void *array, int size, int curr)
{
int **tmp_array = (int **)array;
int next;
if (curr < (size - 1) && !tmp_array[curr + 1]) {
next = curr + 1;
} else {
int i = 0;
while ((i < size) && (tmp_array[i]))
i++;
if (i == size)
next = ICE_NO_VSI;
else
next = i;
}
return next;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_delete - delete a VSI from the switch
* @vsi: pointer to VSI being removed
*/
void ice_vsi_delete(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctxt;
enum ice_status status;
ctxt = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*ctxt), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ctxt)
return;
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
ctxt->vf_num = vsi->vf_id;
ctxt->vsi_num = vsi->vsi_num;
memcpy(&ctxt->info, &vsi->info, sizeof(ctxt->info));
status = ice_free_vsi(&pf->hw, vsi->idx, ctxt, false, NULL);
if (status)
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev, "Failed to delete VSI %i in FW\n",
vsi->vsi_num);
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, ctxt);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_free_arrays - De-allocate queue and vector pointer arrays for the VSI
* @vsi: pointer to VSI being cleared
*/
static void ice_vsi_free_arrays(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
/* free the ring and vector containers */
if (vsi->q_vectors) {
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->q_vectors);
vsi->q_vectors = NULL;
}
if (vsi->tx_rings) {
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->tx_rings);
vsi->tx_rings = NULL;
}
if (vsi->rx_rings) {
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->rx_rings);
vsi->rx_rings = NULL;
}
ice: Alloc queue management bitmaps and arrays dynamically The total number of queues available on the device is divided between multiple physical functions (PF) in the firmware and provided to the driver when it gets function capabilities from the firmware. Thus each PF knows how many Tx/Rx queues it has. These queues are then doled out to different VSIs (for LAN traffic, SR-IOV VF traffic, etc.) To track usage of these queues at the PF level, the driver uses two bitmaps avail_txqs and avail_rxqs. At the VSI level (i.e. struct ice_vsi instances) the driver uses two arrays txq_map and rxq_map, to track ownership of VSIs' queues in avail_txqs and avail_rxqs respectively. The aforementioned bitmaps and arrays should be allocated dynamically, because the number of queues supported by a PF is only available once function capabilities have been queried. The current static allocation consumes way more memory than required. This patch removes the DECLARE_BITMAP for avail_txqs and avail_rxqs and instead uses bitmap_zalloc to allocate the bitmaps during init. Similarly txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated in ice_vsi_alloc_arrays. As a result ICE_MAX_TXQS and ICE_MAX_RXQS defines are no longer needed. Also as txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated and freed, some code reordering was required in ice_vsi_rebuild for correct functioning. Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-08-02 08:25:21 +00:00
if (vsi->txq_map) {
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->txq_map);
vsi->txq_map = NULL;
}
if (vsi->rxq_map) {
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->rxq_map);
vsi->rxq_map = NULL;
}
}
/**
* ice_vsi_clear - clean up and deallocate the provided VSI
* @vsi: pointer to VSI being cleared
*
* This deallocates the VSI's queue resources, removes it from the PF's
* VSI array if necessary, and deallocates the VSI
*
* Returns 0 on success, negative on failure
*/
int ice_vsi_clear(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = NULL;
if (!vsi)
return 0;
if (!vsi->back)
return -EINVAL;
pf = vsi->back;
if (!pf->vsi[vsi->idx] || pf->vsi[vsi->idx] != vsi) {
dev_dbg(&pf->pdev->dev, "vsi does not exist at pf->vsi[%d]\n",
vsi->idx);
return -EINVAL;
}
mutex_lock(&pf->sw_mutex);
/* updates the PF for this cleared VSI */
pf->vsi[vsi->idx] = NULL;
if (vsi->idx < pf->next_vsi)
pf->next_vsi = vsi->idx;
ice_vsi_free_arrays(vsi);
mutex_unlock(&pf->sw_mutex);
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi);
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_msix_clean_rings - MSIX mode Interrupt Handler
* @irq: interrupt number
* @data: pointer to a q_vector
*/
static irqreturn_t ice_msix_clean_rings(int __always_unused irq, void *data)
{
struct ice_q_vector *q_vector = (struct ice_q_vector *)data;
if (!q_vector->tx.ring && !q_vector->rx.ring)
return IRQ_HANDLED;
napi_schedule(&q_vector->napi);
return IRQ_HANDLED;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_alloc - Allocates the next available struct VSI in the PF
* @pf: board private structure
* @type: type of VSI
* @vf_id: ID of the VF being configured
*
* returns a pointer to a VSI on success, NULL on failure.
*/
static struct ice_vsi *
ice_vsi_alloc(struct ice_pf *pf, enum ice_vsi_type type, u16 vf_id)
{
struct ice_vsi *vsi = NULL;
/* Need to protect the allocation of the VSIs at the PF level */
mutex_lock(&pf->sw_mutex);
/* If we have already allocated our maximum number of VSIs,
* pf->next_vsi will be ICE_NO_VSI. If not, pf->next_vsi index
* is available to be populated
*/
if (pf->next_vsi == ICE_NO_VSI) {
dev_dbg(&pf->pdev->dev, "out of VSI slots!\n");
goto unlock_pf;
}
vsi = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*vsi), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!vsi)
goto unlock_pf;
vsi->type = type;
vsi->back = pf;
set_bit(__ICE_DOWN, vsi->state);
vsi->idx = pf->next_vsi;
if (type == ICE_VSI_VF)
ice_vsi_set_num_qs(vsi, vf_id);
else
ice_vsi_set_num_qs(vsi, ICE_INVAL_VFID);
switch (vsi->type) {
case ICE_VSI_PF:
if (ice_vsi_alloc_arrays(vsi))
goto err_rings;
/* Setup default MSIX irq handler for VSI */
vsi->irq_handler = ice_msix_clean_rings;
break;
case ICE_VSI_VF:
if (ice_vsi_alloc_arrays(vsi))
goto err_rings;
break;
case ICE_VSI_LB:
if (ice_vsi_alloc_arrays(vsi))
goto err_rings;
break;
default:
dev_warn(&pf->pdev->dev, "Unknown VSI type %d\n", vsi->type);
goto unlock_pf;
}
/* fill VSI slot in the PF struct */
pf->vsi[pf->next_vsi] = vsi;
/* prepare pf->next_vsi for next use */
pf->next_vsi = ice_get_free_slot(pf->vsi, pf->num_alloc_vsi,
pf->next_vsi);
goto unlock_pf;
err_rings:
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi);
vsi = NULL;
unlock_pf:
mutex_unlock(&pf->sw_mutex);
return vsi;
}
/**
* __ice_vsi_get_qs_contig - Assign a contiguous chunk of queues to VSI
* @qs_cfg: gathered variables needed for PF->VSI queues assignment
*
* Return 0 on success and -ENOMEM in case of no left space in PF queue bitmap
*/
static int __ice_vsi_get_qs_contig(struct ice_qs_cfg *qs_cfg)
{
int offset, i;
mutex_lock(qs_cfg->qs_mutex);
offset = bitmap_find_next_zero_area(qs_cfg->pf_map, qs_cfg->pf_map_size,
0, qs_cfg->q_count, 0);
if (offset >= qs_cfg->pf_map_size) {
mutex_unlock(qs_cfg->qs_mutex);
return -ENOMEM;
}
bitmap_set(qs_cfg->pf_map, offset, qs_cfg->q_count);
for (i = 0; i < qs_cfg->q_count; i++)
qs_cfg->vsi_map[i + qs_cfg->vsi_map_offset] = i + offset;
mutex_unlock(qs_cfg->qs_mutex);
return 0;
}
/**
* __ice_vsi_get_qs_sc - Assign a scattered queues from PF to VSI
* @qs_cfg: gathered variables needed for pf->vsi queues assignment
*
* Return 0 on success and -ENOMEM in case of no left space in PF queue bitmap
*/
static int __ice_vsi_get_qs_sc(struct ice_qs_cfg *qs_cfg)
{
int i, index = 0;
mutex_lock(qs_cfg->qs_mutex);
for (i = 0; i < qs_cfg->q_count; i++) {
index = find_next_zero_bit(qs_cfg->pf_map,
qs_cfg->pf_map_size, index);
if (index >= qs_cfg->pf_map_size)
goto err_scatter;
set_bit(index, qs_cfg->pf_map);
qs_cfg->vsi_map[i + qs_cfg->vsi_map_offset] = index;
}
mutex_unlock(qs_cfg->qs_mutex);
return 0;
err_scatter:
for (index = 0; index < i; index++) {
clear_bit(qs_cfg->vsi_map[index], qs_cfg->pf_map);
qs_cfg->vsi_map[index + qs_cfg->vsi_map_offset] = 0;
}
mutex_unlock(qs_cfg->qs_mutex);
return -ENOMEM;
}
/**
* __ice_vsi_get_qs - helper function for assigning queues from PF to VSI
* @qs_cfg: gathered variables needed for pf->vsi queues assignment
*
* This function first tries to find contiguous space. If it is not successful,
* it tries with the scatter approach.
*
* Return 0 on success and -ENOMEM in case of no left space in PF queue bitmap
*/
static int __ice_vsi_get_qs(struct ice_qs_cfg *qs_cfg)
{
int ret = 0;
ret = __ice_vsi_get_qs_contig(qs_cfg);
if (ret) {
/* contig failed, so try with scatter approach */
qs_cfg->mapping_mode = ICE_VSI_MAP_SCATTER;
qs_cfg->q_count = min_t(u16, qs_cfg->q_count,
qs_cfg->scatter_count);
ret = __ice_vsi_get_qs_sc(qs_cfg);
}
return ret;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_get_qs - Assign queues from PF to VSI
* @vsi: the VSI to assign queues to
*
* Returns 0 on success and a negative value on error
*/
static int ice_vsi_get_qs(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_qs_cfg tx_qs_cfg = {
.qs_mutex = &pf->avail_q_mutex,
.pf_map = pf->avail_txqs,
ice: Alloc queue management bitmaps and arrays dynamically The total number of queues available on the device is divided between multiple physical functions (PF) in the firmware and provided to the driver when it gets function capabilities from the firmware. Thus each PF knows how many Tx/Rx queues it has. These queues are then doled out to different VSIs (for LAN traffic, SR-IOV VF traffic, etc.) To track usage of these queues at the PF level, the driver uses two bitmaps avail_txqs and avail_rxqs. At the VSI level (i.e. struct ice_vsi instances) the driver uses two arrays txq_map and rxq_map, to track ownership of VSIs' queues in avail_txqs and avail_rxqs respectively. The aforementioned bitmaps and arrays should be allocated dynamically, because the number of queues supported by a PF is only available once function capabilities have been queried. The current static allocation consumes way more memory than required. This patch removes the DECLARE_BITMAP for avail_txqs and avail_rxqs and instead uses bitmap_zalloc to allocate the bitmaps during init. Similarly txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated in ice_vsi_alloc_arrays. As a result ICE_MAX_TXQS and ICE_MAX_RXQS defines are no longer needed. Also as txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated and freed, some code reordering was required in ice_vsi_rebuild for correct functioning. Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-08-02 08:25:21 +00:00
.pf_map_size = pf->max_pf_txqs,
.q_count = vsi->alloc_txq,
.scatter_count = ICE_MAX_SCATTER_TXQS,
.vsi_map = vsi->txq_map,
.vsi_map_offset = 0,
.mapping_mode = vsi->tx_mapping_mode
};
struct ice_qs_cfg rx_qs_cfg = {
.qs_mutex = &pf->avail_q_mutex,
.pf_map = pf->avail_rxqs,
ice: Alloc queue management bitmaps and arrays dynamically The total number of queues available on the device is divided between multiple physical functions (PF) in the firmware and provided to the driver when it gets function capabilities from the firmware. Thus each PF knows how many Tx/Rx queues it has. These queues are then doled out to different VSIs (for LAN traffic, SR-IOV VF traffic, etc.) To track usage of these queues at the PF level, the driver uses two bitmaps avail_txqs and avail_rxqs. At the VSI level (i.e. struct ice_vsi instances) the driver uses two arrays txq_map and rxq_map, to track ownership of VSIs' queues in avail_txqs and avail_rxqs respectively. The aforementioned bitmaps and arrays should be allocated dynamically, because the number of queues supported by a PF is only available once function capabilities have been queried. The current static allocation consumes way more memory than required. This patch removes the DECLARE_BITMAP for avail_txqs and avail_rxqs and instead uses bitmap_zalloc to allocate the bitmaps during init. Similarly txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated in ice_vsi_alloc_arrays. As a result ICE_MAX_TXQS and ICE_MAX_RXQS defines are no longer needed. Also as txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated and freed, some code reordering was required in ice_vsi_rebuild for correct functioning. Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-08-02 08:25:21 +00:00
.pf_map_size = pf->max_pf_rxqs,
.q_count = vsi->alloc_rxq,
.scatter_count = ICE_MAX_SCATTER_RXQS,
.vsi_map = vsi->rxq_map,
.vsi_map_offset = 0,
.mapping_mode = vsi->rx_mapping_mode
};
int ret = 0;
vsi->tx_mapping_mode = ICE_VSI_MAP_CONTIG;
vsi->rx_mapping_mode = ICE_VSI_MAP_CONTIG;
ret = __ice_vsi_get_qs(&tx_qs_cfg);
if (!ret)
ret = __ice_vsi_get_qs(&rx_qs_cfg);
return ret;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_put_qs - Release queues from VSI to PF
* @vsi: the VSI that is going to release queues
*/
void ice_vsi_put_qs(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
int i;
mutex_lock(&pf->avail_q_mutex);
for (i = 0; i < vsi->alloc_txq; i++) {
clear_bit(vsi->txq_map[i], pf->avail_txqs);
vsi->txq_map[i] = ICE_INVAL_Q_INDEX;
}
for (i = 0; i < vsi->alloc_rxq; i++) {
clear_bit(vsi->rxq_map[i], pf->avail_rxqs);
vsi->rxq_map[i] = ICE_INVAL_Q_INDEX;
}
mutex_unlock(&pf->avail_q_mutex);
}
/**
* ice_is_safe_mode
* @pf: pointer to the PF struct
*
* returns true if driver is in safe mode, false otherwise
*/
bool ice_is_safe_mode(struct ice_pf *pf)
{
return !test_bit(ICE_FLAG_ADV_FEATURES, pf->flags);
}
/**
* ice_rss_clean - Delete RSS related VSI structures that hold user inputs
* @vsi: the VSI being removed
*/
static void ice_rss_clean(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf;
pf = vsi->back;
if (vsi->rss_hkey_user)
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->rss_hkey_user);
if (vsi->rss_lut_user)
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->rss_lut_user);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_set_rss_params - Setup RSS capabilities per VSI type
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*/
static void ice_vsi_set_rss_params(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_hw_common_caps *cap;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
if (!test_bit(ICE_FLAG_RSS_ENA, pf->flags)) {
vsi->rss_size = 1;
return;
}
cap = &pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap;
switch (vsi->type) {
case ICE_VSI_PF:
/* PF VSI will inherit RSS instance of PF */
vsi->rss_table_size = cap->rss_table_size;
vsi->rss_size = min_t(int, num_online_cpus(),
BIT(cap->rss_table_entry_width));
vsi->rss_lut_type = ICE_AQC_GSET_RSS_LUT_TABLE_TYPE_PF;
break;
case ICE_VSI_VF:
/* VF VSI will gets a small RSS table
* For VSI_LUT, LUT size should be set to 64 bytes
*/
vsi->rss_table_size = ICE_VSIQF_HLUT_ARRAY_SIZE;
vsi->rss_size = min_t(int, num_online_cpus(),
BIT(cap->rss_table_entry_width));
vsi->rss_lut_type = ICE_AQC_GSET_RSS_LUT_TABLE_TYPE_VSI;
break;
case ICE_VSI_LB:
break;
default:
dev_warn(&pf->pdev->dev, "Unknown VSI type %d\n",
vsi->type);
break;
}
}
/**
* ice_set_dflt_vsi_ctx - Set default VSI context before adding a VSI
* @ctxt: the VSI context being set
*
* This initializes a default VSI context for all sections except the Queues.
*/
static void ice_set_dflt_vsi_ctx(struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctxt)
{
u32 table = 0;
memset(&ctxt->info, 0, sizeof(ctxt->info));
/* VSI's should be allocated from shared pool */
ctxt->alloc_from_pool = true;
/* Src pruning enabled by default */
ctxt->info.sw_flags = ICE_AQ_VSI_SW_FLAG_SRC_PRUNE;
/* Traffic from VSI can be sent to LAN */
ctxt->info.sw_flags2 = ICE_AQ_VSI_SW_FLAG_LAN_ENA;
/* By default bits 3 and 4 in vlan_flags are 0's which results in legacy
* behavior (show VLAN, DEI, and UP) in descriptor. Also, allow all
* packets untagged/tagged.
*/
ctxt->info.vlan_flags = ((ICE_AQ_VSI_VLAN_MODE_ALL &
ICE_AQ_VSI_VLAN_MODE_M) >>
ICE_AQ_VSI_VLAN_MODE_S);
/* Have 1:1 UP mapping for both ingress/egress tables */
table |= ICE_UP_TABLE_TRANSLATE(0, 0);
table |= ICE_UP_TABLE_TRANSLATE(1, 1);
table |= ICE_UP_TABLE_TRANSLATE(2, 2);
table |= ICE_UP_TABLE_TRANSLATE(3, 3);
table |= ICE_UP_TABLE_TRANSLATE(4, 4);
table |= ICE_UP_TABLE_TRANSLATE(5, 5);
table |= ICE_UP_TABLE_TRANSLATE(6, 6);
table |= ICE_UP_TABLE_TRANSLATE(7, 7);
ctxt->info.ingress_table = cpu_to_le32(table);
ctxt->info.egress_table = cpu_to_le32(table);
/* Have 1:1 UP mapping for outer to inner UP table */
ctxt->info.outer_up_table = cpu_to_le32(table);
/* No Outer tag support outer_tag_flags remains to zero */
}
/**
* ice_vsi_setup_q_map - Setup a VSI queue map
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @ctxt: VSI context structure
*/
static void ice_vsi_setup_q_map(struct ice_vsi *vsi, struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctxt)
{
u16 offset = 0, qmap = 0, tx_count = 0;
u16 qcount_tx = vsi->alloc_txq;
u16 qcount_rx = vsi->alloc_rxq;
u16 tx_numq_tc, rx_numq_tc;
u16 pow = 0, max_rss = 0;
bool ena_tc0 = false;
u8 netdev_tc = 0;
int i;
/* at least TC0 should be enabled by default */
if (vsi->tc_cfg.numtc) {
if (!(vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc & BIT(0)))
ena_tc0 = true;
} else {
ena_tc0 = true;
}
if (ena_tc0) {
vsi->tc_cfg.numtc++;
vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc |= 1;
}
rx_numq_tc = qcount_rx / vsi->tc_cfg.numtc;
if (!rx_numq_tc)
rx_numq_tc = 1;
tx_numq_tc = qcount_tx / vsi->tc_cfg.numtc;
if (!tx_numq_tc)
tx_numq_tc = 1;
/* TC mapping is a function of the number of Rx queues assigned to the
* VSI for each traffic class and the offset of these queues.
* The first 10 bits are for queue offset for TC0, next 4 bits for no:of
* queues allocated to TC0. No:of queues is a power-of-2.
*
* If TC is not enabled, the queue offset is set to 0, and allocate one
* queue, this way, traffic for the given TC will be sent to the default
* queue.
*
* Setup number and offset of Rx queues for all TCs for the VSI
*/
qcount_rx = rx_numq_tc;
/* qcount will change if RSS is enabled */
if (test_bit(ICE_FLAG_RSS_ENA, vsi->back->flags)) {
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_PF || vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF) {
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_PF)
max_rss = ICE_MAX_LG_RSS_QS;
else
max_rss = ICE_MAX_SMALL_RSS_QS;
qcount_rx = min_t(int, rx_numq_tc, max_rss);
qcount_rx = min_t(int, qcount_rx, vsi->rss_size);
}
}
/* find the (rounded up) power-of-2 of qcount */
pow = order_base_2(qcount_rx);
ice_for_each_traffic_class(i) {
if (!(vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc & BIT(i))) {
/* TC is not enabled */
vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[i].qoffset = 0;
vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[i].qcount_rx = 1;
vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[i].qcount_tx = 1;
vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[i].netdev_tc = 0;
ctxt->info.tc_mapping[i] = 0;
continue;
}
/* TC is enabled */
vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[i].qoffset = offset;
vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[i].qcount_rx = qcount_rx;
vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[i].qcount_tx = tx_numq_tc;
vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[i].netdev_tc = netdev_tc++;
qmap = ((offset << ICE_AQ_VSI_TC_Q_OFFSET_S) &
ICE_AQ_VSI_TC_Q_OFFSET_M) |
((pow << ICE_AQ_VSI_TC_Q_NUM_S) &
ICE_AQ_VSI_TC_Q_NUM_M);
offset += qcount_rx;
tx_count += tx_numq_tc;
ctxt->info.tc_mapping[i] = cpu_to_le16(qmap);
}
/* if offset is non-zero, means it is calculated correctly based on
* enabled TCs for a given VSI otherwise qcount_rx will always
* be correct and non-zero because it is based off - VSI's
* allocated Rx queues which is at least 1 (hence qcount_tx will be
* at least 1)
*/
if (offset)
vsi->num_rxq = offset;
else
vsi->num_rxq = qcount_rx;
vsi->num_txq = tx_count;
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF && vsi->num_txq != vsi->num_rxq) {
dev_dbg(&vsi->back->pdev->dev, "VF VSI should have same number of Tx and Rx queues. Hence making them equal\n");
/* since there is a chance that num_rxq could have been changed
* in the above for loop, make num_txq equal to num_rxq.
*/
vsi->num_txq = vsi->num_rxq;
}
/* Rx queue mapping */
ctxt->info.mapping_flags |= cpu_to_le16(ICE_AQ_VSI_Q_MAP_CONTIG);
/* q_mapping buffer holds the info for the first queue allocated for
* this VSI in the PF space and also the number of queues associated
* with this VSI.
*/
ctxt->info.q_mapping[0] = cpu_to_le16(vsi->rxq_map[0]);
ctxt->info.q_mapping[1] = cpu_to_le16(vsi->num_rxq);
}
/**
* ice_set_rss_vsi_ctx - Set RSS VSI context before adding a VSI
* @ctxt: the VSI context being set
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*/
static void ice_set_rss_vsi_ctx(struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctxt, struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
u8 lut_type, hash_type;
struct ice_pf *pf;
pf = vsi->back;
switch (vsi->type) {
case ICE_VSI_PF:
/* PF VSI will inherit RSS instance of PF */
lut_type = ICE_AQ_VSI_Q_OPT_RSS_LUT_PF;
hash_type = ICE_AQ_VSI_Q_OPT_RSS_TPLZ;
break;
case ICE_VSI_VF:
/* VF VSI will gets a small RSS table which is a VSI LUT type */
lut_type = ICE_AQ_VSI_Q_OPT_RSS_LUT_VSI;
hash_type = ICE_AQ_VSI_Q_OPT_RSS_TPLZ;
break;
case ICE_VSI_LB:
dev_dbg(&pf->pdev->dev, "Unsupported VSI type %d\n", vsi->type);
return;
default:
dev_warn(&pf->pdev->dev, "Unknown VSI type %d\n", vsi->type);
return;
}
ctxt->info.q_opt_rss = ((lut_type << ICE_AQ_VSI_Q_OPT_RSS_LUT_S) &
ICE_AQ_VSI_Q_OPT_RSS_LUT_M) |
((hash_type << ICE_AQ_VSI_Q_OPT_RSS_HASH_S) &
ICE_AQ_VSI_Q_OPT_RSS_HASH_M);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_init - Create and initialize a VSI
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*
* This initializes a VSI context depending on the VSI type to be added and
* passes it down to the add_vsi aq command to create a new VSI.
*/
static int ice_vsi_init(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_hw *hw = &pf->hw;
struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctxt;
int ret = 0;
ctxt = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*ctxt), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ctxt)
return -ENOMEM;
ctxt->info = vsi->info;
switch (vsi->type) {
case ICE_VSI_LB:
/* fall through */
case ICE_VSI_PF:
ctxt->flags = ICE_AQ_VSI_TYPE_PF;
break;
case ICE_VSI_VF:
ctxt->flags = ICE_AQ_VSI_TYPE_VF;
/* VF number here is the absolute VF number (0-255) */
ctxt->vf_num = vsi->vf_id + hw->func_caps.vf_base_id;
break;
default:
return -ENODEV;
}
ice_set_dflt_vsi_ctx(ctxt);
/* if the switch is in VEB mode, allow VSI loopback */
if (vsi->vsw->bridge_mode == BRIDGE_MODE_VEB)
ctxt->info.sw_flags |= ICE_AQ_VSI_SW_FLAG_ALLOW_LB;
/* Set LUT type and HASH type if RSS is enabled */
if (test_bit(ICE_FLAG_RSS_ENA, pf->flags))
ice_set_rss_vsi_ctx(ctxt, vsi);
ctxt->info.sw_id = vsi->port_info->sw_id;
ice_vsi_setup_q_map(vsi, ctxt);
/* Enable MAC Antispoof with new VSI being initialized or updated */
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF && pf->vf[vsi->vf_id].spoofchk) {
ctxt->info.valid_sections |=
cpu_to_le16(ICE_AQ_VSI_PROP_SECURITY_VALID);
ctxt->info.sec_flags |=
ICE_AQ_VSI_SEC_FLAG_ENA_MAC_ANTI_SPOOF;
}
/* Allow control frames out of main VSI */
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_PF) {
ctxt->info.sec_flags |= ICE_AQ_VSI_SEC_FLAG_ALLOW_DEST_OVRD;
ctxt->info.valid_sections |=
cpu_to_le16(ICE_AQ_VSI_PROP_SECURITY_VALID);
}
ret = ice_add_vsi(hw, vsi->idx, ctxt, NULL);
if (ret) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"Add VSI failed, err %d\n", ret);
return -EIO;
}
/* keep context for update VSI operations */
vsi->info = ctxt->info;
/* record VSI number returned */
vsi->vsi_num = ctxt->vsi_num;
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, ctxt);
return ret;
}
/**
* ice_free_q_vector - Free memory allocated for a specific interrupt vector
* @vsi: VSI having the memory freed
* @v_idx: index of the vector to be freed
*/
static void ice_free_q_vector(struct ice_vsi *vsi, int v_idx)
{
struct ice_q_vector *q_vector;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_ring *ring;
if (!vsi->q_vectors[v_idx]) {
dev_dbg(&pf->pdev->dev, "Queue vector at index %d not found\n",
v_idx);
return;
}
q_vector = vsi->q_vectors[v_idx];
ice_for_each_ring(ring, q_vector->tx)
ring->q_vector = NULL;
ice_for_each_ring(ring, q_vector->rx)
ring->q_vector = NULL;
/* only VSI with an associated netdev is set up with NAPI */
if (vsi->netdev)
netif_napi_del(&q_vector->napi);
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, q_vector);
vsi->q_vectors[v_idx] = NULL;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_free_q_vectors - Free memory allocated for interrupt vectors
* @vsi: the VSI having memory freed
*/
void ice_vsi_free_q_vectors(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
int v_idx;
ice_for_each_q_vector(vsi, v_idx)
ice_free_q_vector(vsi, v_idx);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_alloc_q_vector - Allocate memory for a single interrupt vector
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @v_idx: index of the vector in the VSI struct
*
* We allocate one q_vector. If allocation fails we return -ENOMEM.
*/
static int ice_vsi_alloc_q_vector(struct ice_vsi *vsi, int v_idx)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_q_vector *q_vector;
/* allocate q_vector */
q_vector = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*q_vector), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!q_vector)
return -ENOMEM;
q_vector->vsi = vsi;
q_vector->v_idx = v_idx;
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
goto out;
/* only set affinity_mask if the CPU is online */
if (cpu_online(v_idx))
cpumask_set_cpu(v_idx, &q_vector->affinity_mask);
/* This will not be called in the driver load path because the netdev
* will not be created yet. All other cases with register the NAPI
* handler here (i.e. resume, reset/rebuild, etc.)
*/
if (vsi->netdev)
netif_napi_add(vsi->netdev, &q_vector->napi, ice_napi_poll,
NAPI_POLL_WEIGHT);
out:
/* tie q_vector and VSI together */
vsi->q_vectors[v_idx] = q_vector;
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_alloc_q_vectors - Allocate memory for interrupt vectors
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*
* We allocate one q_vector per queue interrupt. If allocation fails we
* return -ENOMEM.
*/
static int ice_vsi_alloc_q_vectors(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
int v_idx = 0, num_q_vectors;
int err;
if (vsi->q_vectors[0]) {
dev_dbg(&pf->pdev->dev, "VSI %d has existing q_vectors\n",
vsi->vsi_num);
return -EEXIST;
}
num_q_vectors = vsi->num_q_vectors;
for (v_idx = 0; v_idx < num_q_vectors; v_idx++) {
err = ice_vsi_alloc_q_vector(vsi, v_idx);
if (err)
goto err_out;
}
return 0;
err_out:
while (v_idx--)
ice_free_q_vector(vsi, v_idx);
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"Failed to allocate %d q_vector for VSI %d, ret=%d\n",
vsi->num_q_vectors, vsi->vsi_num, err);
vsi->num_q_vectors = 0;
return err;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_setup_vector_base - Set up the base vector for the given VSI
* @vsi: ptr to the VSI
*
* This should only be called after ice_vsi_alloc() which allocates the
* corresponding SW VSI structure and initializes num_queue_pairs for the
* newly allocated VSI.
*
* Returns 0 on success or negative on failure
*/
static int ice_vsi_setup_vector_base(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
u16 num_q_vectors;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
/* SRIOV doesn't grab irq_tracker entries for each VSI */
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
return 0;
if (vsi->base_vector) {
dev_dbg(&pf->pdev->dev, "VSI %d has non-zero base vector %d\n",
vsi->vsi_num, vsi->base_vector);
return -EEXIST;
}
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
num_q_vectors = vsi->num_q_vectors;
/* reserve slots from OS requested IRQs */
vsi->base_vector = ice_get_res(pf, pf->irq_tracker, num_q_vectors,
vsi->idx);
if (vsi->base_vector < 0) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
"Failed to get tracking for %d vectors for VSI %d, err=%d\n",
num_q_vectors, vsi->vsi_num, vsi->base_vector);
return -ENOENT;
}
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
pf->num_avail_sw_msix -= num_q_vectors;
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_clear_rings - Deallocates the Tx and Rx rings for VSI
* @vsi: the VSI having rings deallocated
*/
static void ice_vsi_clear_rings(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
int i;
if (vsi->tx_rings) {
for (i = 0; i < vsi->alloc_txq; i++) {
if (vsi->tx_rings[i]) {
kfree_rcu(vsi->tx_rings[i], rcu);
vsi->tx_rings[i] = NULL;
}
}
}
if (vsi->rx_rings) {
for (i = 0; i < vsi->alloc_rxq; i++) {
if (vsi->rx_rings[i]) {
kfree_rcu(vsi->rx_rings[i], rcu);
vsi->rx_rings[i] = NULL;
}
}
}
}
/**
* ice_vsi_alloc_rings - Allocates Tx and Rx rings for the VSI
* @vsi: VSI which is having rings allocated
*/
static int ice_vsi_alloc_rings(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
int i;
/* Allocate Tx rings */
for (i = 0; i < vsi->alloc_txq; i++) {
struct ice_ring *ring;
/* allocate with kzalloc(), free with kfree_rcu() */
ring = kzalloc(sizeof(*ring), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ring)
goto err_out;
ring->q_index = i;
ring->reg_idx = vsi->txq_map[i];
ring->ring_active = false;
ring->vsi = vsi;
ring->dev = &pf->pdev->dev;
ring->count = vsi->num_tx_desc;
vsi->tx_rings[i] = ring;
}
/* Allocate Rx rings */
for (i = 0; i < vsi->alloc_rxq; i++) {
struct ice_ring *ring;
/* allocate with kzalloc(), free with kfree_rcu() */
ring = kzalloc(sizeof(*ring), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ring)
goto err_out;
ring->q_index = i;
ring->reg_idx = vsi->rxq_map[i];
ring->ring_active = false;
ring->vsi = vsi;
ring->netdev = vsi->netdev;
ring->dev = &pf->pdev->dev;
ring->count = vsi->num_rx_desc;
vsi->rx_rings[i] = ring;
}
return 0;
err_out:
ice_vsi_clear_rings(vsi);
return -ENOMEM;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_map_rings_to_vectors - Map VSI rings to interrupt vectors
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*
* This function maps descriptor rings to the queue-specific vectors allotted
* through the MSI-X enabling code. On a constrained vector budget, we map Tx
* and Rx rings to the vector as "efficiently" as possible.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_DCB
void ice_vsi_map_rings_to_vectors(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
#else
static void ice_vsi_map_rings_to_vectors(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
#endif /* CONFIG_DCB */
{
int q_vectors = vsi->num_q_vectors;
int tx_rings_rem, rx_rings_rem;
int v_id;
/* initially assigning remaining rings count to VSIs num queue value */
tx_rings_rem = vsi->num_txq;
rx_rings_rem = vsi->num_rxq;
for (v_id = 0; v_id < q_vectors; v_id++) {
struct ice_q_vector *q_vector = vsi->q_vectors[v_id];
int tx_rings_per_v, rx_rings_per_v, q_id, q_base;
/* Tx rings mapping to vector */
tx_rings_per_v = DIV_ROUND_UP(tx_rings_rem, q_vectors - v_id);
q_vector->num_ring_tx = tx_rings_per_v;
q_vector->tx.ring = NULL;
q_vector->tx.itr_idx = ICE_TX_ITR;
q_base = vsi->num_txq - tx_rings_rem;
for (q_id = q_base; q_id < (q_base + tx_rings_per_v); q_id++) {
struct ice_ring *tx_ring = vsi->tx_rings[q_id];
tx_ring->q_vector = q_vector;
tx_ring->next = q_vector->tx.ring;
q_vector->tx.ring = tx_ring;
}
tx_rings_rem -= tx_rings_per_v;
/* Rx rings mapping to vector */
rx_rings_per_v = DIV_ROUND_UP(rx_rings_rem, q_vectors - v_id);
q_vector->num_ring_rx = rx_rings_per_v;
q_vector->rx.ring = NULL;
q_vector->rx.itr_idx = ICE_RX_ITR;
q_base = vsi->num_rxq - rx_rings_rem;
for (q_id = q_base; q_id < (q_base + rx_rings_per_v); q_id++) {
struct ice_ring *rx_ring = vsi->rx_rings[q_id];
rx_ring->q_vector = q_vector;
rx_ring->next = q_vector->rx.ring;
q_vector->rx.ring = rx_ring;
}
rx_rings_rem -= rx_rings_per_v;
}
}
/**
* ice_vsi_manage_rss_lut - disable/enable RSS
* @vsi: the VSI being changed
* @ena: boolean value indicating if this is an enable or disable request
*
* In the event of disable request for RSS, this function will zero out RSS
* LUT, while in the event of enable request for RSS, it will reconfigure RSS
* LUT.
*/
int ice_vsi_manage_rss_lut(struct ice_vsi *vsi, bool ena)
{
int err = 0;
u8 *lut;
lut = devm_kzalloc(&vsi->back->pdev->dev, vsi->rss_table_size,
GFP_KERNEL);
if (!lut)
return -ENOMEM;
if (ena) {
if (vsi->rss_lut_user)
memcpy(lut, vsi->rss_lut_user, vsi->rss_table_size);
else
ice_fill_rss_lut(lut, vsi->rss_table_size,
vsi->rss_size);
}
err = ice_set_rss(vsi, NULL, lut, vsi->rss_table_size);
devm_kfree(&vsi->back->pdev->dev, lut);
return err;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_cfg_rss_lut_key - Configure RSS params for a VSI
* @vsi: VSI to be configured
*/
static int ice_vsi_cfg_rss_lut_key(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_aqc_get_set_rss_keys *key;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
enum ice_status status;
int err = 0;
u8 *lut;
vsi->rss_size = min_t(int, vsi->rss_size, vsi->num_rxq);
lut = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, vsi->rss_table_size, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!lut)
return -ENOMEM;
if (vsi->rss_lut_user)
memcpy(lut, vsi->rss_lut_user, vsi->rss_table_size);
else
ice_fill_rss_lut(lut, vsi->rss_table_size, vsi->rss_size);
status = ice_aq_set_rss_lut(&pf->hw, vsi->idx, vsi->rss_lut_type, lut,
vsi->rss_table_size);
if (status) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"set_rss_lut failed, error %d\n", status);
err = -EIO;
goto ice_vsi_cfg_rss_exit;
}
key = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*key), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!key) {
err = -ENOMEM;
goto ice_vsi_cfg_rss_exit;
}
if (vsi->rss_hkey_user)
memcpy(key,
(struct ice_aqc_get_set_rss_keys *)vsi->rss_hkey_user,
ICE_GET_SET_RSS_KEY_EXTEND_KEY_SIZE);
else
netdev_rss_key_fill((void *)key,
ICE_GET_SET_RSS_KEY_EXTEND_KEY_SIZE);
status = ice_aq_set_rss_key(&pf->hw, vsi->idx, key);
if (status) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev, "set_rss_key failed, error %d\n",
status);
err = -EIO;
}
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, key);
ice_vsi_cfg_rss_exit:
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, lut);
return err;
}
/**
* ice_add_mac_to_list - Add a MAC address filter entry to the list
* @vsi: the VSI to be forwarded to
* @add_list: pointer to the list which contains MAC filter entries
* @macaddr: the MAC address to be added.
*
* Adds MAC address filter entry to the temp list
*
* Returns 0 on success or ENOMEM on failure.
*/
int ice_add_mac_to_list(struct ice_vsi *vsi, struct list_head *add_list,
const u8 *macaddr)
{
struct ice_fltr_list_entry *tmp;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
tmp = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*tmp), GFP_ATOMIC);
if (!tmp)
return -ENOMEM;
tmp->fltr_info.flag = ICE_FLTR_TX;
tmp->fltr_info.src_id = ICE_SRC_ID_VSI;
tmp->fltr_info.lkup_type = ICE_SW_LKUP_MAC;
tmp->fltr_info.fltr_act = ICE_FWD_TO_VSI;
tmp->fltr_info.vsi_handle = vsi->idx;
ether_addr_copy(tmp->fltr_info.l_data.mac.mac_addr, macaddr);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&tmp->list_entry);
list_add(&tmp->list_entry, add_list);
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_update_eth_stats - Update VSI-specific ethernet statistics counters
* @vsi: the VSI to be updated
*/
void ice_update_eth_stats(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_eth_stats *prev_es, *cur_es;
struct ice_hw *hw = &vsi->back->hw;
u16 vsi_num = vsi->vsi_num; /* HW absolute index of a VSI */
prev_es = &vsi->eth_stats_prev;
cur_es = &vsi->eth_stats;
ice_stat_update40(hw, GLV_GORCL(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->rx_bytes, &cur_es->rx_bytes);
ice_stat_update40(hw, GLV_UPRCL(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->rx_unicast, &cur_es->rx_unicast);
ice_stat_update40(hw, GLV_MPRCL(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->rx_multicast, &cur_es->rx_multicast);
ice_stat_update40(hw, GLV_BPRCL(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->rx_broadcast, &cur_es->rx_broadcast);
ice_stat_update32(hw, GLV_RDPC(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->rx_discards, &cur_es->rx_discards);
ice_stat_update40(hw, GLV_GOTCL(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->tx_bytes, &cur_es->tx_bytes);
ice_stat_update40(hw, GLV_UPTCL(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->tx_unicast, &cur_es->tx_unicast);
ice_stat_update40(hw, GLV_MPTCL(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->tx_multicast, &cur_es->tx_multicast);
ice_stat_update40(hw, GLV_BPTCL(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->tx_broadcast, &cur_es->tx_broadcast);
ice_stat_update32(hw, GLV_TEPC(vsi_num), vsi->stat_offsets_loaded,
&prev_es->tx_errors, &cur_es->tx_errors);
vsi->stat_offsets_loaded = true;
}
/**
* ice_free_fltr_list - free filter lists helper
* @dev: pointer to the device struct
* @h: pointer to the list head to be freed
*
* Helper function to free filter lists previously created using
* ice_add_mac_to_list
*/
void ice_free_fltr_list(struct device *dev, struct list_head *h)
{
struct ice_fltr_list_entry *e, *tmp;
list_for_each_entry_safe(e, tmp, h, list_entry) {
list_del(&e->list_entry);
devm_kfree(dev, e);
}
}
/**
* ice_vsi_add_vlan - Add VSI membership for given VLAN
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @vid: VLAN ID to be added
*/
int ice_vsi_add_vlan(struct ice_vsi *vsi, u16 vid)
{
struct ice_fltr_list_entry *tmp;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
LIST_HEAD(tmp_add_list);
enum ice_status status;
int err = 0;
tmp = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*tmp), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!tmp)
return -ENOMEM;
tmp->fltr_info.lkup_type = ICE_SW_LKUP_VLAN;
tmp->fltr_info.fltr_act = ICE_FWD_TO_VSI;
tmp->fltr_info.flag = ICE_FLTR_TX;
tmp->fltr_info.src_id = ICE_SRC_ID_VSI;
tmp->fltr_info.vsi_handle = vsi->idx;
tmp->fltr_info.l_data.vlan.vlan_id = vid;
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&tmp->list_entry);
list_add(&tmp->list_entry, &tmp_add_list);
status = ice_add_vlan(&pf->hw, &tmp_add_list);
if (status) {
err = -ENODEV;
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev, "Failure Adding VLAN %d on VSI %i\n",
vid, vsi->vsi_num);
}
ice_free_fltr_list(&pf->pdev->dev, &tmp_add_list);
return err;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_kill_vlan - Remove VSI membership for a given VLAN
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @vid: VLAN ID to be removed
*
* Returns 0 on success and negative on failure
*/
int ice_vsi_kill_vlan(struct ice_vsi *vsi, u16 vid)
{
struct ice_fltr_list_entry *list;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
LIST_HEAD(tmp_add_list);
enum ice_status status;
int err = 0;
list = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*list), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!list)
return -ENOMEM;
list->fltr_info.lkup_type = ICE_SW_LKUP_VLAN;
list->fltr_info.vsi_handle = vsi->idx;
list->fltr_info.fltr_act = ICE_FWD_TO_VSI;
list->fltr_info.l_data.vlan.vlan_id = vid;
list->fltr_info.flag = ICE_FLTR_TX;
list->fltr_info.src_id = ICE_SRC_ID_VSI;
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&list->list_entry);
list_add(&list->list_entry, &tmp_add_list);
status = ice_remove_vlan(&pf->hw, &tmp_add_list);
if (status == ICE_ERR_DOES_NOT_EXIST) {
dev_dbg(&pf->pdev->dev,
"Failed to remove VLAN %d on VSI %i, it does not exist, status: %d\n",
vid, vsi->vsi_num, status);
} else if (status) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"Error removing VLAN %d on vsi %i error: %d\n",
vid, vsi->vsi_num, status);
err = -EIO;
}
ice_free_fltr_list(&pf->pdev->dev, &tmp_add_list);
return err;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_cfg_rxqs - Configure the VSI for Rx
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*
* Return 0 on success and a negative value on error
* Configure the Rx VSI for operation.
*/
int ice_vsi_cfg_rxqs(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
u16 i;
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
goto setup_rings;
if (vsi->netdev && vsi->netdev->mtu > ETH_DATA_LEN)
vsi->max_frame = vsi->netdev->mtu +
ETH_HLEN + ETH_FCS_LEN + VLAN_HLEN;
else
vsi->max_frame = ICE_RXBUF_2048;
vsi->rx_buf_len = ICE_RXBUF_2048;
setup_rings:
/* set up individual rings */
for (i = 0; i < vsi->num_rxq; i++) {
int err;
err = ice_setup_rx_ctx(vsi->rx_rings[i]);
if (err) {
dev_err(&vsi->back->pdev->dev,
"ice_setup_rx_ctx failed for RxQ %d, err %d\n",
i, err);
return err;
}
}
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_cfg_txq - Configure single Tx queue
* @vsi: the VSI that queue belongs to
* @ring: Tx ring to be configured
* @tc_q_idx: queue index within given TC
* @qg_buf: queue group buffer
* @tc: TC that Tx ring belongs to
*/
static int
ice_vsi_cfg_txq(struct ice_vsi *vsi, struct ice_ring *ring, u16 tc_q_idx,
struct ice_aqc_add_tx_qgrp *qg_buf, u8 tc)
{
struct ice_tlan_ctx tlan_ctx = { 0 };
struct ice_aqc_add_txqs_perq *txq;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
u8 buf_len = sizeof(*qg_buf);
enum ice_status status;
u16 pf_q;
pf_q = ring->reg_idx;
ice_setup_tx_ctx(ring, &tlan_ctx, pf_q);
/* copy context contents into the qg_buf */
qg_buf->txqs[0].txq_id = cpu_to_le16(pf_q);
ice_set_ctx((u8 *)&tlan_ctx, qg_buf->txqs[0].txq_ctx,
ice_tlan_ctx_info);
/* init queue specific tail reg. It is referred as
* transmit comm scheduler queue doorbell.
*/
ring->tail = pf->hw.hw_addr + QTX_COMM_DBELL(pf_q);
/* Add unique software queue handle of the Tx queue per
* TC into the VSI Tx ring
*/
ring->q_handle = tc_q_idx;
status = ice_ena_vsi_txq(vsi->port_info, vsi->idx, tc, ring->q_handle,
1, qg_buf, buf_len, NULL);
if (status) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"Failed to set LAN Tx queue context, error: %d\n",
status);
return -ENODEV;
}
/* Add Tx Queue TEID into the VSI Tx ring from the
* response. This will complete configuring and
* enabling the queue.
*/
txq = &qg_buf->txqs[0];
if (pf_q == le16_to_cpu(txq->txq_id))
ring->txq_teid = le32_to_cpu(txq->q_teid);
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_cfg_txqs - Configure the VSI for Tx
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @rings: Tx ring array to be configured
* @offset: offset within vsi->txq_map
*
* Return 0 on success and a negative value on error
* Configure the Tx VSI for operation.
*/
static int
ice_vsi_cfg_txqs(struct ice_vsi *vsi, struct ice_ring **rings, int offset)
{
struct ice_aqc_add_tx_qgrp *qg_buf;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
u16 q_idx = 0, i;
int err = 0;
u8 tc;
qg_buf = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*qg_buf), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!qg_buf)
return -ENOMEM;
qg_buf->num_txqs = 1;
/* set up and configure the Tx queues for each enabled TC */
ice_for_each_traffic_class(tc) {
if (!(vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc & BIT(tc)))
break;
for (i = 0; i < vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[tc].qcount_tx; i++) {
err = ice_vsi_cfg_txq(vsi, rings[q_idx], i + offset,
qg_buf, tc);
if (err)
goto err_cfg_txqs;
q_idx++;
}
}
err_cfg_txqs:
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, qg_buf);
return err;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_cfg_lan_txqs - Configure the VSI for Tx
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*
* Return 0 on success and a negative value on error
* Configure the Tx VSI for operation.
*/
int ice_vsi_cfg_lan_txqs(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
return ice_vsi_cfg_txqs(vsi, vsi->tx_rings, 0);
}
/**
* ice_intrl_usec_to_reg - convert interrupt rate limit to register value
* @intrl: interrupt rate limit in usecs
* @gran: interrupt rate limit granularity in usecs
*
* This function converts a decimal interrupt rate limit in usecs to the format
* expected by firmware.
*/
u32 ice_intrl_usec_to_reg(u8 intrl, u8 gran)
{
u32 val = intrl / gran;
if (val)
return val | GLINT_RATE_INTRL_ENA_M;
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_cfg_itr_gran - set the ITR granularity to 2 usecs if not already set
* @hw: board specific structure
*/
static void ice_cfg_itr_gran(struct ice_hw *hw)
{
u32 regval = rd32(hw, GLINT_CTL);
/* no need to update global register if ITR gran is already set */
if (!(regval & GLINT_CTL_DIS_AUTOMASK_M) &&
(((regval & GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_200_M) >>
GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_200_S) == ICE_ITR_GRAN_US) &&
(((regval & GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_100_M) >>
GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_100_S) == ICE_ITR_GRAN_US) &&
(((regval & GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_50_M) >>
GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_50_S) == ICE_ITR_GRAN_US) &&
(((regval & GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_25_M) >>
GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_25_S) == ICE_ITR_GRAN_US))
return;
regval = ((ICE_ITR_GRAN_US << GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_200_S) &
GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_200_M) |
((ICE_ITR_GRAN_US << GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_100_S) &
GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_100_M) |
((ICE_ITR_GRAN_US << GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_50_S) &
GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_50_M) |
((ICE_ITR_GRAN_US << GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_25_S) &
GLINT_CTL_ITR_GRAN_25_M);
wr32(hw, GLINT_CTL, regval);
}
/**
* ice_cfg_itr - configure the initial interrupt throttle values
* @hw: pointer to the HW structure
* @q_vector: interrupt vector that's being configured
*
* Configure interrupt throttling values for the ring containers that are
* associated with the interrupt vector passed in.
*/
static void
ice_cfg_itr(struct ice_hw *hw, struct ice_q_vector *q_vector)
{
ice_cfg_itr_gran(hw);
if (q_vector->num_ring_rx) {
struct ice_ring_container *rc = &q_vector->rx;
/* if this value is set then don't overwrite with default */
if (!rc->itr_setting)
rc->itr_setting = ICE_DFLT_RX_ITR;
rc->target_itr = ITR_TO_REG(rc->itr_setting);
rc->next_update = jiffies + 1;
rc->current_itr = rc->target_itr;
wr32(hw, GLINT_ITR(rc->itr_idx, q_vector->reg_idx),
ITR_REG_ALIGN(rc->current_itr) >> ICE_ITR_GRAN_S);
}
if (q_vector->num_ring_tx) {
struct ice_ring_container *rc = &q_vector->tx;
/* if this value is set then don't overwrite with default */
if (!rc->itr_setting)
rc->itr_setting = ICE_DFLT_TX_ITR;
rc->target_itr = ITR_TO_REG(rc->itr_setting);
rc->next_update = jiffies + 1;
rc->current_itr = rc->target_itr;
wr32(hw, GLINT_ITR(rc->itr_idx, q_vector->reg_idx),
ITR_REG_ALIGN(rc->current_itr) >> ICE_ITR_GRAN_S);
}
}
/**
* ice_cfg_txq_interrupt - configure interrupt on Tx queue
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @txq: Tx queue being mapped to MSI-X vector
* @msix_idx: MSI-X vector index within the function
* @itr_idx: ITR index of the interrupt cause
*
* Configure interrupt on Tx queue by associating Tx queue to MSI-X vector
* within the function space.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_PCI_IOV
void
ice_cfg_txq_interrupt(struct ice_vsi *vsi, u16 txq, u16 msix_idx, u16 itr_idx)
#else
static void
ice_cfg_txq_interrupt(struct ice_vsi *vsi, u16 txq, u16 msix_idx, u16 itr_idx)
#endif /* CONFIG_PCI_IOV */
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_hw *hw = &pf->hw;
u32 val;
itr_idx = (itr_idx << QINT_TQCTL_ITR_INDX_S) & QINT_TQCTL_ITR_INDX_M;
val = QINT_TQCTL_CAUSE_ENA_M | itr_idx |
((msix_idx << QINT_TQCTL_MSIX_INDX_S) & QINT_TQCTL_MSIX_INDX_M);
wr32(hw, QINT_TQCTL(vsi->txq_map[txq]), val);
}
/**
* ice_cfg_rxq_interrupt - configure interrupt on Rx queue
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @rxq: Rx queue being mapped to MSI-X vector
* @msix_idx: MSI-X vector index within the function
* @itr_idx: ITR index of the interrupt cause
*
* Configure interrupt on Rx queue by associating Rx queue to MSI-X vector
* within the function space.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_PCI_IOV
void
ice_cfg_rxq_interrupt(struct ice_vsi *vsi, u16 rxq, u16 msix_idx, u16 itr_idx)
#else
static void
ice_cfg_rxq_interrupt(struct ice_vsi *vsi, u16 rxq, u16 msix_idx, u16 itr_idx)
#endif /* CONFIG_PCI_IOV */
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_hw *hw = &pf->hw;
u32 val;
itr_idx = (itr_idx << QINT_RQCTL_ITR_INDX_S) & QINT_RQCTL_ITR_INDX_M;
val = QINT_RQCTL_CAUSE_ENA_M | itr_idx |
((msix_idx << QINT_RQCTL_MSIX_INDX_S) & QINT_RQCTL_MSIX_INDX_M);
wr32(hw, QINT_RQCTL(vsi->rxq_map[rxq]), val);
ice_flush(hw);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_cfg_msix - MSIX mode Interrupt Config in the HW
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*
* This configures MSIX mode interrupts for the PF VSI, and should not be used
* for the VF VSI.
*/
void ice_vsi_cfg_msix(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_hw *hw = &pf->hw;
u32 txq = 0, rxq = 0;
int i, q;
for (i = 0; i < vsi->num_q_vectors; i++) {
struct ice_q_vector *q_vector = vsi->q_vectors[i];
u16 reg_idx = q_vector->reg_idx;
ice_cfg_itr(hw, q_vector);
wr32(hw, GLINT_RATE(reg_idx),
ice_intrl_usec_to_reg(q_vector->intrl, hw->intrl_gran));
/* Both Transmit Queue Interrupt Cause Control register
* and Receive Queue Interrupt Cause control register
* expects MSIX_INDX field to be the vector index
* within the function space and not the absolute
* vector index across PF or across device.
* For SR-IOV VF VSIs queue vector index always starts
* with 1 since first vector index(0) is used for OICR
* in VF space. Since VMDq and other PF VSIs are within
* the PF function space, use the vector index that is
* tracked for this PF.
*/
for (q = 0; q < q_vector->num_ring_tx; q++) {
ice_cfg_txq_interrupt(vsi, txq, reg_idx,
q_vector->tx.itr_idx);
txq++;
}
for (q = 0; q < q_vector->num_ring_rx; q++) {
ice_cfg_rxq_interrupt(vsi, rxq, reg_idx,
q_vector->rx.itr_idx);
rxq++;
}
}
}
/**
* ice_vsi_manage_vlan_insertion - Manage VLAN insertion for the VSI for Tx
* @vsi: the VSI being changed
*/
int ice_vsi_manage_vlan_insertion(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct device *dev = &vsi->back->pdev->dev;
struct ice_hw *hw = &vsi->back->hw;
struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctxt;
enum ice_status status;
int ret = 0;
ctxt = devm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(*ctxt), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ctxt)
return -ENOMEM;
/* Here we are configuring the VSI to let the driver add VLAN tags by
* setting vlan_flags to ICE_AQ_VSI_VLAN_MODE_ALL. The actual VLAN tag
* insertion happens in the Tx hot path, in ice_tx_map.
*/
ctxt->info.vlan_flags = ICE_AQ_VSI_VLAN_MODE_ALL;
/* Preserve existing VLAN strip setting */
ctxt->info.vlan_flags |= (vsi->info.vlan_flags &
ICE_AQ_VSI_VLAN_EMOD_M);
ctxt->info.valid_sections = cpu_to_le16(ICE_AQ_VSI_PROP_VLAN_VALID);
status = ice_update_vsi(hw, vsi->idx, ctxt, NULL);
if (status) {
dev_err(dev, "update VSI for VLAN insert failed, err %d aq_err %d\n",
status, hw->adminq.sq_last_status);
ret = -EIO;
goto out;
}
vsi->info.vlan_flags = ctxt->info.vlan_flags;
out:
devm_kfree(dev, ctxt);
return ret;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_manage_vlan_stripping - Manage VLAN stripping for the VSI for Rx
* @vsi: the VSI being changed
* @ena: boolean value indicating if this is a enable or disable request
*/
int ice_vsi_manage_vlan_stripping(struct ice_vsi *vsi, bool ena)
{
struct device *dev = &vsi->back->pdev->dev;
struct ice_hw *hw = &vsi->back->hw;
struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctxt;
enum ice_status status;
int ret = 0;
ctxt = devm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(*ctxt), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ctxt)
return -ENOMEM;
/* Here we are configuring what the VSI should do with the VLAN tag in
* the Rx packet. We can either leave the tag in the packet or put it in
* the Rx descriptor.
*/
if (ena)
/* Strip VLAN tag from Rx packet and put it in the desc */
ctxt->info.vlan_flags = ICE_AQ_VSI_VLAN_EMOD_STR_BOTH;
else
/* Disable stripping. Leave tag in packet */
ctxt->info.vlan_flags = ICE_AQ_VSI_VLAN_EMOD_NOTHING;
/* Allow all packets untagged/tagged */
ctxt->info.vlan_flags |= ICE_AQ_VSI_VLAN_MODE_ALL;
ctxt->info.valid_sections = cpu_to_le16(ICE_AQ_VSI_PROP_VLAN_VALID);
status = ice_update_vsi(hw, vsi->idx, ctxt, NULL);
if (status) {
dev_err(dev, "update VSI for VLAN strip failed, ena = %d err %d aq_err %d\n",
ena, status, hw->adminq.sq_last_status);
ret = -EIO;
goto out;
}
vsi->info.vlan_flags = ctxt->info.vlan_flags;
out:
devm_kfree(dev, ctxt);
return ret;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_start_rx_rings - start VSI's Rx rings
* @vsi: the VSI whose rings are to be started
*
* Returns 0 on success and a negative value on error
*/
int ice_vsi_start_rx_rings(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
return ice_vsi_ctrl_rx_rings(vsi, true);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_stop_rx_rings - stop VSI's Rx rings
* @vsi: the VSI
*
* Returns 0 on success and a negative value on error
*/
int ice_vsi_stop_rx_rings(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
return ice_vsi_ctrl_rx_rings(vsi, false);
}
/**
* ice_trigger_sw_intr - trigger a software interrupt
* @hw: pointer to the HW structure
* @q_vector: interrupt vector to trigger the software interrupt for
*/
void ice_trigger_sw_intr(struct ice_hw *hw, struct ice_q_vector *q_vector)
{
wr32(hw, GLINT_DYN_CTL(q_vector->reg_idx),
(ICE_ITR_NONE << GLINT_DYN_CTL_ITR_INDX_S) |
GLINT_DYN_CTL_SWINT_TRIG_M |
GLINT_DYN_CTL_INTENA_M);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_stop_tx_ring - Disable single Tx ring
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @rst_src: reset source
* @rel_vmvf_num: Relative ID of VF/VM
* @ring: Tx ring to be stopped
* @txq_meta: Meta data of Tx ring to be stopped
*/
#ifndef CONFIG_PCI_IOV
static
#endif /* !CONFIG_PCI_IOV */
int
ice_vsi_stop_tx_ring(struct ice_vsi *vsi, enum ice_disq_rst_src rst_src,
u16 rel_vmvf_num, struct ice_ring *ring,
struct ice_txq_meta *txq_meta)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_q_vector *q_vector;
struct ice_hw *hw = &pf->hw;
enum ice_status status;
u32 val;
/* clear cause_ena bit for disabled queues */
val = rd32(hw, QINT_TQCTL(ring->reg_idx));
val &= ~QINT_TQCTL_CAUSE_ENA_M;
wr32(hw, QINT_TQCTL(ring->reg_idx), val);
/* software is expected to wait for 100 ns */
ndelay(100);
/* trigger a software interrupt for the vector
* associated to the queue to schedule NAPI handler
*/
q_vector = ring->q_vector;
if (q_vector)
ice_trigger_sw_intr(hw, q_vector);
status = ice_dis_vsi_txq(vsi->port_info, txq_meta->vsi_idx,
txq_meta->tc, 1, &txq_meta->q_handle,
&txq_meta->q_id, &txq_meta->q_teid, rst_src,
rel_vmvf_num, NULL);
/* if the disable queue command was exercised during an
* active reset flow, ICE_ERR_RESET_ONGOING is returned.
* This is not an error as the reset operation disables
* queues at the hardware level anyway.
*/
if (status == ICE_ERR_RESET_ONGOING) {
dev_dbg(&vsi->back->pdev->dev,
"Reset in progress. LAN Tx queues already disabled\n");
} else if (status == ICE_ERR_DOES_NOT_EXIST) {
dev_dbg(&vsi->back->pdev->dev,
"LAN Tx queues do not exist, nothing to disable\n");
} else if (status) {
dev_err(&vsi->back->pdev->dev,
"Failed to disable LAN Tx queues, error: %d\n", status);
return -ENODEV;
}
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_fill_txq_meta - Prepare the Tx queue's meta data
* @vsi: VSI that ring belongs to
* @ring: ring that txq_meta will be based on
* @txq_meta: a helper struct that wraps Tx queue's information
*
* Set up a helper struct that will contain all the necessary fields that
* are needed for stopping Tx queue
*/
#ifndef CONFIG_PCI_IOV
static
#endif /* !CONFIG_PCI_IOV */
void
ice_fill_txq_meta(struct ice_vsi *vsi, struct ice_ring *ring,
struct ice_txq_meta *txq_meta)
{
u8 tc = 0;
#ifdef CONFIG_DCB
tc = ring->dcb_tc;
#endif /* CONFIG_DCB */
txq_meta->q_id = ring->reg_idx;
txq_meta->q_teid = ring->txq_teid;
txq_meta->q_handle = ring->q_handle;
txq_meta->vsi_idx = vsi->idx;
txq_meta->tc = tc;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_stop_tx_rings - Disable Tx rings
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @rst_src: reset source
* @rel_vmvf_num: Relative ID of VF/VM
* @rings: Tx ring array to be stopped
*/
static int
ice_vsi_stop_tx_rings(struct ice_vsi *vsi, enum ice_disq_rst_src rst_src,
u16 rel_vmvf_num, struct ice_ring **rings)
{
u16 i, q_idx = 0;
int status;
u8 tc;
if (vsi->num_txq > ICE_LAN_TXQ_MAX_QDIS)
return -EINVAL;
/* set up the Tx queue list to be disabled for each enabled TC */
ice_for_each_traffic_class(tc) {
if (!(vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc & BIT(tc)))
break;
for (i = 0; i < vsi->tc_cfg.tc_info[tc].qcount_tx; i++) {
struct ice_txq_meta txq_meta = { };
if (!rings || !rings[q_idx])
return -EINVAL;
ice_fill_txq_meta(vsi, rings[q_idx], &txq_meta);
status = ice_vsi_stop_tx_ring(vsi, rst_src,
rel_vmvf_num,
rings[q_idx], &txq_meta);
if (status)
return status;
q_idx++;
}
}
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_stop_lan_tx_rings - Disable LAN Tx rings
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @rst_src: reset source
* @rel_vmvf_num: Relative ID of VF/VM
*/
int
ice_vsi_stop_lan_tx_rings(struct ice_vsi *vsi, enum ice_disq_rst_src rst_src,
u16 rel_vmvf_num)
{
return ice_vsi_stop_tx_rings(vsi, rst_src, rel_vmvf_num, vsi->tx_rings);
}
/**
* ice_cfg_vlan_pruning - enable or disable VLAN pruning on the VSI
* @vsi: VSI to enable or disable VLAN pruning on
* @ena: set to true to enable VLAN pruning and false to disable it
* @vlan_promisc: enable valid security flags if not in VLAN promiscuous mode
*
* returns 0 if VSI is updated, negative otherwise
*/
int ice_cfg_vlan_pruning(struct ice_vsi *vsi, bool ena, bool vlan_promisc)
{
struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctxt;
struct device *dev;
struct ice_pf *pf;
int status;
if (!vsi)
return -EINVAL;
pf = vsi->back;
dev = &pf->pdev->dev;
ctxt = devm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(*ctxt), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ctxt)
return -ENOMEM;
ctxt->info = vsi->info;
if (ena) {
ctxt->info.sec_flags |=
ICE_AQ_VSI_SEC_TX_VLAN_PRUNE_ENA <<
ICE_AQ_VSI_SEC_TX_PRUNE_ENA_S;
ctxt->info.sw_flags2 |= ICE_AQ_VSI_SW_FLAG_RX_VLAN_PRUNE_ENA;
} else {
ctxt->info.sec_flags &=
~(ICE_AQ_VSI_SEC_TX_VLAN_PRUNE_ENA <<
ICE_AQ_VSI_SEC_TX_PRUNE_ENA_S);
ctxt->info.sw_flags2 &= ~ICE_AQ_VSI_SW_FLAG_RX_VLAN_PRUNE_ENA;
}
if (!vlan_promisc)
ctxt->info.valid_sections =
cpu_to_le16(ICE_AQ_VSI_PROP_SECURITY_VALID |
ICE_AQ_VSI_PROP_SW_VALID);
status = ice_update_vsi(&pf->hw, vsi->idx, ctxt, NULL);
if (status) {
netdev_err(vsi->netdev, "%sabling VLAN pruning on VSI handle: %d, VSI HW ID: %d failed, err = %d, aq_err = %d\n",
ena ? "En" : "Dis", vsi->idx, vsi->vsi_num, status,
pf->hw.adminq.sq_last_status);
goto err_out;
}
vsi->info.sec_flags = ctxt->info.sec_flags;
vsi->info.sw_flags2 = ctxt->info.sw_flags2;
devm_kfree(dev, ctxt);
return 0;
err_out:
devm_kfree(dev, ctxt);
return -EIO;
}
static void ice_vsi_set_tc_cfg(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_dcbx_cfg *cfg = &vsi->port_info->local_dcbx_cfg;
vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc = ice_dcb_get_ena_tc(cfg);
vsi->tc_cfg.numtc = ice_dcb_get_num_tc(cfg);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_set_q_vectors_reg_idx - set the HW register index for all q_vectors
* @vsi: VSI to set the q_vectors register index on
*/
static int
ice_vsi_set_q_vectors_reg_idx(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
u16 i;
if (!vsi || !vsi->q_vectors)
return -EINVAL;
ice_for_each_q_vector(vsi, i) {
struct ice_q_vector *q_vector = vsi->q_vectors[i];
if (!q_vector) {
dev_err(&vsi->back->pdev->dev,
"Failed to set reg_idx on q_vector %d VSI %d\n",
i, vsi->vsi_num);
goto clear_reg_idx;
}
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF) {
struct ice_vf *vf = &vsi->back->vf[vsi->vf_id];
q_vector->reg_idx = ice_calc_vf_reg_idx(vf, q_vector);
} else {
q_vector->reg_idx =
q_vector->v_idx + vsi->base_vector;
}
}
return 0;
clear_reg_idx:
ice_for_each_q_vector(vsi, i) {
struct ice_q_vector *q_vector = vsi->q_vectors[i];
if (q_vector)
q_vector->reg_idx = 0;
}
return -EINVAL;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_add_rem_eth_mac - Program VSI ethertype based filter with rule
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @add_rule: boolean value to add or remove ethertype filter rule
*/
static void
ice_vsi_add_rem_eth_mac(struct ice_vsi *vsi, bool add_rule)
{
struct ice_fltr_list_entry *list;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
LIST_HEAD(tmp_add_list);
enum ice_status status;
list = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*list), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!list)
return;
list->fltr_info.lkup_type = ICE_SW_LKUP_ETHERTYPE;
list->fltr_info.fltr_act = ICE_DROP_PACKET;
list->fltr_info.flag = ICE_FLTR_TX;
list->fltr_info.src_id = ICE_SRC_ID_VSI;
list->fltr_info.vsi_handle = vsi->idx;
list->fltr_info.l_data.ethertype_mac.ethertype = vsi->ethtype;
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&list->list_entry);
list_add(&list->list_entry, &tmp_add_list);
if (add_rule)
status = ice_add_eth_mac(&pf->hw, &tmp_add_list);
else
status = ice_remove_eth_mac(&pf->hw, &tmp_add_list);
if (status)
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"Failure Adding or Removing Ethertype on VSI %i error: %d\n",
vsi->vsi_num, status);
ice_free_fltr_list(&pf->pdev->dev, &tmp_add_list);
}
/**
* ice_cfg_sw_lldp - Config switch rules for LLDP packet handling
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
* @tx: bool to determine Tx or Rx rule
* @create: bool to determine create or remove Rule
*/
void ice_cfg_sw_lldp(struct ice_vsi *vsi, bool tx, bool create)
{
struct ice_fltr_list_entry *list;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
LIST_HEAD(tmp_add_list);
enum ice_status status;
list = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*list), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!list)
return;
list->fltr_info.lkup_type = ICE_SW_LKUP_ETHERTYPE;
list->fltr_info.vsi_handle = vsi->idx;
list->fltr_info.l_data.ethertype_mac.ethertype = ETH_P_LLDP;
if (tx) {
list->fltr_info.fltr_act = ICE_DROP_PACKET;
list->fltr_info.flag = ICE_FLTR_TX;
list->fltr_info.src_id = ICE_SRC_ID_VSI;
} else {
list->fltr_info.fltr_act = ICE_FWD_TO_VSI;
list->fltr_info.flag = ICE_FLTR_RX;
list->fltr_info.src_id = ICE_SRC_ID_LPORT;
}
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&list->list_entry);
list_add(&list->list_entry, &tmp_add_list);
if (create)
status = ice_add_eth_mac(&pf->hw, &tmp_add_list);
else
status = ice_remove_eth_mac(&pf->hw, &tmp_add_list);
if (status)
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"Fail %s %s LLDP rule on VSI %i error: %d\n",
create ? "adding" : "removing", tx ? "TX" : "RX",
vsi->vsi_num, status);
ice_free_fltr_list(&pf->pdev->dev, &tmp_add_list);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_setup - Set up a VSI by a given type
* @pf: board private structure
* @pi: pointer to the port_info instance
* @type: VSI type
* @vf_id: defines VF ID to which this VSI connects. This field is meant to be
* used only for ICE_VSI_VF VSI type. For other VSI types, should
* fill-in ICE_INVAL_VFID as input.
*
* This allocates the sw VSI structure and its queue resources.
*
* Returns pointer to the successfully allocated and configured VSI sw struct on
* success, NULL on failure.
*/
struct ice_vsi *
ice_vsi_setup(struct ice_pf *pf, struct ice_port_info *pi,
enum ice_vsi_type type, u16 vf_id)
{
u16 max_txqs[ICE_MAX_TRAFFIC_CLASS] = { 0 };
struct device *dev = &pf->pdev->dev;
enum ice_status status;
struct ice_vsi *vsi;
int ret, i;
if (type == ICE_VSI_VF)
vsi = ice_vsi_alloc(pf, type, vf_id);
else
vsi = ice_vsi_alloc(pf, type, ICE_INVAL_VFID);
if (!vsi) {
dev_err(dev, "could not allocate VSI\n");
return NULL;
}
vsi->port_info = pi;
vsi->vsw = pf->first_sw;
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_PF)
vsi->ethtype = ETH_P_PAUSE;
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
vsi->vf_id = vf_id;
if (ice_vsi_get_qs(vsi)) {
dev_err(dev, "Failed to allocate queues. vsi->idx = %d\n",
vsi->idx);
goto unroll_get_qs;
}
/* set RSS capabilities */
ice_vsi_set_rss_params(vsi);
/* set TC configuration */
ice_vsi_set_tc_cfg(vsi);
/* create the VSI */
ret = ice_vsi_init(vsi);
if (ret)
goto unroll_get_qs;
switch (vsi->type) {
case ICE_VSI_PF:
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_q_vectors(vsi);
if (ret)
goto unroll_vsi_init;
ret = ice_vsi_setup_vector_base(vsi);
if (ret)
goto unroll_alloc_q_vector;
ret = ice_vsi_set_q_vectors_reg_idx(vsi);
if (ret)
goto unroll_vector_base;
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_rings(vsi);
if (ret)
goto unroll_vector_base;
ice_vsi_map_rings_to_vectors(vsi);
/* Do not exit if configuring RSS had an issue, at least
* receive traffic on first queue. Hence no need to capture
* return value
*/
if (test_bit(ICE_FLAG_RSS_ENA, pf->flags))
ice_vsi_cfg_rss_lut_key(vsi);
break;
case ICE_VSI_VF:
/* VF driver will take care of creating netdev for this type and
* map queues to vectors through Virtchnl, PF driver only
* creates a VSI and corresponding structures for bookkeeping
* purpose
*/
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_q_vectors(vsi);
if (ret)
goto unroll_vsi_init;
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_rings(vsi);
if (ret)
goto unroll_alloc_q_vector;
ret = ice_vsi_set_q_vectors_reg_idx(vsi);
if (ret)
goto unroll_vector_base;
/* Do not exit if configuring RSS had an issue, at least
* receive traffic on first queue. Hence no need to capture
* return value
*/
if (test_bit(ICE_FLAG_RSS_ENA, pf->flags))
ice_vsi_cfg_rss_lut_key(vsi);
break;
case ICE_VSI_LB:
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_rings(vsi);
if (ret)
goto unroll_vsi_init;
break;
default:
/* clean up the resources and exit */
goto unroll_vsi_init;
}
/* configure VSI nodes based on number of queues and TC's */
for (i = 0; i < vsi->tc_cfg.numtc; i++)
max_txqs[i] = vsi->alloc_txq;
status = ice_cfg_vsi_lan(vsi->port_info, vsi->idx, vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc,
max_txqs);
if (status) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"VSI %d failed lan queue config, error %d\n",
vsi->vsi_num, status);
goto unroll_vector_base;
}
/* Add switch rule to drop all Tx Flow Control Frames, of look up
* type ETHERTYPE from VSIs, and restrict malicious VF from sending
* out PAUSE or PFC frames. If enabled, FW can still send FC frames.
* The rule is added once for PF VSI in order to create appropriate
* recipe, since VSI/VSI list is ignored with drop action...
* Also add rules to handle LLDP Tx and Rx packets. Tx LLDP packets
* need to be dropped so that VFs cannot send LLDP packets to reconfig
* DCB settings in the HW. Also, if the FW DCBX engine is not running
* then Rx LLDP packets need to be redirected up the stack.
*/
if (!ice_is_safe_mode(pf)) {
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_PF) {
ice_vsi_add_rem_eth_mac(vsi, true);
/* Tx LLDP packets */
ice_cfg_sw_lldp(vsi, true, true);
/* Rx LLDP packets */
if (!test_bit(ICE_FLAG_FW_LLDP_AGENT, pf->flags))
ice_cfg_sw_lldp(vsi, false, true);
}
}
return vsi;
unroll_vector_base:
/* reclaim SW interrupts back to the common pool */
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
ice_free_res(pf->irq_tracker, vsi->base_vector, vsi->idx);
pf->num_avail_sw_msix += vsi->num_q_vectors;
unroll_alloc_q_vector:
ice_vsi_free_q_vectors(vsi);
unroll_vsi_init:
ice_vsi_delete(vsi);
unroll_get_qs:
ice_vsi_put_qs(vsi);
ice_vsi_clear(vsi);
return NULL;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_release_msix - Clear the queue to Interrupt mapping in HW
* @vsi: the VSI being cleaned up
*/
static void ice_vsi_release_msix(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_hw *hw = &pf->hw;
u32 txq = 0;
u32 rxq = 0;
int i, q;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < vsi->num_q_vectors; i++) {
struct ice_q_vector *q_vector = vsi->q_vectors[i];
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
u16 reg_idx = q_vector->reg_idx;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
wr32(hw, GLINT_ITR(ICE_IDX_ITR0, reg_idx), 0);
wr32(hw, GLINT_ITR(ICE_IDX_ITR1, reg_idx), 0);
for (q = 0; q < q_vector->num_ring_tx; q++) {
wr32(hw, QINT_TQCTL(vsi->txq_map[txq]), 0);
txq++;
}
for (q = 0; q < q_vector->num_ring_rx; q++) {
wr32(hw, QINT_RQCTL(vsi->rxq_map[rxq]), 0);
rxq++;
}
}
ice_flush(hw);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_free_irq - Free the IRQ association with the OS
* @vsi: the VSI being configured
*/
void ice_vsi_free_irq(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
int base = vsi->base_vector;
int i;
if (!vsi->q_vectors || !vsi->irqs_ready)
return;
ice_vsi_release_msix(vsi);
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
return;
vsi->irqs_ready = false;
ice_for_each_q_vector(vsi, i) {
u16 vector = i + base;
int irq_num;
irq_num = pf->msix_entries[vector].vector;
/* free only the irqs that were actually requested */
if (!vsi->q_vectors[i] ||
!(vsi->q_vectors[i]->num_ring_tx ||
vsi->q_vectors[i]->num_ring_rx))
continue;
/* clear the affinity notifier in the IRQ descriptor */
irq_set_affinity_notifier(irq_num, NULL);
/* clear the affinity_mask in the IRQ descriptor */
irq_set_affinity_hint(irq_num, NULL);
synchronize_irq(irq_num);
devm_free_irq(&pf->pdev->dev, irq_num,
vsi->q_vectors[i]);
}
}
/**
* ice_vsi_free_tx_rings - Free Tx resources for VSI queues
* @vsi: the VSI having resources freed
*/
void ice_vsi_free_tx_rings(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
int i;
if (!vsi->tx_rings)
return;
ice_for_each_txq(vsi, i)
if (vsi->tx_rings[i] && vsi->tx_rings[i]->desc)
ice_free_tx_ring(vsi->tx_rings[i]);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_free_rx_rings - Free Rx resources for VSI queues
* @vsi: the VSI having resources freed
*/
void ice_vsi_free_rx_rings(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
int i;
if (!vsi->rx_rings)
return;
ice_for_each_rxq(vsi, i)
if (vsi->rx_rings[i] && vsi->rx_rings[i]->desc)
ice_free_rx_ring(vsi->rx_rings[i]);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_close - Shut down a VSI
* @vsi: the VSI being shut down
*/
void ice_vsi_close(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
if (!test_and_set_bit(__ICE_DOWN, vsi->state))
ice_down(vsi);
ice_vsi_free_irq(vsi);
ice_vsi_free_tx_rings(vsi);
ice_vsi_free_rx_rings(vsi);
}
/**
* ice_free_res - free a block of resources
* @res: pointer to the resource
* @index: starting index previously returned by ice_get_res
* @id: identifier to track owner
*
* Returns number of resources freed
*/
int ice_free_res(struct ice_res_tracker *res, u16 index, u16 id)
{
int count = 0;
int i;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
if (!res || index >= res->end)
return -EINVAL;
id |= ICE_RES_VALID_BIT;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
for (i = index; i < res->end && res->list[i] == id; i++) {
res->list[i] = 0;
count++;
}
return count;
}
/**
* ice_search_res - Search the tracker for a block of resources
* @res: pointer to the resource
* @needed: size of the block needed
* @id: identifier to track owner
*
* Returns the base item index of the block, or -ENOMEM for error
*/
static int ice_search_res(struct ice_res_tracker *res, u16 needed, u16 id)
{
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
int start = 0, end = 0;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
if (needed > res->end)
return -ENOMEM;
id |= ICE_RES_VALID_BIT;
do {
/* skip already allocated entries */
if (res->list[end++] & ICE_RES_VALID_BIT) {
start = end;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
if ((start + needed) > res->end)
break;
}
if (end == (start + needed)) {
int i = start;
/* there was enough, so assign it to the requestor */
while (i != end)
res->list[i++] = id;
return start;
}
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
} while (end < res->end);
return -ENOMEM;
}
/**
* ice_get_res - get a block of resources
* @pf: board private structure
* @res: pointer to the resource
* @needed: size of the block needed
* @id: identifier to track owner
*
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
* Returns the base item index of the block, or negative for error
*/
int
ice_get_res(struct ice_pf *pf, struct ice_res_tracker *res, u16 needed, u16 id)
{
if (!res || !pf)
return -EINVAL;
if (!needed || needed > res->num_entries || id >= ICE_RES_VALID_BIT) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"param err: needed=%d, num_entries = %d id=0x%04x\n",
needed, res->num_entries, id);
return -EINVAL;
}
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
return ice_search_res(res, needed, id);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_dis_irq - Mask off queue interrupt generation on the VSI
* @vsi: the VSI being un-configured
*/
void ice_vsi_dis_irq(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
int base = vsi->base_vector;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
struct ice_hw *hw = &pf->hw;
u32 val;
int i;
/* disable interrupt causation from each queue */
if (vsi->tx_rings) {
ice_for_each_txq(vsi, i) {
if (vsi->tx_rings[i]) {
u16 reg;
reg = vsi->tx_rings[i]->reg_idx;
val = rd32(hw, QINT_TQCTL(reg));
val &= ~QINT_TQCTL_CAUSE_ENA_M;
wr32(hw, QINT_TQCTL(reg), val);
}
}
}
if (vsi->rx_rings) {
ice_for_each_rxq(vsi, i) {
if (vsi->rx_rings[i]) {
u16 reg;
reg = vsi->rx_rings[i]->reg_idx;
val = rd32(hw, QINT_RQCTL(reg));
val &= ~QINT_RQCTL_CAUSE_ENA_M;
wr32(hw, QINT_RQCTL(reg), val);
}
}
}
/* disable each interrupt */
ice_for_each_q_vector(vsi, i) {
if (!vsi->q_vectors[i])
continue;
wr32(hw, GLINT_DYN_CTL(vsi->q_vectors[i]->reg_idx), 0);
}
ice_flush(hw);
/* don't call synchronize_irq() for VF's from the host */
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
return;
ice_for_each_q_vector(vsi, i)
synchronize_irq(pf->msix_entries[i + base].vector);
}
/**
* ice_napi_del - Remove NAPI handler for the VSI
* @vsi: VSI for which NAPI handler is to be removed
*/
void ice_napi_del(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
int v_idx;
if (!vsi->netdev)
return;
ice_for_each_q_vector(vsi, v_idx)
netif_napi_del(&vsi->q_vectors[v_idx]->napi);
}
/**
* ice_vsi_release - Delete a VSI and free its resources
* @vsi: the VSI being removed
*
* Returns 0 on success or < 0 on error
*/
int ice_vsi_release(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
struct ice_pf *pf;
if (!vsi->back)
return -ENODEV;
pf = vsi->back;
/* do not unregister while driver is in the reset recovery pending
* state. Since reset/rebuild happens through PF service task workqueue,
* it's not a good idea to unregister netdev that is associated to the
* PF that is running the work queue items currently. This is done to
* avoid check_flush_dependency() warning on this wq
*/
if (vsi->netdev && !ice_is_reset_in_progress(pf->state))
unregister_netdev(vsi->netdev);
if (test_bit(ICE_FLAG_RSS_ENA, pf->flags))
ice_rss_clean(vsi);
/* Disable VSI and free resources */
if (vsi->type != ICE_VSI_LB)
ice_vsi_dis_irq(vsi);
ice_vsi_close(vsi);
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
/* SR-IOV determines needed MSIX resources all at once instead of per
* VSI since when VFs are spawned we know how many VFs there are and how
* many interrupts each VF needs. SR-IOV MSIX resources are also
* cleared in the same manner.
*/
if (vsi->type != ICE_VSI_VF) {
/* reclaim SW interrupts back to the common pool */
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
ice_free_res(pf->irq_tracker, vsi->base_vector, vsi->idx);
pf->num_avail_sw_msix += vsi->num_q_vectors;
}
if (!ice_is_safe_mode(pf)) {
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_PF) {
ice_vsi_add_rem_eth_mac(vsi, false);
ice_cfg_sw_lldp(vsi, true, false);
/* The Rx rule will only exist to remove if the LLDP FW
* engine is currently stopped
*/
if (!test_bit(ICE_FLAG_FW_LLDP_AGENT, pf->flags))
ice_cfg_sw_lldp(vsi, false, false);
}
}
ice_remove_vsi_fltr(&pf->hw, vsi->idx);
ice_rm_vsi_lan_cfg(vsi->port_info, vsi->idx);
ice_vsi_delete(vsi);
ice_vsi_free_q_vectors(vsi);
/* make sure unregister_netdev() was called by checking __ICE_DOWN */
if (vsi->netdev && test_bit(__ICE_DOWN, vsi->state)) {
free_netdev(vsi->netdev);
vsi->netdev = NULL;
}
ice_vsi_clear_rings(vsi);
ice_vsi_put_qs(vsi);
/* retain SW VSI data structure since it is needed to unregister and
* free VSI netdev when PF is not in reset recovery pending state,\
* for ex: during rmmod.
*/
if (!ice_is_reset_in_progress(pf->state))
ice_vsi_clear(vsi);
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_rebuild - Rebuild VSI after reset
* @vsi: VSI to be rebuild
*
* Returns 0 on success and negative value on failure
*/
int ice_vsi_rebuild(struct ice_vsi *vsi)
{
u16 max_txqs[ICE_MAX_TRAFFIC_CLASS] = { 0 };
struct ice_vf *vf = NULL;
enum ice_status status;
struct ice_pf *pf;
int ret, i;
if (!vsi)
return -EINVAL;
pf = vsi->back;
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
vf = &pf->vf[vsi->vf_id];
ice_rm_vsi_lan_cfg(vsi->port_info, vsi->idx);
ice_vsi_free_q_vectors(vsi);
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
/* SR-IOV determines needed MSIX resources all at once instead of per
* VSI since when VFs are spawned we know how many VFs there are and how
* many interrupts each VF needs. SR-IOV MSIX resources are also
* cleared in the same manner.
*/
if (vsi->type != ICE_VSI_VF) {
/* reclaim SW interrupts back to the common pool */
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
ice_free_res(pf->irq_tracker, vsi->base_vector, vsi->idx);
pf->num_avail_sw_msix += vsi->num_q_vectors;
ice: Refactor interrupt tracking Currently we have two MSI-x (IRQ) trackers, one for OS requested MSI-x entries (sw_irq_tracker) and one for hardware MSI-x vectors (hw_irq_tracker). Generally the sw_irq_tracker has less entries than the hw_irq_tracker because the hw_irq_tracker has entries equal to the max allowed MSI-x per PF and the sw_irq_tracker is mainly the minimum (non SR-IOV portion of the vectors, kernel granted IRQs). All of the non SR-IOV portions of the driver (i.e. LAN queues, RDMA queues, OICR, etc.) take at least one of each type of tracker resource. SR-IOV only grabs entries from the hw_irq_tracker. There are a few issues with this approach that can be seen when doing any kind of device reconfiguration (i.e. ethtool -L, SR-IOV, etc.). One of them being, any time the driver creates an ice_q_vector and associates it to a LAN queue pair it will grab and use one entry from the hw_irq_tracker and one from the sw_irq_tracker. If the indices on these does not match it will cause a Tx timeout, which will cause a reset and then the indices will match up again and traffic will resume. The mismatched indices come from the trackers not being the same size and/or the search_hint in the two trackers not being equal. Another reason for the refactor is the co-existence of features with SR-IOV. If SR-IOV is enabled and the interrupts are taken from the end of the sw_irq_tracker then other features can no longer use this space because the hardware has now given the remaining interrupts to SR-IOV. This patch reworks how we track MSI-x vectors by removing the hw_irq_tracker completely and instead MSI-x resources needed for SR-IOV are determined all at once instead of per VF. This can be done because when creating VFs we know how many are wanted and how many MSI-x vectors each VF needs. This also allows us to start using MSI-x resources from the end of the PF's allowed MSI-x vectors so we are less likely to use entries needed for other features (i.e. RDMA, L2 Offload, etc). This patch also reworks the ice_res_tracker structure by removing the search_hint and adding a new member - "end". Instead of having a search_hint we will always search from 0. The new member, "end", will be used to manipulate the end of the ice_res_tracker (specifically sw_irq_tracker) during runtime based on MSI-x vectors needed by SR-IOV. In the normal case, the end of ice_res_tracker will be equal to the ice_res_tracker's num_entries. The sriov_base_vector member was added to the PF structure. It is used to represent the starting MSI-x index of all the needed MSI-x vectors for all SR-IOV VFs. Depending on how many MSI-x are needed, SR-IOV may have to take resources from the sw_irq_tracker. This is done by setting the sw_irq_tracker->end equal to the pf->sriov_base_vector. When all SR-IOV VFs are removed then the sw_irq_tracker->end is reset back to sw_irq_tracker->num_entries. The sriov_base_vector, along with the VF's number of MSI-x (pf->num_vf_msix), vf_id, and the base MSI-x index on the PF (pf->hw.func_caps.common_cap.msix_vector_first_id), is used to calculate the first HW absolute MSI-x index for each VF, which is used to write to the VPINT_ALLOC[_PCI] and GLINT_VECT2FUNC registers to program the VFs MSI-x PCI configuration bits. Also, the sriov_base_vector is used along with VF's num_vf_msix, vf_id, and q_vector->v_idx to determine the MSI-x register index (used for writing to GLINT_DYN_CTL) within the PF's space. Interrupt changes removed any references to hw_base_vector, hw_oicr_idx, and hw_irq_tracker. Only sw_base_vector, sw_oicr_idx, and sw_irq_tracker variables remain. Change all of these by removing the "sw_" prefix to help avoid confusion with these variables and their use. Signed-off-by: Brett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-04-16 17:30:44 +00:00
vsi->base_vector = 0;
}
ice: Alloc queue management bitmaps and arrays dynamically The total number of queues available on the device is divided between multiple physical functions (PF) in the firmware and provided to the driver when it gets function capabilities from the firmware. Thus each PF knows how many Tx/Rx queues it has. These queues are then doled out to different VSIs (for LAN traffic, SR-IOV VF traffic, etc.) To track usage of these queues at the PF level, the driver uses two bitmaps avail_txqs and avail_rxqs. At the VSI level (i.e. struct ice_vsi instances) the driver uses two arrays txq_map and rxq_map, to track ownership of VSIs' queues in avail_txqs and avail_rxqs respectively. The aforementioned bitmaps and arrays should be allocated dynamically, because the number of queues supported by a PF is only available once function capabilities have been queried. The current static allocation consumes way more memory than required. This patch removes the DECLARE_BITMAP for avail_txqs and avail_rxqs and instead uses bitmap_zalloc to allocate the bitmaps during init. Similarly txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated in ice_vsi_alloc_arrays. As a result ICE_MAX_TXQS and ICE_MAX_RXQS defines are no longer needed. Also as txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated and freed, some code reordering was required in ice_vsi_rebuild for correct functioning. Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-08-02 08:25:21 +00:00
ice_vsi_put_qs(vsi);
ice_vsi_clear_rings(vsi);
ice_vsi_free_arrays(vsi);
ice_dev_onetime_setup(&pf->hw);
if (vsi->type == ICE_VSI_VF)
ice_vsi_set_num_qs(vsi, vf->vf_id);
else
ice_vsi_set_num_qs(vsi, ICE_INVAL_VFID);
ice: Alloc queue management bitmaps and arrays dynamically The total number of queues available on the device is divided between multiple physical functions (PF) in the firmware and provided to the driver when it gets function capabilities from the firmware. Thus each PF knows how many Tx/Rx queues it has. These queues are then doled out to different VSIs (for LAN traffic, SR-IOV VF traffic, etc.) To track usage of these queues at the PF level, the driver uses two bitmaps avail_txqs and avail_rxqs. At the VSI level (i.e. struct ice_vsi instances) the driver uses two arrays txq_map and rxq_map, to track ownership of VSIs' queues in avail_txqs and avail_rxqs respectively. The aforementioned bitmaps and arrays should be allocated dynamically, because the number of queues supported by a PF is only available once function capabilities have been queried. The current static allocation consumes way more memory than required. This patch removes the DECLARE_BITMAP for avail_txqs and avail_rxqs and instead uses bitmap_zalloc to allocate the bitmaps during init. Similarly txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated in ice_vsi_alloc_arrays. As a result ICE_MAX_TXQS and ICE_MAX_RXQS defines are no longer needed. Also as txq_map and rxq_map are now allocated and freed, some code reordering was required in ice_vsi_rebuild for correct functioning. Signed-off-by: Anirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com> Tested-by: Andrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
2019-08-02 08:25:21 +00:00
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_arrays(vsi);
if (ret < 0)
goto err_vsi;
ice_vsi_get_qs(vsi);
ice_vsi_set_tc_cfg(vsi);
/* Initialize VSI struct elements and create VSI in FW */
ret = ice_vsi_init(vsi);
if (ret < 0)
goto err_vsi;
switch (vsi->type) {
case ICE_VSI_PF:
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_q_vectors(vsi);
if (ret)
goto err_rings;
ret = ice_vsi_setup_vector_base(vsi);
if (ret)
goto err_vectors;
ret = ice_vsi_set_q_vectors_reg_idx(vsi);
if (ret)
goto err_vectors;
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_rings(vsi);
if (ret)
goto err_vectors;
ice_vsi_map_rings_to_vectors(vsi);
/* Do not exit if configuring RSS had an issue, at least
* receive traffic on first queue. Hence no need to capture
* return value
*/
if (test_bit(ICE_FLAG_RSS_ENA, pf->flags))
ice_vsi_cfg_rss_lut_key(vsi);
break;
case ICE_VSI_VF:
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_q_vectors(vsi);
if (ret)
goto err_rings;
ret = ice_vsi_set_q_vectors_reg_idx(vsi);
if (ret)
goto err_vectors;
ret = ice_vsi_alloc_rings(vsi);
if (ret)
goto err_vectors;
break;
default:
break;
}
/* configure VSI nodes based on number of queues and TC's */
for (i = 0; i < vsi->tc_cfg.numtc; i++)
max_txqs[i] = vsi->alloc_txq;
status = ice_cfg_vsi_lan(vsi->port_info, vsi->idx, vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc,
max_txqs);
if (status) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"VSI %d failed lan queue config, error %d\n",
vsi->vsi_num, status);
goto err_vectors;
}
return 0;
err_vectors:
ice_vsi_free_q_vectors(vsi);
err_rings:
if (vsi->netdev) {
vsi->current_netdev_flags = 0;
unregister_netdev(vsi->netdev);
free_netdev(vsi->netdev);
vsi->netdev = NULL;
}
err_vsi:
ice_vsi_clear(vsi);
set_bit(__ICE_RESET_FAILED, pf->state);
return ret;
}
/**
* ice_is_reset_in_progress - check for a reset in progress
* @state: PF state field
*/
bool ice_is_reset_in_progress(unsigned long *state)
{
return test_bit(__ICE_RESET_OICR_RECV, state) ||
test_bit(__ICE_PFR_REQ, state) ||
test_bit(__ICE_CORER_REQ, state) ||
test_bit(__ICE_GLOBR_REQ, state);
}
#ifdef CONFIG_DCB
/**
* ice_vsi_update_q_map - update our copy of the VSI info with new queue map
* @vsi: VSI being configured
* @ctx: the context buffer returned from AQ VSI update command
*/
static void ice_vsi_update_q_map(struct ice_vsi *vsi, struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctx)
{
vsi->info.mapping_flags = ctx->info.mapping_flags;
memcpy(&vsi->info.q_mapping, &ctx->info.q_mapping,
sizeof(vsi->info.q_mapping));
memcpy(&vsi->info.tc_mapping, ctx->info.tc_mapping,
sizeof(vsi->info.tc_mapping));
}
/**
* ice_vsi_cfg_tc - Configure VSI Tx Sched for given TC map
* @vsi: VSI to be configured
* @ena_tc: TC bitmap
*
* VSI queues expected to be quiesced before calling this function
*/
int ice_vsi_cfg_tc(struct ice_vsi *vsi, u8 ena_tc)
{
u16 max_txqs[ICE_MAX_TRAFFIC_CLASS] = { 0 };
struct ice_vsi_ctx *ctx;
struct ice_pf *pf = vsi->back;
enum ice_status status;
int i, ret = 0;
u8 num_tc = 0;
ice_for_each_traffic_class(i) {
/* build bitmap of enabled TCs */
if (ena_tc & BIT(i))
num_tc++;
/* populate max_txqs per TC */
max_txqs[i] = vsi->alloc_txq;
}
vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc = ena_tc;
vsi->tc_cfg.numtc = num_tc;
ctx = devm_kzalloc(&pf->pdev->dev, sizeof(*ctx), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ctx)
return -ENOMEM;
ctx->vf_num = 0;
ctx->info = vsi->info;
ice_vsi_setup_q_map(vsi, ctx);
/* must to indicate which section of VSI context are being modified */
ctx->info.valid_sections = cpu_to_le16(ICE_AQ_VSI_PROP_RXQ_MAP_VALID);
status = ice_update_vsi(&pf->hw, vsi->idx, ctx, NULL);
if (status) {
dev_info(&pf->pdev->dev, "Failed VSI Update\n");
ret = -EIO;
goto out;
}
status = ice_cfg_vsi_lan(vsi->port_info, vsi->idx, vsi->tc_cfg.ena_tc,
max_txqs);
if (status) {
dev_err(&pf->pdev->dev,
"VSI %d failed TC config, error %d\n",
vsi->vsi_num, status);
ret = -EIO;
goto out;
}
ice_vsi_update_q_map(vsi, ctx);
vsi->info.valid_sections = 0;
ice_vsi_cfg_netdev_tc(vsi, ena_tc);
out:
devm_kfree(&pf->pdev->dev, ctx);
return ret;
}
#endif /* CONFIG_DCB */
/**
* ice_nvm_version_str - format the NVM version strings
* @hw: ptr to the hardware info
*/
char *ice_nvm_version_str(struct ice_hw *hw)
{
u8 oem_ver, oem_patch, ver_hi, ver_lo;
static char buf[ICE_NVM_VER_LEN];
u16 oem_build;
ice_get_nvm_version(hw, &oem_ver, &oem_build, &oem_patch, &ver_hi,
&ver_lo);
snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "%x.%02x 0x%x %d.%d.%d", ver_hi, ver_lo,
hw->nvm.eetrack, oem_ver, oem_build, oem_patch);
return buf;
}
/**
* ice_vsi_cfg_mac_fltr - Add or remove a MAC address filter for a VSI
* @vsi: the VSI being configured MAC filter
* @macaddr: the MAC address to be added.
* @set: Add or delete a MAC filter
*
* Adds or removes MAC address filter entry for VF VSI
*/
enum ice_status
ice_vsi_cfg_mac_fltr(struct ice_vsi *vsi, const u8 *macaddr, bool set)
{
LIST_HEAD(tmp_add_list);
enum ice_status status;
/* Update MAC filter list to be added or removed for a VSI */
if (ice_add_mac_to_list(vsi, &tmp_add_list, macaddr)) {
status = ICE_ERR_NO_MEMORY;
goto cfg_mac_fltr_exit;
}
if (set)
status = ice_add_mac(&vsi->back->hw, &tmp_add_list);
else
status = ice_remove_mac(&vsi->back->hw, &tmp_add_list);
cfg_mac_fltr_exit:
ice_free_fltr_list(&vsi->back->pdev->dev, &tmp_add_list);
return status;
}