X-Git-Url: http://git.droids-corp.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fguides%2Fcryptodevs%2Fqat.rst;h=b09624f2cbf9b2b7956b82d356e75bce2d73be3f;hb=d14c148e79f03586569458eb489c2c6d2c446cd9;hp=9ecd19b211d3c8d7ea7fb2af412721c28d864db0;hpb=e09231eaa2af97ebba5b9b6e59c31be74025601c;p=dpdk.git diff --git a/doc/guides/cryptodevs/qat.rst b/doc/guides/cryptodevs/qat.rst index 9ecd19b211..b09624f2cb 100644 --- a/doc/guides/cryptodevs/qat.rst +++ b/doc/guides/cryptodevs/qat.rst @@ -1,42 +1,32 @@ -.. BSD LICENSE - Copyright(c) 2015-2016 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. - - Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without - modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions - are met: - - * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright - notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. - * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright - notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in - the documentation and/or other materials provided with the - distribution. - * Neither the name of Intel Corporation nor the names of its - contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived - from this software without specific prior written permission. - - THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS - "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT - LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR - A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT - OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, - SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT - LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, - DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY - THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT - (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE - OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause + Copyright(c) 2015-2016 Intel Corporation. Intel(R) QuickAssist (QAT) Crypto Poll Mode Driver ================================================== -The QAT PMD provides poll mode crypto driver support for **Intel QuickAssist -Technology DH895xxC**, **Intel QuickAssist Technology C62x** and -**Intel QuickAssist Technology C3xxx** hardware accelerator. +QAT documentation consists of three parts: + +* Details of the symmetric crypto service below. +* Details of the `compression service `_ + in the compressdev drivers section. +* Details of building the common QAT infrastructure and the PMDs to support the + above services. See :ref:`building_qat` below. + + +Symmetric Crypto Service on QAT +------------------------------- + +The QAT crypto PMD provides poll mode crypto driver support for the following +hardware accelerator devices: + +* ``Intel QuickAssist Technology DH895xCC`` +* ``Intel QuickAssist Technology C62x`` +* ``Intel QuickAssist Technology C3xxx`` +* ``Intel QuickAssist Technology D15xx`` Features --------- +~~~~~~~~ The QAT PMD has support for: @@ -51,10 +41,12 @@ Cipher algorithms: * ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES192_CTR`` * ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES256_CTR`` * ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_SNOW3G_UEA2`` -* ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES_GCM`` * ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_NULL`` * ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_KASUMI_F8`` * ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_DES_CBC`` +* ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES_DOCSISBPI`` +* ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_DES_DOCSISBPI`` +* ``RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_ZUC_EEA3`` Hash algorithms: @@ -69,213 +61,235 @@ Hash algorithms: * ``RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_NULL`` * ``RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_KASUMI_F9`` * ``RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_AES_GMAC`` +* ``RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_ZUC_EIA3`` + +Supported AEAD algorithms: + +* ``RTE_CRYPTO_AEAD_AES_GCM`` +* ``RTE_CRYPTO_AEAD_AES_CCM`` Limitations ------------ +~~~~~~~~~~~ -* Hash only is not supported except SNOW 3G UIA2 and KASUMI F9. * Only supports the session-oriented API implementation (session-less APIs are not supported). -* SNOW 3G (UEA2) and KASUMI (F8) supported only if cipher length, cipher offset fields are byte-aligned. -* SNOW 3G (UIA2) and KASUMI (F9) supported only if hash length, hash offset fields are byte-aligned. +* SNOW 3G (UEA2), KASUMI (F8) and ZUC (EEA3) supported only if cipher length and offset fields are byte-multiple. +* SNOW 3G (UIA2) and ZUC (EIA3) supported only if hash length and offset fields are byte-multiple. * No BSD support as BSD QAT kernel driver not available. +* ZUC EEA3/EIA3 is not supported by dh895xcc devices +* Maximum additional authenticated data (AAD) for GCM is 240 bytes long. +* Queue pairs are not thread-safe (that is, within a single queue pair, RX and TX from different lcores is not supported). -Installation ------------- +Extra notes on KASUMI F9 +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -To use the DPDK QAT PMD an SRIOV-enabled QAT kernel driver is required. The -VF devices exposed by this driver will be used by QAT PMD. +When using KASUMI F9 authentication algorithm, the input buffer must be +constructed according to the +`3GPP KASUMI specification `_ +(section 4.4, page 13). The input buffer has to have COUNT (4 bytes), +FRESH (4 bytes), MESSAGE and DIRECTION (1 bit) concatenated. After the DIRECTION +bit, a single '1' bit is appended, followed by between 0 and 7 '0' bits, so that +the total length of the buffer is multiple of 8 bits. Note that the actual +message can be any length, specified in bits. -To enable QAT in DPDK, follow the instructions mentioned in -http://dpdk.org/doc/guides/linux_gsg/build_dpdk.html +Once this buffer is passed this way, when creating the crypto operation, +length of data to authenticate "op.sym.auth.data.length" must be the length +of all the items described above, including the padding at the end. +Also, offset of data to authenticate "op.sym.auth.data.offset" +must be such that points at the start of the COUNT bytes. -Quick instructions as follows: -.. code-block:: console - make config T=x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc - sed -i 's,\(CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_QAT\)=n,\1=y,' build/.config - make +.. _building_qat: -If you are running on kernel 4.4 or greater, see instructions for -`Installation using kernel.org driver`_ below. If you are on a kernel earlier -than 4.4, see `Installation using 01.org QAT driver`_. +Building PMDs on QAT +-------------------- -For **Intel QuickAssist Technology C62x** and **Intel QuickAssist Technology C3xxx** -device, kernel 4.5 or greater is needed. -See instructions for `Installation using kernel.org driver`_ below. +A QAT device can host multiple acceleration services: +* symmetric cryptography +* data compression -Installation using 01.org QAT driver ------------------------------------- +These services are provided to DPDK applications via PMDs which register to +implement the corresponding cryptodev and compressdev APIs. The PMDs use +common QAT driver code which manages the QAT PCI device. They also depend on a +QAT kernel driver being installed on the platform, see :ref:`qat_kernel` below. -NOTE: There is no driver available for **Intel QuickAssist Technology C62x** and -**Intel QuickAssist Technology C3xxx** devices on 01.org. -Download the latest QuickAssist Technology Driver from `01.org -`_ -Consult the *Getting Started Guide* at the same URL for further information. +Configuring and Building the DPDK QAT PMDs +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -The steps below assume you are: -* Building on a platform with one ``DH895xCC`` device. -* Using package ``qatmux.l.2.3.0-34.tgz``. -* On Fedora21 kernel ``3.17.4-301.fc21.x86_64``. +Further information on configuring, building and installing DPDK is described +`here `_. -In the BIOS ensure that SRIOV is enabled and VT-d is disabled. -Uninstall any existing QAT driver, for example by running: +Quick instructions for QAT cryptodev PMD are as follows: -* ``./installer.sh uninstall`` in the directory where originally installed. +.. code-block:: console -* or ``rmmod qat_dh895xcc; rmmod intel_qat``. + cd to the top-level DPDK directory + make defconfig + sed -i 's,\(CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_QAT_SYM\)=n,\1=y,' build/.config + make -Build and install the SRIOV-enabled QAT driver:: +Quick instructions for QAT compressdev PMD are as follows: - mkdir /QAT - cd /QAT - # copy qatmux.l.2.3.0-34.tgz to this location - tar zxof qatmux.l.2.3.0-34.tgz +.. code-block:: console - export ICP_WITHOUT_IOMMU=1 - ./installer.sh install QAT1.6 host + cd to the top-level DPDK directory + make defconfig + make -You can use ``cat /proc/icp_dh895xcc_dev0/version`` to confirm the driver is correctly installed. -You can use ``lspci -d:443`` to confirm the bdf of the 32 VF devices are available per ``DH895xCC`` device. -To complete the installation - follow instructions in `Binding the available VFs to the DPDK UIO driver`_. +Build Configuration +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -**Note**: If using a later kernel and the build fails with an error relating to ``strict_stroul`` not being available apply the following patch: +These are the build configuration options affecting QAT, and their default values: -.. code-block:: diff +.. code-block:: console - /QAT/QAT1.6/quickassist/utilities/downloader/Target_CoreLibs/uclo/include/linux/uclo_platform.h - + #if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(3,18,5) - + #define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) {endPtr=NULL; if (kstrtoul((str), (base), (num))) printk("Error strtoull convert %s\n", str); } - + #else - #if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(2,6,38) - #define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) {endPtr=NULL; if (strict_strtoull((str), (base), (num))) printk("Error strtoull convert %s\n", str); } - #else - #if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(2,6,25) - #define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) {endPtr=NULL; strict_strtoll((str), (base), (num));} - #else - #define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) \ - do { \ - if (str[0] == '-') \ - { \ - *(num) = -(simple_strtoull((str+1), &(endPtr), (base))); \ - }else { \ - *(num) = simple_strtoull((str), &(endPtr), (base)); \ - } \ - } while(0) - + #endif - #endif - #endif + CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_QAT=y + CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_QAT_SYM=n + CONFIG_RTE_PMD_QAT_MAX_PCI_DEVICES=48 + CONFIG_RTE_PMD_QAT_COMP_SGL_MAX_SEGMENTS=16 +CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_QAT must be enabled for any QAT PMD to be built. -If the build fails due to missing header files you may need to do following: +The QAT cryptodev PMD has an external dependency on libcrypto, so is not +built by default. CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_QAT_SYM should be enabled to build it. -* ``sudo yum install zlib-devel`` -* ``sudo yum install openssl-devel`` +The QAT compressdev PMD has no external dependencies, so needs no configuration +options and is built by default. -If the build or install fails due to mismatching kernel sources you may need to do the following: +The number of VFs per PF varies - see table below. If multiple QAT packages are +installed on a platform then CONFIG_RTE_PMD_QAT_MAX_PCI_DEVICES should be +adjusted to the number of VFs which the QAT common code will need to handle. +Note, there is a separate config item for max cryptodevs CONFIG_RTE_CRYPTO_MAX_DEVS, +if necessary this should be adjusted to handle the total of QAT and other devices +which the process will use. -* ``sudo yum install kernel-headers-`uname -r``` -* ``sudo yum install kernel-src-`uname -r``` -* ``sudo yum install kernel-devel-`uname -r``` +QAT allocates internal structures to handle SGLs. For the compression service +CONFIG_RTE_PMD_QAT_COMP_SGL_MAX_SEGMENTS can be changed if more segments are needed. +An extra (max_inflight_ops x 16) bytes per queue_pair will be used for every increment. -Installation using kernel.org driver ------------------------------------- +Device and driver naming +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -For **Intel QuickAssist Technology DH895xxC**: +* The qat cryptodev driver name is "crypto_qat". + The "rte_cryptodev_devices_get()" returns the devices exposed by this driver. -Assuming you are running on at least a 4.4 kernel, you can use the stock kernel.org QAT -driver to start the QAT hardware. +* Each qat crypto device has a unique name, in format + "_", e.g. "0000:41:01.0_qat_sym". + This name can be passed to "rte_cryptodev_get_dev_id()" to get the device_id. -The steps below assume you are: +.. Note:: -* Running DPDK on a platform with one ``DH895xCC`` device. -* On a kernel at least version 4.4. + The qat crypto driver name is passed to the dpdk-test-crypto-perf tool in the "-devtype" parameter. -In BIOS ensure that SRIOV is enabled and either -a) disable VT-d or -b) enable VT-d and set ``"intel_iommu=on iommu=pt"`` in the grub file. + The qat crypto device name is in the format of the slave parameter passed to the crypto scheduler. -Ensure the QAT driver is loaded on your system, by executing:: +* The qat compressdev driver name is "compress_qat". + The rte_compressdev_devices_get() returns the devices exposed by this driver. - lsmod | grep qat +* Each qat compression device has a unique name, in format + _, e.g. "0000:41:01.0_qat_comp". + This name can be passed to rte_compressdev_get_dev_id() to get the device_id. -You should see the following output:: +.. _qat_kernel: - qat_dh895xcc 5626 0 - intel_qat 82336 1 qat_dh895xcc +Dependency on the QAT kernel driver +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -Next, you need to expose the Virtual Functions (VFs) using the sysfs file system. +To use QAT an SRIOV-enabled QAT kernel driver is required. The VF +devices created and initialised by this driver will be used by the QAT PMDs. -First find the bdf of the physical function (PF) of the DH895xCC device:: +Instructions for installation are below, but first an explanation of the +relationships between the PF/VF devices and the PMDs visible to +DPDK applications. - lspci -d : 435 +Each QuickAssist PF device exposes a number of VF devices. Each VF device can +enable one cryptodev PMD and/or one compressdev PMD. +These QAT PMDs share the same underlying device and pci-mgmt code, but are +enumerated independently on their respective APIs and appear as independent +devices to applications. -You should see output similar to:: +.. Note:: - 03:00.0 Co-processor: Intel Corporation Coleto Creek PCIe Endpoint + Each VF can only be used by one DPDK process. It is not possible to share + the same VF across multiple processes, even if these processes are using + different acceleration services. -Using the sysfs, enable the VFs:: + Conversely one DPDK process can use one or more QAT VFs and can expose both + cryptodev and compressdev instances on each of those VFs. - echo 32 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/dh895xcc/0000\:03\:00.0/sriov_numvfs -If you get an error, it's likely you're using a QAT kernel driver earlier than kernel 4.4. +Available kernel drivers +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -To verify that the VFs are available for use - use ``lspci -d:443`` to confirm -the bdf of the 32 VF devices are available per ``DH895xCC`` device. +Kernel drivers for each device are listed in the following table. Scroll right +to check that the driver and device supports the service you require. -To complete the installation - follow instructions in `Binding the available VFs to the DPDK UIO driver`_. -**Note**: If the QAT kernel modules are not loaded and you see an error like - ``Failed to load MMP firmware qat_895xcc_mmp.bin`` this may be as a - result of not using a distribution, but just updating the kernel directly. +.. _table_qat_pmds_drivers: -Download firmware from the kernel firmware repo at: -http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/firmware/linux-firmware.git/tree/ +.. table:: QAT device generations, devices and drivers -Copy qat binaries to /lib/firmware: -* ``cp qat_895xcc.bin /lib/firmware`` -* ``cp qat_895xcc_mmp.bin /lib/firmware`` + +-----+----------+---------------+---------------+------------+--------+------+--------+--------+-----------+-------------+ + | Gen | Device | Driver/ver | Kernel Module | Pci Driver | PF Did | #PFs | VF Did | VFs/PF | cryptodev | compressdev | + +=====+==========+===============+===============+============+========+======+========+========+===========+=============+ + | 1 | DH895xCC | linux/4.4+ | qat_dh895xcc | dh895xcc | 435 | 1 | 443 | 32 | Yes | No | + +-----+----------+---------------+---------------+------------+--------+------+--------+--------+-----------+-------------+ + | " | " | 01.org/4.2.0+ | " | " | " | " | " | " | Yes | No | + +-----+----------+---------------+---------------+------------+--------+------+--------+--------+-----------+-------------+ + | 2 | C62x | linux/4.5+ | qat_c62x | c6xx | 37c8 | 3 | 37c9 | 16 | Yes | No | + +-----+----------+---------------+---------------+------------+--------+------+--------+--------+-----------+-------------+ + | " | " | 01.org/4.2.0+ | " | " | " | " | " | " | Yes | Yes | + +-----+----------+---------------+---------------+------------+--------+------+--------+--------+-----------+-------------+ + | 2 | C3xxx | linux/4.5+ | qat_c3xxx | c3xxx | 19e2 | 1 | 19e3 | 16 | Yes | No | + +-----+----------+---------------+---------------+------------+--------+------+--------+--------+-----------+-------------+ + | " | " | 01.org/4.2.0+ | " | " | " | " | " | " | Yes | Yes | + +-----+----------+---------------+---------------+------------+--------+------+--------+--------+-----------+-------------+ + | 2 | D15xx | p | qat_d15xx | d15xx | 6f54 | 1 | 6f55 | 16 | Yes | No | + +-----+----------+---------------+---------------+------------+--------+------+--------+--------+-----------+-------------+ -cd to your linux source root directory and start the qat kernel modules: -* ``insmod ./drivers/crypto/qat/qat_common/intel_qat.ko`` -* ``insmod ./drivers/crypto/qat/qat_dh895xcc/qat_dh895xcc.ko`` -**Note**:The following warning in /var/log/messages can be ignored: - ``IOMMU should be enabled for SR-IOV to work correctly`` +The ``Driver`` column indicates either the Linux kernel version in which +support for this device was introduced or a driver available on Intel's 01.org +website. There are both linux and 01.org kernel drivers available for some +devices. p = release pending. -For **Intel QuickAssist Technology C62x**: -Assuming you are running on at least a 4.5 kernel, you can use the stock kernel.org QAT -driver to start the QAT hardware. +If you are running on a kernel which includes a driver for your device, see +`Installation using kernel.org driver`_ below. Otherwise see +`Installation using 01.org QAT driver`_. -The steps below assume you are: -* Running DPDK on a platform with one ``C62x`` device. -* On a kernel at least version 4.5. +Installation using kernel.org driver +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -In BIOS ensure that SRIOV is enabled and either -a) disable VT-d or -b) enable VT-d and set ``"intel_iommu=on iommu=pt"`` in the grub file. +The examples below are based on the C62x device, if you have a different device +use the corresponding values in the above table. -Ensure the QAT driver is loaded on your system, by executing:: +In BIOS ensure that SRIOV is enabled and either: - lsmod | grep qat +* Disable VT-d or +* Enable VT-d and set ``"intel_iommu=on iommu=pt"`` in the grub file. -You should see the following output:: +Check that the QAT driver is loaded on your system, by executing:: - qat_c62x 16384 0 - intel_qat 122880 1 qat_c62x + lsmod | grep qa -Next, you need to expose the VFs using the sysfs file system. +You should see the kernel module for your device listed, e.g.:: -First find the bdf of the C62x device:: + qat_c62x 5626 0 + intel_qat 82336 1 qat_c62x + +Next, you need to expose the Virtual Functions (VFs) using the sysfs file system. + +First find the BDFs (Bus-Device-Function) of the physical functions (PFs) of +your device, e.g.:: lspci -d:37c8 @@ -285,131 +299,252 @@ You should see output similar to:: 3d:00.0 Co-processor: Intel Corporation Device 37c8 3f:00.0 Co-processor: Intel Corporation Device 37c8 -For each c62x device there are 3 PFs. -Using the sysfs, for each PF, enable the 16 VFs:: +Enable the VFs for each PF by echoing the number of VFs per PF to the pci driver:: - echo 16 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/c6xx/0000\:1a\:00.0/sriov_numvfs + echo 16 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/c6xx/0000:1a:00.0/sriov_numvfs + echo 16 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/c6xx/0000:3d:00.0/sriov_numvfs + echo 16 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/c6xx/0000:3f:00.0/sriov_numvfs -If you get an error, it's likely you're using a QAT kernel driver earlier than kernel 4.5. +Check that the VFs are available for use. For example ``lspci -d:37c9`` should +list 48 VF devices available for a ``C62x`` device. -To verify that the VFs are available for use - use ``lspci -d:37c9`` to confirm -the bdf of the 48 VF devices are available per ``C62x`` device. +To complete the installation follow the instructions in +`Binding the available VFs to the DPDK UIO driver`_. + +.. Note:: + + If the QAT kernel modules are not loaded and you see an error like ``Failed + to load MMP firmware qat_895xcc_mmp.bin`` in kernel logs, this may be as a + result of not using a distribution, but just updating the kernel directly. + + Download firmware from the `kernel firmware repo + `_. + + Copy qat binaries to ``/lib/firmware``:: + + cp qat_895xcc.bin /lib/firmware + cp qat_895xcc_mmp.bin /lib/firmware + + Change to your linux source root directory and start the qat kernel modules:: + + insmod ./drivers/crypto/qat/qat_common/intel_qat.ko + insmod ./drivers/crypto/qat/qat_dh895xcc/qat_dh895xcc.ko -To complete the installation - follow instructions in `Binding the available VFs to the DPDK UIO driver`_. -For **Intel QuickAssist Technology C3xxx**: -Assuming you are running on at least a 4.5 kernel, you can use the stock kernel.org QAT -driver to start the QAT hardware. +.. Note:: + + If you see the following warning in ``/var/log/messages`` it can be ignored: + ``IOMMU should be enabled for SR-IOV to work correctly``. + + +Installation using 01.org QAT driver +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Download the latest QuickAssist Technology Driver from `01.org +`_. +Consult the *Getting Started Guide* at the same URL for further information. The steps below assume you are: -* Running DPDK on a platform with one ``C3xxx`` device. -* On a kernel at least version 4.5. +* Building on a platform with one ``C62x`` device. +* Using package ``qat1.7.l.4.2.0-000xx.tar.gz``. +* On Fedora26 kernel ``4.11.11-300.fc26.x86_64``. -In BIOS ensure that SRIOV is enabled and either -a) disable VT-d or -b) enable VT-d and set ``"intel_iommu=on iommu=pt"`` in the grub file. +In the BIOS ensure that SRIOV is enabled and VT-d is disabled. -Ensure the QAT driver is loaded on your system, by executing:: +Uninstall any existing QAT driver, for example by running: - lsmod | grep qat +* ``./installer.sh uninstall`` in the directory where originally installed. -You should see the following output:: - qat_c3xxx 16384 0 - intel_qat 122880 1 qat_c3xxx +Build and install the SRIOV-enabled QAT driver:: -Next, you need to expose the Virtual Functions (VFs) using the sysfs file system. + mkdir /QAT + cd /QAT -First find the bdf of the physical function (PF) of the C3xxx device + # Copy the package to this location and unpack + tar zxof qat1.7.l.4.2.0-000xx.tar.gz - lspci -d:19e2 + ./configure --enable-icp-sriov=host + make install -You should see output similar to:: +You can use ``cat /sys/kernel/debug/qat/version/fw`` to confirm the driver is correctly installed and is using firmware version 4.2.0. +You can use ``lspci -d:37c9`` to confirm the presence of the 16 VF devices available per ``C62x`` PF. + +Confirm the driver is correctly installed and is using firmware version 4.2.0:: - 01:00.0 Co-processor: Intel Corporation Device 19e2 + cat /sys/kernel/debug/qat/version/fw -For c3xxx device there is 1 PFs. -Using the sysfs, enable the 16 VFs:: - echo 16 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/c3xxx/0000\:01\:00.0/sriov_numvfs +Confirm the presence of 48 VF devices - 16 per PF:: + + lspci -d:37c9 -If you get an error, it's likely you're using a QAT kernel driver earlier than kernel 4.5. -To verify that the VFs are available for use - use ``lspci -d:19e3`` to confirm -the bdf of the 16 VF devices are available per ``C3xxx`` device. To complete the installation - follow instructions in `Binding the available VFs to the DPDK UIO driver`_. -Binding the available VFs to the DPDK UIO driver ------------------------------------------------- +.. Note:: -For **Intel(R) QuickAssist Technology DH895xcc** device: -The unbind command below assumes ``bdfs`` of ``03:01.00-03:04.07``, if yours are different adjust the unbind command below:: + If using a later kernel and the build fails with an error relating to + ``strict_stroul`` not being available apply the following patch: - cd $RTE_SDK - modprobe uio - insmod ./build/kmod/igb_uio.ko + .. code-block:: diff - for device in $(seq 1 4); do \ - for fn in $(seq 0 7); do \ - echo -n 0000:03:0${device}.${fn} > \ - /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:03\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ - done; \ - done + /QAT/QAT1.6/quickassist/utilities/downloader/Target_CoreLibs/uclo/include/linux/uclo_platform.h + + #if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(3,18,5) + + #define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) {endPtr=NULL; if (kstrtoul((str), (base), (num))) printk("Error strtoull convert %s\n", str); } + + #else + #if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(2,6,38) + #define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) {endPtr=NULL; if (strict_strtoull((str), (base), (num))) printk("Error strtoull convert %s\n", str); } + #else + #if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(2,6,25) + #define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) {endPtr=NULL; strict_strtoll((str), (base), (num));} + #else + #define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) \ + do { \ + if (str[0] == '-') \ + { \ + *(num) = -(simple_strtoull((str+1), &(endPtr), (base))); \ + }else { \ + *(num) = simple_strtoull((str), &(endPtr), (base)); \ + } \ + } while(0) + + #endif + #endif + #endif - echo "8086 0443" > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/igb_uio/new_id -You can use ``lspci -vvd:443`` to confirm that all devices are now in use by igb_uio kernel driver. +.. Note:: -For **Intel(R) QuickAssist Technology C62x** device: -The unbind command below assumes ``bdfs`` of ``1a:01.00-1a:02.07``, ``3d:01.00-3d:02.07`` and ``3f:01.00-3f:02.07``, -if yours are different adjust the unbind command below:: + If the build fails due to missing header files you may need to do following:: - cd $RTE_SDK - modprobe uio - insmod ./build/kmod/igb_uio.ko + sudo yum install zlib-devel + sudo yum install openssl-devel + sudo yum install libudev-devel - for device in $(seq 1 2); do \ - for fn in $(seq 0 7); do \ - echo -n 0000:1a:0${device}.${fn} > \ - /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:1a\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ +.. Note:: - echo -n 0000:3d:0${device}.${fn} > \ - /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:3d\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ + If the build or install fails due to mismatching kernel sources you may need to do the following:: - echo -n 0000:3f:0${device}.${fn} > \ - /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:3f\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ - done; \ - done + sudo yum install kernel-headers-`uname -r` + sudo yum install kernel-src-`uname -r` + sudo yum install kernel-devel-`uname -r` - echo "8086 37c9" > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/igb_uio/new_id -You can use ``lspci -vvd:37c9`` to confirm that all devices are now in use by igb_uio kernel driver. +Binding the available VFs to the DPDK UIO driver +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -For **Intel(R) QuickAssist Technology C3xxx** device: -The unbind command below assumes ``bdfs`` of ``01:01.00-01:02.07``, -if yours are different adjust the unbind command below:: +Unbind the VFs from the stock driver so they can be bound to the uio driver. - cd $RTE_SDK - modprobe uio - insmod ./build/kmod/igb_uio.ko +For an Intel(R) QuickAssist Technology DH895xCC device +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - for device in $(seq 1 2); do \ - for fn in $(seq 0 7); do \ - echo -n 0000:01:0${device}.${fn} > \ - /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:01\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ +The unbind command below assumes ``BDFs`` of ``03:01.00-03:04.07``, if your +VFs are different adjust the unbind command below:: - done; \ - done + for device in $(seq 1 4); do \ + for fn in $(seq 0 7); do \ + echo -n 0000:03:0${device}.${fn} > \ + /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:03\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ + done; \ + done - echo "8086 19e3" > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/igb_uio/new_id +For an Intel(R) QuickAssist Technology C62x device +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -You can use ``lspci -vvd:19e3`` to confirm that all devices are now in use by igb_uio kernel driver. +The unbind command below assumes ``BDFs`` of ``1a:01.00-1a:02.07``, +``3d:01.00-3d:02.07`` and ``3f:01.00-3f:02.07``, if your VFs are different +adjust the unbind command below:: + for device in $(seq 1 2); do \ + for fn in $(seq 0 7); do \ + echo -n 0000:1a:0${device}.${fn} > \ + /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:1a\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ -The other way to bind the VFs to the DPDK UIO driver is by using the ``dpdk-devbind.py`` script: + echo -n 0000:3d:0${device}.${fn} > \ + /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:3d\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ -.. code-block:: console + echo -n 0000:3f:0${device}.${fn} > \ + /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:3f\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ + done; \ + done + +For Intel(R) QuickAssist Technology C3xxx or D15xx device +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - cd $RTE_SDK +The unbind command below assumes ``BDFs`` of ``01:01.00-01:02.07``, if your +VFs are different adjust the unbind command below:: + + for device in $(seq 1 2); do \ + for fn in $(seq 0 7); do \ + echo -n 0000:01:0${device}.${fn} > \ + /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:01\:0${device}.${fn}/driver/unbind; \ + done; \ + done + +Bind to the DPDK uio driver +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Install the DPDK igb_uio driver, bind the VF PCI Device id to it and use lspci +to confirm the VF devices are now in use by igb_uio kernel driver, +e.g. for the C62x device:: + + cd to the top-level DPDK directory + modprobe uio + insmod ./build/kmod/igb_uio.ko + echo "8086 37c9" > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/igb_uio/new_id + lspci -vvd:37c9 + + +Another way to bind the VFs to the DPDK UIO driver is by using the +``dpdk-devbind.py`` script:: + + cd to the top-level DPDK directory ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -b igb_uio 0000:03:01.1 + +Testing +~~~~~~~ + +QAT crypto PMD can be tested by running the test application:: + + make defconfig + make test-build -j + cd ./build/app + ./test -l1 -n1 -w + RTE>>cryptodev_qat_autotest + +QAT compression PMD can be tested by running the test application:: + + make defconfig + sed -i 's,\(CONFIG_RTE_COMPRESSDEV_TEST\)=n,\1=y,' build/.config + make test-build -j + cd ./build/app + ./test -l1 -n1 -w + RTE>>compressdev_autotest + + +Debugging +~~~~~~~~~ + +There are 2 sets of trace available via the dynamic logging feature: + +* pmd.qat_dp exposes trace on the data-path. +* pmd.qat_general exposes all other trace. + +pmd.qat exposes both sets of traces. +They can be enabled using the log-level option (where 8=maximum log level) on +the process cmdline, e.g. using any of the following:: + + --log-level="pmd.qat_general,8" + --log-level="pmd.qat_dp,8" + --log-level="pmd.qat,8" + +.. Note:: + + The global RTE_LOG_DP_LEVEL overrides data-path trace so must be set to + RTE_LOG_DEBUG to see all the trace. This variable is in config/rte_config.h + for meson build and config/common_base for gnu make. + Also the dynamic global log level overrides both sets of trace, so e.g. no + QAT trace would display in this case:: + + --log-level="7" --log-level="pmd.qat_general,8"