This section is for PMDs which use the UIO or VFIO drivers.
See :ref:`bifurcated_driver` section for more details.
-As of release 1.4, DPDK applications no longer automatically unbind all supported network ports from the kernel driver in use.
-Instead, in case the PMD being used use the VFIO or UIO drivers,
-all ports that are to be used by a DPDK application must be bound to
-the ``vfio-pci``, ``uio_pci_generic``, or ``igb_uio`` module
-before the application is run.
-For such PMDs, any network ports under Linux* control will be ignored and cannot be used by the application.
-
-To bind ports to the ``vfio-pci``, ``uio_pci_generic`` or ``igb_uio`` module
+.. note::
+
+ It is recommended that ``vfio-pci`` be used as the kernel module for DPDK-bound ports in all cases.
+ If an IOMMU is unavailable, the ``vfio-pci`` can be used in :ref:`no-iommu<vfio_noiommu>` mode.
+ If, for some reason, vfio is unavailable, then UIO-based modules, ``igb_uio`` and ``uio_pci_generic`` may be used.
+ See section :ref:`uio` for details.
+
+Most devices require that the hardware to be used by DPDK be unbound from the kernel driver it uses,
+and instead be bound to the ``vfio-pci`` kernel module before the application is run.
+For such PMDs, any network ports or other hardware under Linux* control will be ignored and cannot be used by the application.
+
+To bind ports to the ``vfio-pci`` module
for DPDK use, or to return ports to Linux control,
a utility script called ``dpdk-devbind.py`` is provided in the ``usertools`` subdirectory.
This utility can be used to provide a view of the current state of the network ports on the system,
Network devices using DPDK-compatible driver
============================================
- 0000:82:00.0 '82599EB 10-GbE NIC' drv=uio_pci_generic unused=ixgbe
- 0000:82:00.1 '82599EB 10-GbE NIC' drv=uio_pci_generic unused=ixgbe
+ 0000:82:00.0 '82599EB 10-GbE NIC' drv=vfio-pci unused=ixgbe
+ 0000:82:00.1 '82599EB 10-GbE NIC' drv=vfio-pci unused=ixgbe
Network devices using kernel driver
===================================
- 0000:04:00.0 'I350 1-GbE NIC' if=em0 drv=igb unused=uio_pci_generic *Active*
- 0000:04:00.1 'I350 1-GbE NIC' if=eth1 drv=igb unused=uio_pci_generic
- 0000:04:00.2 'I350 1-GbE NIC' if=eth2 drv=igb unused=uio_pci_generic
- 0000:04:00.3 'I350 1-GbE NIC' if=eth3 drv=igb unused=uio_pci_generic
+ 0000:04:00.0 'I350 1-GbE NIC' if=em0 drv=igb unused=vfio-pci *Active*
+ 0000:04:00.1 'I350 1-GbE NIC' if=eth1 drv=igb unused=vfio-pci
+ 0000:04:00.2 'I350 1-GbE NIC' if=eth2 drv=igb unused=vfio-pci
+ 0000:04:00.3 'I350 1-GbE NIC' if=eth3 drv=igb unused=vfio-pci
Other network devices
=====================
<none>
-To bind device ``eth1``,``04:00.1``, to the ``uio_pci_generic`` driver:
+To bind device ``eth1``,``04:00.1``, to the ``vfio-pci`` driver:
.. code-block:: console
- ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --bind=uio_pci_generic 04:00.1
+ ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --bind=vfio-pci 04:00.1
or, alternatively,
.. code-block:: console
- ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --bind=uio_pci_generic eth1
+ ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --bind=vfio-pci eth1
-To restore device ``82:00.0`` to its original kernel binding:
+When specifying device ids, wildcards can be used for the final part of the address.
+To restore device ``82:00.0`` and ``82:00.1`` to their original kernel binding:
.. code-block:: console
- ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --bind=ixgbe 82:00.0
+ ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --bind=ixgbe 82:00.*
VFIO
----
For proper operation of VFIO when running DPDK applications as a non-privileged user, correct permissions should also be set up.
For more information, please refer to :ref:`Running_Without_Root_Privileges`.
+.. _vfio_noiommu:
+
VFIO no-IOMMU mode
------------------
to keep the degree of device access and programming that VFIO has,
in situations where IOMMU is not available.
+.. _uio:
+
UIO
---