1 Rocker Network Switch Register Programming Guide
2 Copyright (c) Scott Feldman <sfeldma@gmail.com>
3 Copyright (c) Neil Horman <nhorman@tuxdriver.com>
4 Version 0.11, 12/29/2014
9 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
14 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 GNU General Public License for more details.
19 SECTION 1: Introduction
20 =======================
25 This document describes the hardware/software interface for the Rocker switch
26 device. The intended audience is authors of OS drivers and device emulation
29 Notations and Conventions
30 -------------------------
32 o In register descriptions, [n:m] indicates a range from bit n to bit m,
34 o Use of leading 0x indicates a hexadecimal number.
35 o Use of leading 0b indicates a binary number.
36 o The use of RSVD or Reserved indicates that a bit or field is reserved for
38 o Field width is in bytes, unless otherwise noted.
39 o Register are (R) read-only, (R/W) read/write, (W) write-only, or (COR) clear
41 o TLV values in network-byte-order are designated with (N).
44 SECTION 2: PCI Configuration Registers
45 ======================================
47 PCI Configuration Space
48 -----------------------
50 Each switch instance registers as a PCI device with PCI configuration space:
52 offset width description value
53 ---------------------------------------------
54 0x0 2 Vendor ID 0x1b36
55 0x2 2 Device ID 0x0006
57 0x8 1 Revision ID 0x01
58 0x9 3 Class code 0x2800
62 0xF 1 Built-in self test
63 0x10 4 Base address low
64 0x14 4 Base address high
66 0x2C 2 Subsystem vendor ID *
70 0x3D 1 Interrupt pin 0x00
72 0x3D 1 Max latency 0x00
78 * Assigned by sub-system implementation
80 SECTION 3: Memory-Mapped Register Space
81 =======================================
83 There are two memory-mapped BARs. BAR0 maps device register space and is
84 0x2000 in size. BAR1 maps MSI-X vector and PBA tables and is also 0x2000 in
85 size, allowing for 256 MSI-X vectors.
87 All registers are 4 or 8 bytes long. It is assumed host software will access 4
88 byte registers with one 4-byte access, and 8 byte registers with either two
89 4-byte accesses or a single 8-byte access. In the case of two 4-byte accesses,
90 access must be lower and then upper 4-bytes, in that order.
92 BAR0 device register space is organized as follows:
95 ------------------------------------------------------
96 0x0000-0x000f Bogus registers to catch misbehaving
97 drivers. Writes do nothing. Reads
99 0x0010-0x00ff Test registers
100 0x0300-0x03ff General purpose registers
101 0x1000-0x1fff Descriptor control
103 Holes in register space are reserved. Writes to reserved registers do nothing.
104 Reads to reserved registers read back as 0.
106 No fancy stuff like write-combining is enabled on any of the registers.
108 BAR1 MSI-X register space is organized as follows:
111 ------------------------------------------------------
112 0x0000-0x0fff MSI-X vector table (256 vectors total)
113 0x1000-0x1fff MSI-X PBA table
116 SECTION 4: Interrupts, DMA, and Endianness
117 ==========================================
122 The device supports only MSI-X interrupts. BAR1 memory-mapped region contains
123 the MSI-X vector and PBA tables, with support for up to 256 MSI-X vectors.
125 The vector assignment is:
128 -----------------------------------------------------
129 0 Command descriptor ring completion
130 1 Event descriptor ring completion
131 2 Test operation completion
133 4-255 Tx and Rx descriptor ring completion
137 A MSI-X vector table entry is 16 bytes:
139 field offset width description
140 -------------------------------------------------------------
141 lower_addr 0x0 4 [31:2] message address[31:2]
142 [1:0] Rsvd (4 byte alignment
144 upper_addr 0x4 4 [31:19] Rsvd
145 [14:0] message address[46:32]
146 data 0x8 4 message data[31:0]
147 control 0xc 4 [31:1] Rsvd
148 [0] mask (0 = enable,
151 Software should install the Interrupt Service Routine (ISR) before any ports
152 are enabled or any commands are issued on the command ring.
157 DMA operations are used for packet DMA to/from the CPU, command and event
158 processing. Command processing includes statistical counters and table dumps,
159 table insertion/deletion, and more. Event processing provides an async
160 notification method for device-originating events. Each DMA operation has a
161 set of control registers to manage a descriptor ring. The descriptor rings are
162 allocated from contiguous host DMA-able memory and registers specify the rings
163 base address, size and current head and tail indices. Software always writes
164 the head, and hardware always writes the tail.
166 The higher-order bit of DMA_DESC_COMP_ERR is used to mark hardware completion
167 of a descriptor. Software will clear this bit when posting a descriptor to the
168 ring, and hardware will set this bit when the descriptor is complete.
170 Descriptor ring sizes must be a power of 2 and range from 2 to 64K entries.
171 Descriptor rings' base address must be 8-byte aligned. Descriptors must be
172 packed within ring. Each descriptor in each ring must also be aligned on an 8
173 byte boundary. Each descriptor ring will have these registers:
175 DMA_DESC_xxx_BASE_ADDR, offset 0x1000 + (x * 32), 64-bit, (R/W)
176 DMA_DESC_xxx_SIZE, offset 0x1008 + (x * 32), 32-bit, (R/W)
177 DMA_DESC_xxx_HEAD, offset 0x100c + (x * 32), 32-bit, (R/W)
178 DMA_DESC_xxx_TAIL, offset 0x1010 + (x * 32), 32-bit, (R)
179 DMA_DESC_xxx_CTRL, offset 0x1014 + (x * 32), 32-bit, (W)
180 DMA_DESC_xxx_CREDITS, offset 0x1018 + (x * 32), 32-bit, (R/W)
181 DMA_DESC_xxx_RSVD1, offset 0x101c + (x * 32), 32-bit, (R/W)
183 Where x is descriptor ring index:
201 Writing BASE_ADDR or SIZE will reset HEAD and TAIL to zero. HEAD cannot be
202 written past TAIL. To do so would wrap the ring. An empty ring is when HEAD
203 == TAIL. A full ring is when HEAD is one position behind TAIL. Both HEAD and
204 TAIL increment and modulo wrap at the ring size.
209 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
210 [0] CTRL_RESET Reset the descriptor ring
213 All descriptor types share some common fields:
215 field width description
216 -------------------------------------------------------------------
217 DMA_DESC_BUF_ADDR 8 Phys addr of desc payload, 8-byte
219 DMA_DESC_COOKIE 8 Desc cookie for completion matching,
220 upper-most bit is reserved
221 DMA_DESC_BUF_SIZE 2 Desc payload size in bytes
222 DMA_DESC_TLV_SIZE 2 Desc payload total size in bytes
223 used for TLVs. Must be <=
225 DMA_DESC_COMP_ERR 2 Completion status of associated
226 desc payload. High order bit is
227 clear on new descs, toggled by
228 hw for completed items.
230 To support forward- and backward-compatibility, descriptor and completion
231 payloads are specified in TLV format. Fields are packed with Type=field name,
232 Length=field length, and Value=field value. Software will ignore unknown fields
233 filled in by the switch. Likewise, the switch will ignore unknown fields
234 filled in by software.
236 Descriptor payload buffer is 8-byte aligned and TLVs are 8-byte aligned. The
237 value within a TLV is also 8-byte aligned. The (packed, 8 byte) TLV header is:
239 field width description
240 -----------------------------
242 len 2 TLV value length
245 The alignment requirements for descriptors and TLVs are to avoid unaligned
246 access exceptions in software. Note that the payload for each TLV is also
249 Figure 1 shows an example descriptor buffer with two TLVs.
251 <------- 8 bytes ------->
253 8-byte +––––+ +–––––––––––+–––––+–––––+ +–+
254 align | type | len | pad | TLV#1 hdr |
255 +–––––––––––+–––––+–––––+ (len=22) |
257 | value | TVL#1 value |
258 | | (padded to 8-byte |
259 | +–––––+ alignment) |
261 8-byte +––––+ +–––––––––––+–––––––––––+ |
262 align | type | len | pad | TLV#2 hdr DESC_BUF_SIZE
263 +–––––+–––––+–––––+–––––+ (len=2) |
264 |value|/////////////////| TLV#2 value |
265 +–––––+/////////////////| |
266 |///////////////////////| |
267 |///////////////////////| |
268 |///////////////////////| |
269 |////////unused/////////| |
270 |////////space//////////| |
271 |///////////////////////| |
272 |///////////////////////| |
273 |///////////////////////| |
274 +–––––––––––––––––––––––+ +–+
278 TLVs can be nested within the NEST TLV type.
283 MSI-X vectors used for descriptor ring completions use a credit mechanism for
284 efficient device, PCIe bus, OS and driver operations. Each descriptor ring has
285 a credit count which represents the number of outstanding descriptors to be
286 processed by the driver. As the device marks descriptors complete, the credit
287 count is incremented. As the driver processes those outstanding descriptors,
288 it returns credits back to the device. This way, the device knows the driver's
289 progress and can make decisions about when to fire the next interrupt or not.
290 When the credit count is zero, and the first descriptors are posted for the
291 driver, a single interrupt is fired. Once the interrupt is fired, the
292 interrupt is disabled (auto-masked*). In response to the interrupt, the driver
293 will process descriptors and PIO write a returned credit value for that
294 descriptor ring. If the driver returns all credits (the driver caught up with
295 the device and there is no outstanding work), then the interrupt is unmasked,
296 but not fired. If only partial credits are returned, the interrupt remains
297 masked but the device generates an interrupt, signaling the driver that more
298 outstanding work is available.
300 (* this masking is unrelated to the MSI-X interrupt mask register)
305 Device registers are hard-coded to little-endian (LE). The driver should
306 convert to/from host endianness to LE for device register accesses.
308 Descriptors are LE. Descriptor buffer TLVs will have LE type and length
309 fields, but the value field can either be LE or network-byte-order, depending
310 on context. TLV values containing network packet data will be in network-byte
311 order. A TLV value containing a field or mask used to compare against network
312 packet data is network-byte order. For example, flow match fields (and masks)
313 are network-byte-order since they're matched directly, byte-by-byte, against
314 network packet data. All non-network-packet TLV multi-byte values will be LE.
316 TLV values in network-byte-order are designated with (N).
319 SECTION 5: Test Registers
320 =========================
322 Rocker has several test registers to support troubleshooting register access,
323 interrupt generation, and DMA operations:
325 TEST_REG, offset 0x0010, 32-bit (R/W)
326 TEST_REG64, offset 0x0018, 64-bit (R/W)
327 TEST_IRQ, offset 0x0020, 32-bit (R/W)
328 TEST_DMA_ADDR, offset 0x0028, 64-bit (R/W)
329 TEST_DMA_SIZE, offset 0x0030, 32-bit (R/W)
330 TEST_DMA_CTRL, offset 0x0034, 32-bit (R/W)
332 Reads to TEST_REG and TEST_REG64 will read a value equal to twice the last
333 value written to the register. The 32-bit and 64-bit versions are for testing
334 32-bit and 64-bit host accesses.
336 A vector can be written to TEST_IRQ and the device will generate an interrupt
339 To test basic DMA operations, allocate a DMA-able host buffer and put the
340 buffer address into TEST_DMA_ADDR and size into TEST_DMA_SIZE. Then, write to
341 TEST_DMA_CTRL to manipulate the buffer contents. TEST_DMA_CTRL operations are:
343 operation value description
344 -----------------------------------------------------------
345 TEST_DMA_CTRL_CLEAR 1 clear buffer
346 TEST_DMA_CTRL_FILL 2 fill buffer bytes with 0x96
347 TEST_DMA_CTRL_INVERT 4 invert bytes in buffer
349 Various buffer address and sizes should be tested to verify no address boundary
350 issue exists. In particular, buffers that start on odd-8-byte boundary and/or
351 span multiple PAGE sizes should be tested.
357 Physical and Logical Ports
358 ------------------------------------
360 The switch supports up to 62 physical (front-panel) ports. Register
361 PORT_PHYS_COUNT returns the actual number of physical ports available:
363 PORT_PHYS_COUNT, offset 0x0304, 32-bit, (R)
365 In addition to front-panel ports, the switch supports logical ports for
368 Front-panel ports and logical tunnel ports are mapped into a single 32-bit port
369 space. A special CPU port is assigned port 0. The front-panel ports are
370 mapped to ports 1-62. A special loopback port is assigned port 63. Logical
371 tunnel ports are assigned ports 0x0001000-0x0001ffff.
372 To summarize the port assignments:
375 -------------------------------------------------------
376 0 CPU port (for packets to/from host CPU)
377 1-62 front-panel physical ports
380 0x00010000-0x0001ffff logical tunnel ports
381 0x00020000-0xffffffff RSVD
386 Switch front-panel ports operate in a mode. Currently, the only mode is
387 OF-DPA. OF-DPA[1] mode is based on OpenFlow Data Plane Abstraction (OF-DPA)
388 Abstract Switch Specification, Version 1.0, from Broadcom Corporation. To
389 set/get the mode for front-panel ports, see port settings, below.
394 Link status for all front-panel ports is available via PORT_PHYS_LINK_STATUS:
396 PORT_PHYS_LINK_STATUS, offset 0x0310, 64-bit, (R)
398 Value is port bitmap. Bits 0 and 63 always read 0. Bits 1-62
399 read 1 for link UP and 0 for link DOWN for respective front-panel ports.
401 Other properties for front-panel ports are available via DMA CMD descriptors:
403 Get PORT_SETTINGS descriptor:
405 field width description
406 ----------------------------------------------
407 PORT_SETTINGS 2 CMD_GET
408 PPORT 4 Physical port #
410 Get PORT_SETTINGS completion:
412 field width description
413 ----------------------------------------------
414 PPORT 4 Physical port #
415 SPEED 4 Current port interface speed, in Mbps
416 DUPLEX 1 1 = Full, 0 = Half
417 AUTONEG 1 1 = enabled, 0 = disabled
418 MACADDR 6 Port MAC address
420 LEARNING 1 MAC address learning on port
423 PHYS_NAME <var> Physical port name (string)
425 Set PORT_SETTINGS descriptor:
427 field width description
428 ----------------------------------------------
429 PORT_SETTINGS 2 CMD_SET
430 PPORT 4 Physical port #
431 SPEED 4 Port interface speed, in Mbps
432 DUPLEX 1 1 = Full, 0 = Half
433 AUTONEG 1 1 = enabled, 0 = disabled
434 MACADDR 6 Port MAC address
440 Front-panel ports are initially disabled, which means port ingress and egress
441 packets will be dropped. To enable or disable a port, use PORT_PHYS_ENABLE:
443 PORT_PHYS_ENABLE: offset 0x0318, 64-bit, (R/W)
445 Value is bitmap of first 64 ports. Bits 0 and 63 are ignored
446 and always read as 0. Write 1 to enable port; write 0 to disable it.
450 SECTION 7: Switch Control
451 =========================
453 This section covers switch-wide register settings.
458 This register is used for low level control of the switch.
460 CONTROL: offset 0x0300, 32-bit, (W)
463 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
464 [0] CONTROL_RESET If set, device will perform reset
470 The switch has a SWITCH_ID to be used by software to uniquely identify the
473 SWITCH_ID: offset 0x0320, 64-bit, (R)
475 Value is opaque to switch software and no special encoding is implied.
481 Non-I/O asynchronous events from the device are notified to the host using the
482 event ring. The TLV structure for events is:
484 field width description
485 ---------------------------------------------------
486 TYPE 4 Event type, one of:
489 INFO <nest> Event info (details below)
494 When link status changes on a physical port, this event is generated.
496 field width description
497 ---------------------------------------------------
499 PPORT 4 Physical port
500 LINKUP 1 Link status:
507 When a packet ingresses on a port and the source MAC/VLAN isn't known to the
508 device, the device will generate this event. In response to the event, the
509 driver should install to the device the MAC/VLAN on the port into the bridge
510 table. Once installed, the MAC/VLAN is known on the port and this event will
511 no longer be generated.
513 field width description
514 ---------------------------------------------------
516 PPORT 4 Physical port
521 SECTION 9: CPU Packet Processing
522 ================================
524 Ingress packets directed to the host CPU for further processing are delivered
525 in the DMA RX ring. Likewise, host CPU originating packets destined to egress
526 on switch ports are scheduled by software using the DMA TX ring.
531 Software schedules packets for egress on switch ports using the DMA TX ring. A
532 TX descriptor buffer describes the packet location and size in host DMA-able
533 memory, the destination port, and any hardware-offload functions (such as L3
534 payload checksum offload). Software then bumps the descriptor head to signal
535 hardware of new Tx work. In response, hardware will DMA read Tx descriptors up
536 to head, DMA read descriptor buffer and packet data, perform offloading
537 functions, and finally frame packet on wire (network). Once packet processing
538 is complete, hardware will writeback status to descriptor(s) to signal to
539 software that Tx is complete and software resources (e.g. skb) backing packet
542 Figure 2 shows an example 3-fragment packet queued with one Tx descriptor. A
543 TLV is used for each packet fragment.
546 +–––––––+ +–+
549 +––––––––+ | | | |
550 Tx ring +–––+ +–––––+ | | |
551 +–––––––––+ | | TLVs | +–––––––+ |
552 | +–––+ +––––––––+ pkt frag 2 |
553 | desc 0 | | +–––––+ +–––––––+ |
554 +–––––––––+ | TLVs | +–––+ | |
555 head+–+ | +––––––––+ | | |
556 | desc 1 | | +–––––+ +–––––––+ |pkt
557 +–––––––––+ | TLVs | | |
558 | | +––––––––+ | pkt frag 3 |
559 | | | +–––––––+ |
560 +–––––––––+ +–––+ | |
563 +–––––––––+ | | |
566 +–––––––––+ | | |
567 | | +–––––––+ +–+
569 +–––––––––+
573 The TLVs for Tx descriptor buffer are:
575 field width description
576 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
577 PPORT 4 Destination physical port #
578 TX_OFFLOAD 1 Hardware offload modes:
580 1: insert IP csum (ipv4 only)
581 2: insert TCP/UDP csum
582 3: L3 csum calc and insert
583 into csum offset (TX_L3_CSUM_OFF)
584 16-bit 1's complement csum value.
585 IPv4 pseudo-header and IP
586 already calculated by OS
588 4: TSO (TCP Segmentation Offload)
589 TX_L3_CSUM_OFF 2 For L3 csum offload mode, the offset,
590 from the beginning of the packet,
591 of the csum field in the L3 header
592 TX_TSO_MSS 2 For TSO offload mode, the
593 Maximum Segment Size in bytes
594 TX_TSO_HDR_LEN 2 For TSO offload mode, the
595 length of ethernet, IP, and
596 TCP/UDP headers, including IP
598 TX_FRAGS <array> Packet fragments
599 TX_FRAG <nest> Packet fragment
600 TX_FRAG_ADDR 8 DMA address of packet fragment
601 TX_FRAG_LEN 2 Packet fragment length
603 Possible status return codes in descriptor on completion are:
606 --------------------------------------------------------------------
608 -ROCKER_ENXIO address or data read err on desc buf or packet
610 -ROCKER_EINVAL bad pport or TSO or csum offloading error
611 -ROCKER_ENOMEM no memory for internal staging tx fragment
616 For packets ingressing on switch ports that are not forwarded by the switch but
617 rather directed to the host CPU for further processing are delivered in the DMA
618 RX ring. Rx descriptor buffers are allocated by software and placed on the
619 ring. Hardware will fill Rx descriptor buffers with packet data, write the
620 completion, and signal to software that a new packet is ready. Since Rx packet
621 size is not known a-priori, the Rx descriptor buffer must be allocated for
622 worst-case packet size. A single Rx descriptor will contain the entire Rx
623 packet data in one RX_FRAG. Other Rx TLVs describe and hardware offloads
624 performed on the packet, such as checksum validation.
626 The TLVs for Rx descriptor buffer are:
628 field width description
629 ---------------------------------------------------
630 PPORT 4 Source physical port #
631 RX_FLAGS 2 Packet parsing flags:
632 (1 << 0): IPv4 packet
633 (1 << 1): IPv6 packet
634 (1 << 2): csum calculated
635 (1 << 3): IPv4 csum good
636 (1 << 4): IP fragment
639 (1 << 7): TCP/UDP csum good
640 (1 << 8): Offload forward
641 RX_CSUM 2 IP calculated checksum:
642 IPv4: IP payload csum
643 IPv6: header and payload csum
644 (Only valid is RX_FLAGS:csum calc is set)
645 RX_FRAG_ADDR 8 DMA address of packet fragment
646 RX_FRAG_MAX_LEN 2 Packet maximum fragment length
647 RX_FRAG_LEN 2 Actual packet fragment length after receive
649 Offload forward RX_FLAG indicates the device has already forwarded the packet
650 so the host CPU should not also forward the packet.
652 Possible status return codes in descriptor on completion are:
655 --------------------------------------------------------------------
657 -ROCKER_ENXIO address or data read err on desc buf
658 -ROCKER_ENOMEM no memory for internal staging desc buf
659 -ROCKER_EMSGSIZE Rx descriptor buffer wasn't big enough to contain
660 packet data TLV and other TLVs.
663 SECTION 10: OF-DPA Mode
664 ======================
666 OF-DPA mode allows the switch to offload flow packet processing functions to
667 hardware. An OpenFlow controller would communicate with an OpenFlow agent
668 installed on the switch. The OpenFlow agent would (directly or indirectly)
669 communicate with the Rocker switch driver, which in turn would program switch
670 hardware with flow functionality, as defined in OF-DPA. The block diagram is:
672 +–––––––––––––––----–––+
674 | Remote Controller |
675 +––––––––+––----–––––––+
678 +––––––––+–––––––––+
681 +––––––––––––––––––+
684 +––––––––––––––––––+
686 +––––––––––––––––––+
689 +––––––––––––––––––+
691 To participate in flow functions, ports must be configure for OF-DPA mode
692 during switch initialization.
694 OF-DPA Flow Table Interface
695 ---------------------------
697 There are commands to add, modify, delete, and get stats of flow table entries.
698 The commands are issued using the DMA CMD descriptor ring. The following
699 commands are defined:
701 CMD_ADD: add an entry to flow table
702 CMD_MOD: modify an entry in flow table
703 CMD_DEL: delete an entry from flow table
704 CMD_GET_STATS: get stats for flow entry
706 TLVs for add and modify commands are:
708 field width description
709 ----------------------------------------------------
710 OF_DPA_CMD 2 CMD_[ADD|MOD]
711 OF_DPA_TBL 2 Flow table ID
716 40: multicast routing
719 OF_DPA_PRIORITY 4 Flow priority
720 OF_DPA_HARDTIME 4 Hard timeout for flow
721 OF_DPA_IDLETIME 4 Idle timeout for flow
722 OF_DPA_COOKIE 8 Cookie
724 Additional TLVs based on flow table ID:
726 Table ID 0: ingress port
728 field width description
729 ----------------------------------------------------
730 OF_DPA_IN_PPORT 4 ingress physical port number
731 OF_DPA_GOTO_TBL 2 goto table ID; zero to drop
735 field width description
736 ----------------------------------------------------
737 OF_DPA_IN_PPORT 4 ingress physical port number
738 OF_DPA_VLAN_ID 2 (N) vlan ID
739 OF_DPA_VLAN_ID_MASK 2 (N) vlan ID mask
740 OF_DPA_GOTO_TBL 2 goto table ID; zero to drop
741 OF_DPA_NEW_VLAN_ID 2 (N) new vlan ID
743 Table ID 20: termination mac
745 field width description
746 ----------------------------------------------------
747 OF_DPA_IN_PPORT 4 ingress physical port number
748 OF_DPA_IN_PPORT_MASK 4 ingress physical port number mask
749 OF_DPA_ETHERTYPE 2 (N) must be either 0x0800 or 0x86dd
750 OF_DPA_DST_MAC 6 (N) destination MAC
751 OF_DPA_DST_MAC_MASK 6 (N) destination MAC mask
752 OF_DPA_VLAN_ID 2 (N) vlan ID
753 OF_DPA_VLAN_ID_MASK 2 (N) vlan ID mask
754 OF_DPA_GOTO_TBL 2 only acceptable values are
755 unicast or multicast routing
757 OF_DPA_OUT_PPORT 2 if specified, must be
758 controller, set zero otherwise
760 Table ID 30: unicast routing
762 field width description
763 ----------------------------------------------------
764 OF_DPA_ETHERTYPE 2 (N) must be either 0x0800 or 0x86dd
765 OF_DPA_DST_IP 4 (N) destination IPv4 address.
766 Must be unicast address
767 OF_DPA_DST_IP_MASK 4 (N) IP mask. Must be prefix mask
768 OF_DPA_DST_IPV6 16 (N) destination IPv6 address.
769 Must be unicast address
770 OF_DPA_DST_IPV6_MASK 16 (N) IPv6 mask. Must be prefix mask
771 OF_DPA_GOTO_TBL 2 goto table ID; zero to drop
772 OF_DPA_GROUP_ID 4 data for GROUP action must
773 be an L3 Unicast group entry
775 Table ID 40: multicast routing
777 field width description
778 ----------------------------------------------------
779 OF_DPA_ETHERTYPE 2 (N) must be either 0x0800 or 0x86dd
780 OF_DPA_VLAN_ID 2 (N) vlan ID
781 OF_DPA_SRC_IP 4 (N) source IPv4. Optional,
782 can contain IPv4 address,
783 must be completely masked
785 OF_DPA_SRC_IP_MASK 4 (N) IP Mask
786 OF_DPA_DST_IP 4 (N) destination IPv4 address.
787 Must be multicast address
788 OF_DPA_SRC_IPV6 16 (N) source IPv6 Address. Optional.
789 Can contain IPv6 address,
790 must be completely masked
792 OF_DPA_SRC_IPV6_MASK 16 (N) IPv6 mask.
793 OF_DPA_DST_IPV6 16 (N) destination IPv6 Address. Must
795 Must be multicast address
796 OF_DPA_GOTO_TBL 2 goto table ID; zero to drop
797 OF_DPA_GROUP_ID 4 data for GROUP action must
798 be an L3 multicast group entry
800 Table ID 50: bridging
802 field width description
803 ----------------------------------------------------
804 OF_DPA_VLAN_ID 2 (N) vlan ID
805 OF_DPA_TUNNEL_ID 4 tunnel ID
806 OF_DPA_DST_MAC 6 (N) destination MAC
807 OF_DPA_DST_MAC_MASK 6 (N) destination MAC mask
808 OF_DPA_GOTO_TBL 2 goto table ID; zero to drop
809 OF_DPA_GROUP_ID 4 data for GROUP action must
810 be a L2 Interface, L2
812 or L2 Overlay group entry
814 OF_DPA_TUNNEL_LPORT 4 unicast Tenant Bridging
815 flows specify a tunnel
817 OF_DPA_OUT_PPORT 2 data for OUTPUT action,
818 restricted to CONTROLLER,
821 Table ID 60: acl policy
823 field width description
824 ----------------------------------------------------
825 OF_DPA_IN_PPORT 4 ingress physical port number
826 OF_DPA_IN_PPORT_MASK 4 ingress physical port number mask
827 OF_DPA_ETHERTYPE 2 (N) ethertype
828 OF_DPA_VLAN_ID 2 (N) vlan ID
829 OF_DPA_VLAN_ID_MASK 2 (N) vlan ID mask
830 OF_DPA_VLAN_PCP 2 (N) vlan Priority Code Point
831 OF_DPA_VLAN_PCP_MASK 2 (N) vlan Priority Code Point mask
832 OF_DPA_SRC_MAC 6 (N) source MAC
833 OF_DPA_SRC_MAC_MASK 6 (N) source MAC mask
834 OF_DPA_DST_MAC 6 (N) destination MAC
835 OF_DPA_DST_MAC_MASK 6 (N) destination MAC mask
836 OF_DPA_TUNNEL_ID 4 tunnel ID
837 OF_DPA_SRC_IP 4 (N) source IPv4. Optional,
838 can contain IPv4 address,
839 must be completely masked
841 OF_DPA_SRC_IP_MASK 4 (N) IP Mask
842 OF_DPA_DST_IP 4 (N) destination IPv4 address.
843 Must be multicast address
844 OF_DPA_DST_IP_MASK 4 (N) IP Mask
845 OF_DPA_SRC_IPV6 16 (N) source IPv6 Address. Optional.
846 Can contain IPv6 address,
847 must be completely masked
849 OF_DPA_SRC_IPV6_MASK 16 (N) IPv6 mask
850 OF_DPA_DST_IPV6 16 (N) destination IPv6 Address. Must
851 be multicast address.
852 OF_DPA_DST_IPV6_MASK 16 (N) IPv6 mask
853 OF_DPA_SRC_ARP_IP 4 (N) source IPv4 address in the ARP
854 payload. Only used if ethertype
856 OF_DPA_SRC_ARP_IP_MASK 4 (N) IP Mask
857 OF_DPA_IP_PROTO 1 IP protocol
858 OF_DPA_IP_PROTO_MASK 1 IP protocol mask
859 OF_DPA_IP_DSCP 1 DSCP
860 OF_DPA_IP_DSCP_MASK 1 DSCP mask
862 OF_DPA_IP_ECN_MASK 1 ECN mask
863 OF_DPA_L4_SRC_PORT 2 (N) L4 source port, only for
865 OF_DPA_L4_SRC_PORT_MASK 2 (N) L4 source port mask
866 OF_DPA_L4_DST_PORT 2 (N) L4 source port, only for
868 OF_DPA_L4_DST_PORT_MASK 2 (N) L4 source port mask
869 OF_DPA_ICMP_TYPE 1 ICMP type, only if IP
871 OF_DPA_ICMP_TYPE_MASK 1 ICMP type mask
872 OF_DPA_ICMP_CODE 1 ICMP code
873 OF_DPA_ICMP_CODE_MASK 1 ICMP code mask
874 OF_DPA_IPV6_LABEL 4 (N) IPv6 flow label
875 OF_DPA_IPV6_LABEL_MASK 4 (N) IPv6 flow label mask
876 OF_DPA_GROUP_ID 4 data for GROUP action
877 OF_DPA_QUEUE_ID_ACTION 1 write the queue ID
878 OF_DPA_NEW_QUEUE_ID 1 queue ID
879 OF_DPA_VLAN_PCP_ACTION 1 write the VLAN priority
880 OF_DPA_NEW_VLAN_PCP 1 VLAN priority
881 OF_DPA_IP_DSCP_ACTION 1 write the DSCP
882 OF_DPA_NEW_IP_DSCP 1 new DSCP
883 OF_DPA_TUNNEL_LPORT 4 restrct to valid tunnel
884 logical port, set to 0
886 OF_DPA_OUT_PPORT 2 data for OUTPUT action,
887 restricted to CONTROLLER,
889 OF_DPA_CLEAR_ACTIONS 4 if 1 packets matching flow are
890 dropped (all other instructions
893 TLVs for flow delete and get stats command are:
895 field width description
896 ---------------------------------------------------
897 OF_DPA_CMD 2 CMD_[DEL|GET_STATS]
898 OF_DPA_COOKIE 8 Cookie
900 On completion of get stats command, the descriptor buffer is written back with
903 field width description
904 ---------------------------------------------------
905 OF_DPA_STAT_DURATION 4 Flow duration
906 OF_DPA_STAT_RX_PKTS 8 Received packets
907 OF_DPA_STAT_TX_PKTS 8 Transmit packets
909 Possible status return codes in descriptor on completion are:
911 DESC_COMP_ERR command reason
912 --------------------------------------------------------------------
914 -ROCKER_EFAULT all head or tail index outside
916 -ROCKER_ENXIO all address or data read err on
918 -ROCKER_EMSGSIZE GET_STATS cmd descriptor buffer wasn't
919 big enough to contain write-back
921 -ROCKER_EINVAL all invalid parameters passed in
922 -ROCKER_EEXIST ADD entry already exists
923 -ROCKER_ENOSPC ADD no space left in flow table
924 -ROCKER_ENOENT MOD|DEL|GET_STATS cookie invalid
926 Group Table Interface
927 ---------------------
929 There are commands to add, modify, delete, and get stats of group table
930 entries. The commands are issued using the DMA CMD descriptor ring. The
931 following commands are defined:
933 CMD_ADD: add an entry to group table
934 CMD_MOD: modify an entry in group table
935 CMD_DEL: delete an entry from group table
936 CMD_GET_STATS: get stats for group entry
938 TLVs for add and modify commands are:
940 field width description
941 -----------------------------------------------------------
942 FLOW_GROUP_CMD 2 CMD_[ADD|MOD]
943 FLOW_GROUP_ID 2 Flow group ID
944 FLOW_GROUP_TYPE 1 Group type:
954 FLOW_VLAN_ID 2 Vlan ID (types 0, 3, 4, 6)
955 FLOW_L2_PORT 2 Port (types 0)
956 FLOW_INDEX 4 Index (all types but 0)
957 FLOW_OVERLAY_TYPE 1 Overlay sub-type (type 8):
958 0: Flood unicast tunnel
959 1: Flood multicast tunnel
960 2: Multicast unicast tunnel
961 3: Multicast multicast tunnel
962 FLOW_GROUP_ACTION nest
963 FLOW_GROUP_ID 2 next group ID in chain (all
965 FLOW_OUT_PORT 4 egress port (types 0, 8)
966 FLOW_POP_VLAN_TAG 1 strip outer VLAN tag (type 1
968 FLOW_VLAN_ID 2 (types 1, 5)
969 FLOW_SRC_MAC 6 (types 1, 2, 5)
970 FLOW_DST_MAC 6 (types 1, 2)
972 TLVs for flow delete and get stats command are:
974 field width description
975 -----------------------------------------------------------
976 FLOW_GROUP_CMD 2 CMD_[DEL|GET_STATS]
977 FLOW_GROUP_ID 2 Flow group ID
979 On completion of get stats command, the descriptor buffer is written back with
982 field width description
983 ---------------------------------------------------
984 FLOW_GROUP_ID 2 Flow group ID
985 FLOW_STAT_DURATION 4 Flow duration
986 FLOW_STAT_REF_COUNT 4 Flow reference count
987 FLOW_STAT_BUCKET_COUNT 4 Flow bucket count
989 Possible status return codes in descriptor on completion are:
991 DESC_COMP_ERR command reason
992 --------------------------------------------------------------------
994 -ROCKER_EFAULT all head or tail index outside
996 -ROCKER_ENXIO all address or data read err on
998 -ROCKER_ENOSPC GET_STATS cmd descriptor buffer wasn't
999 big enough to contain write-back
1001 -ROCKER_EINVAL ADD|MOD invalid parameters passed in
1002 -ROCKER_EEXIST ADD entry already exists
1003 -ROCKER_ENOSPC ADD no space left in flow table
1004 -ROCKER_ENOENT MOD|DEL|GET_STATS group ID invalid
1005 -ROCKER_EBUSY DEL group reference count non-zero
1006 -ROCKER_ENODEV ADD next group ID doesn't exist
1013 [1] OpenFlow Data Plane Abstraction (OF-DPA) Abstract Switch Specification,
1014 Version 1.0, from Broadcom Corporation, February 21, 2014.