Commit 47cfa3af authored by Vladimir Oltean's avatar Vladimir Oltean Committed by David S. Miller

docs: net: dsa: sja1105: document intended usage of virtual links

Add some verbiage describing how the hardware features of the switch are
exposed to users through tc-flower.
Signed-off-by: default avatarVladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
parent 834f8933
......@@ -230,6 +230,122 @@ simultaneously on two ports. The driver checks the consistency of the schedules
against this restriction and errors out when appropriate. Schedule analysis is
needed to avoid this, which is outside the scope of the document.
Routing actions (redirect, trap, drop)
--------------------------------------
The switch is able to offload flow-based redirection of packets to a set of
destination ports specified by the user. Internally, this is implemented by
making use of Virtual Links, a TTEthernet concept.
The driver supports 2 types of keys for Virtual Links:
- VLAN-aware virtual links: these match on destination MAC address, VLAN ID and
VLAN PCP.
- VLAN-unaware virtual links: these match on destination MAC address only.
The VLAN awareness state of the bridge (vlan_filtering) cannot be changed while
there are virtual link rules installed.
Composing multiple actions inside the same rule is supported. When only routing
actions are requested, the driver creates a "non-critical" virtual link. When
the action list also contains tc-gate (more details below), the virtual link
becomes "time-critical" (draws frame buffers from a reserved memory partition,
etc).
The 3 routing actions that are supported are "trap", "drop" and "redirect".
Example 1: send frames received on swp2 with a DA of 42:be:24:9b:76:20 to the
CPU and to swp3. This type of key (DA only) when the port's VLAN awareness
state is off::
tc qdisc add dev swp2 clsact
tc filter add dev swp2 ingress flower skip_sw dst_mac 42:be:24:9b:76:20 \
action mirred egress redirect dev swp3 \
action trap
Example 2: drop frames received on swp2 with a DA of 42:be:24:9b:76:20, a VID
of 100 and a PCP of 0::
tc filter add dev swp2 ingress protocol 802.1Q flower skip_sw \
dst_mac 42:be:24:9b:76:20 vlan_id 100 vlan_prio 0 action drop
Time-based ingress policing
---------------------------
The TTEthernet hardware abilities of the switch can be constrained to act
similarly to the Per-Stream Filtering and Policing (PSFP) clause specified in
IEEE 802.1Q-2018 (formerly 802.1Qci). This means it can be used to perform
tight timing-based admission control for up to 1024 flows (identified by a
tuple composed of destination MAC address, VLAN ID and VLAN PCP). Packets which
are received outside their expected reception window are dropped.
This capability can be managed through the offload of the tc-gate action. As
routing actions are intrinsic to virtual links in TTEthernet (which performs
explicit routing of time-critical traffic and does not leave that in the hands
of the FDB, flooding etc), the tc-gate action may never appear alone when
asking sja1105 to offload it. One (or more) redirect or trap actions must also
follow along.
Example: create a tc-taprio schedule that is phase-aligned with a tc-gate
schedule (the clocks must be synchronized by a 1588 application stack, which is
outside the scope of this document). No packet delivered by the sender will be
dropped. Note that the reception window is larger than the transmission window
(and much more so, in this example) to compensate for the packet propagation
delay of the link (which can be determined by the 1588 application stack).
Receiver (sja1105)::
tc qdisc add dev swp2 clsact
now=$(phc_ctl /dev/ptp1 get | awk '/clock time is/ {print $5}') && \
sec=$(echo $now | awk -F. '{print $1}') && \
base_time="$(((sec + 2) * 1000000000))" && \
echo "base time ${base_time}"
tc filter add dev swp2 ingress flower skip_sw \
dst_mac 42:be:24:9b:76:20 \
action gate base-time ${base_time} \
sched-entry OPEN 60000 -1 -1 \
sched-entry CLOSE 40000 -1 -1 \
action trap
Sender::
now=$(phc_ctl /dev/ptp0 get | awk '/clock time is/ {print $5}') && \
sec=$(echo $now | awk -F. '{print $1}') && \
base_time="$(((sec + 2) * 1000000000))" && \
echo "base time ${base_time}"
tc qdisc add dev eno0 parent root taprio \
num_tc 8 \
map 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 \
queues 1@0 1@1 1@2 1@3 1@4 1@5 1@6 1@7 \
base-time ${base_time} \
sched-entry S 01 50000 \
sched-entry S 00 50000 \
flags 2
The engine used to schedule the ingress gate operations is the same that the
one used for the tc-taprio offload. Therefore, the restrictions regarding the
fact that no two gate actions (either tc-gate or tc-taprio gates) may fire at
the same time (during the same 200 ns slot) still apply.
To come in handy, it is possible to share time-triggered virtual links across
more than 1 ingress port, via flow blocks. In this case, the restriction of
firing at the same time does not apply because there is a single schedule in
the system, that of the shared virtual link::
tc qdisc add dev swp2 ingress_block 1 clsact
tc qdisc add dev swp3 ingress_block 1 clsact
tc filter add block 1 flower skip_sw dst_mac 42:be:24:9b:76:20 \
action gate index 2 \
base-time 0 \
sched-entry OPEN 50000000 -1 -1 \
sched-entry CLOSE 50000000 -1 -1 \
action trap
Hardware statistics for each flow are also available ("pkts" counts the number
of dropped frames, which is a sum of frames dropped due to timing violations,
lack of destination ports and MTU enforcement checks). Byte-level counters are
not available.
Device Tree bindings and board design
=====================================
......
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