~ [ source navigation ] ~ [ diff markup ] ~ [ identifier search ] ~

TOMOYO Linux Cross Reference
Linux/Documentation/networking/device_drivers/ethernet/altera/altera_tse.rst

Version: ~ [ linux-6.12-rc7 ] ~ [ linux-6.11.7 ] ~ [ linux-6.10.14 ] ~ [ linux-6.9.12 ] ~ [ linux-6.8.12 ] ~ [ linux-6.7.12 ] ~ [ linux-6.6.60 ] ~ [ linux-6.5.13 ] ~ [ linux-6.4.16 ] ~ [ linux-6.3.13 ] ~ [ linux-6.2.16 ] ~ [ linux-6.1.116 ] ~ [ linux-6.0.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.19.17 ] ~ [ linux-5.18.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.17.15 ] ~ [ linux-5.16.20 ] ~ [ linux-5.15.171 ] ~ [ linux-5.14.21 ] ~ [ linux-5.13.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.12.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.11.22 ] ~ [ linux-5.10.229 ] ~ [ linux-5.9.16 ] ~ [ linux-5.8.18 ] ~ [ linux-5.7.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.6.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.5.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.4.285 ] ~ [ linux-5.3.18 ] ~ [ linux-5.2.21 ] ~ [ linux-5.1.21 ] ~ [ linux-5.0.21 ] ~ [ linux-4.20.17 ] ~ [ linux-4.19.323 ] ~ [ linux-4.18.20 ] ~ [ linux-4.17.19 ] ~ [ linux-4.16.18 ] ~ [ linux-4.15.18 ] ~ [ linux-4.14.336 ] ~ [ linux-4.13.16 ] ~ [ linux-4.12.14 ] ~ [ linux-4.11.12 ] ~ [ linux-4.10.17 ] ~ [ linux-4.9.337 ] ~ [ linux-4.4.302 ] ~ [ linux-3.10.108 ] ~ [ linux-2.6.32.71 ] ~ [ linux-2.6.0 ] ~ [ linux-2.4.37.11 ] ~ [ unix-v6-master ] ~ [ ccs-tools-1.8.12 ] ~ [ policy-sample ] ~
Architecture: ~ [ i386 ] ~ [ alpha ] ~ [ m68k ] ~ [ mips ] ~ [ ppc ] ~ [ sparc ] ~ [ sparc64 ] ~

  1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
  2 
  3 .. include:: <isonum.txt>
  4 
  5 =======================================
  6 Altera Triple-Speed Ethernet MAC driver
  7 =======================================
  8 
  9 Copyright |copy| 2008-2014 Altera Corporation
 10 
 11 This is the driver for the Altera Triple-Speed Ethernet (TSE) controllers
 12 using the SGDMA and MSGDMA soft DMA IP components. The driver uses the
 13 platform bus to obtain component resources. The designs used to test this
 14 driver were built for a Cyclone(R) V SOC FPGA board, a Cyclone(R) V FPGA board,
 15 and tested with ARM and NIOS processor hosts separately. The anticipated use
 16 cases are simple communications between an embedded system and an external peer
 17 for status and simple configuration of the embedded system.
 18 
 19 For more information visit www.altera.com and www.rocketboards.org. Support
 20 forums for the driver may be found on www.rocketboards.org, and a design used
 21 to test this driver may be found there as well. Support is also available from
 22 the maintainer of this driver, found in MAINTAINERS.
 23 
 24 The Triple-Speed Ethernet, SGDMA, and MSGDMA components are all soft IP
 25 components that can be assembled and built into an FPGA using the Altera
 26 Quartus toolchain. Quartus 13.1 and 14.0 were used to build the design that
 27 this driver was tested against. The sopc2dts tool is used to create the
 28 device tree for the driver, and may be found at rocketboards.org.
 29 
 30 The driver probe function examines the device tree and determines if the
 31 Triple-Speed Ethernet instance is using an SGDMA or MSGDMA component. The
 32 probe function then installs the appropriate set of DMA routines to
 33 initialize, setup transmits, receives, and interrupt handling primitives for
 34 the respective configurations.
 35 
 36 The SGDMA component is to be deprecated in the near future (over the next 1-2
 37 years as of this writing in early 2014) in favor of the MSGDMA component.
 38 SGDMA support is included for existing designs and reference in case a
 39 developer wishes to support their own soft DMA logic and driver support. Any
 40 new designs should not use the SGDMA.
 41 
 42 The SGDMA supports only a single transmit or receive operation at a time, and
 43 therefore will not perform as well compared to the MSGDMA soft IP. Please
 44 visit www.altera.com for known, documented SGDMA errata.
 45 
 46 Scatter-gather DMA is not supported by the SGDMA or MSGDMA at this time.
 47 Scatter-gather DMA will be added to a future maintenance update to this
 48 driver.
 49 
 50 Jumbo frames are not supported at this time.
 51 
 52 The driver limits PHY operations to 10/100Mbps, and has not yet been fully
 53 tested for 1Gbps. This support will be added in a future maintenance update.
 54 
 55 1. Kernel Configuration
 56 =======================
 57 
 58 The kernel configuration option is ALTERA_TSE:
 59 
 60  Device Drivers ---> Network device support ---> Ethernet driver support --->
 61  Altera Triple-Speed Ethernet MAC support (ALTERA_TSE)
 62 
 63 2. Driver parameters list
 64 =========================
 65 
 66         - debug: message level (0: no output, 16: all);
 67         - dma_rx_num: Number of descriptors in the RX list (default is 64);
 68         - dma_tx_num: Number of descriptors in the TX list (default is 64).
 69 
 70 3. Command line options
 71 =======================
 72 
 73 Driver parameters can be also passed in command line by using::
 74 
 75         altera_tse=dma_rx_num:128,dma_tx_num:512
 76 
 77 4. Driver information and notes
 78 ===============================
 79 
 80 4.1. Transmit process
 81 ---------------------
 82 When the driver's transmit routine is called by the kernel, it sets up a
 83 transmit descriptor by calling the underlying DMA transmit routine (SGDMA or
 84 MSGDMA), and initiates a transmit operation. Once the transmit is complete, an
 85 interrupt is driven by the transmit DMA logic. The driver handles the transmit
 86 completion in the context of the interrupt handling chain by recycling
 87 resource required to send and track the requested transmit operation.
 88 
 89 4.2. Receive process
 90 --------------------
 91 The driver will post receive buffers to the receive DMA logic during driver
 92 initialization. Receive buffers may or may not be queued depending upon the
 93 underlying DMA logic (MSGDMA is able queue receive buffers, SGDMA is not able
 94 to queue receive buffers to the SGDMA receive logic). When a packet is
 95 received, the DMA logic generates an interrupt. The driver handles a receive
 96 interrupt by obtaining the DMA receive logic status, reaping receive
 97 completions until no more receive completions are available.
 98 
 99 4.3. Interrupt Mitigation
100 -------------------------
101 The driver is able to mitigate the number of its DMA interrupts
102 using NAPI for receive operations. Interrupt mitigation is not yet supported
103 for transmit operations, but will be added in a future maintenance release.
104 
105 4.4) Ethtool support
106 --------------------
107 Ethtool is supported. Driver statistics and internal errors can be taken using:
108 ethtool -S ethX command. It is possible to dump registers etc.
109 
110 4.5) PHY Support
111 ----------------
112 The driver is compatible with PAL to work with PHY and GPHY devices.
113 
114 4.7) List of source files:
115 --------------------------
116  - Kconfig
117  - Makefile
118  - altera_tse_main.c: main network device driver
119  - altera_tse_ethtool.c: ethtool support
120  - altera_tse.h: private driver structure and common definitions
121  - altera_msgdma.h: MSGDMA implementation function definitions
122  - altera_sgdma.h: SGDMA implementation function definitions
123  - altera_msgdma.c: MSGDMA implementation
124  - altera_sgdma.c: SGDMA implementation
125  - altera_sgdmahw.h: SGDMA register and descriptor definitions
126  - altera_msgdmahw.h: MSGDMA register and descriptor definitions
127  - altera_utils.c: Driver utility functions
128  - altera_utils.h: Driver utility function definitions
129 
130 5. Debug Information
131 ====================
132 
133 The driver exports debug information such as internal statistics,
134 debug information, MAC and DMA registers etc.
135 
136 A user may use the ethtool support to get statistics:
137 e.g. using: ethtool -S ethX (that shows the statistics counters)
138 or sees the MAC registers: e.g. using: ethtool -d ethX
139 
140 The developer can also use the "debug" module parameter to get
141 further debug information.
142 
143 6. Statistics Support
144 =====================
145 
146 The controller and driver support a mix of IEEE standard defined statistics,
147 RFC defined statistics, and driver or Altera defined statistics. The four
148 specifications containing the standard definitions for these statistics are
149 as follows:
150 
151  - IEEE 802.3-2012 - IEEE Standard for Ethernet.
152  - RFC 2863 found at http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2863.txt.
153  - RFC 2819 found at http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2819.txt.
154  - Altera Triple Speed Ethernet User Guide, found at http://www.altera.com
155 
156 The statistics supported by the TSE and the device driver are as follows:
157 
158 "tx_packets" is equivalent to aFramesTransmittedOK defined in IEEE 802.3-2012,
159 Section 5.2.2.1.2. This statistics is the count of frames that are successfully
160 transmitted.
161 
162 "rx_packets" is equivalent to aFramesReceivedOK defined in IEEE 802.3-2012,
163 Section 5.2.2.1.5. This statistic is the count of frames that are successfully
164 received. This count does not include any error packets such as CRC errors,
165 length errors, or alignment errors.
166 
167 "rx_crc_errors" is equivalent to aFrameCheckSequenceErrors defined in IEEE
168 802.3-2012, Section 5.2.2.1.6. This statistic is the count of frames that are
169 an integral number of bytes in length and do not pass the CRC test as the frame
170 is received.
171 
172 "rx_align_errors" is equivalent to aAlignmentErrors defined in IEEE 802.3-2012,
173 Section 5.2.2.1.7. This statistic is the count of frames that are not an
174 integral number of bytes in length and do not pass the CRC test as the frame is
175 received.
176 
177 "tx_bytes" is equivalent to aOctetsTransmittedOK defined in IEEE 802.3-2012,
178 Section 5.2.2.1.8. This statistic is the count of data and pad bytes
179 successfully transmitted from the interface.
180 
181 "rx_bytes" is equivalent to aOctetsReceivedOK defined in IEEE 802.3-2012,
182 Section 5.2.2.1.14. This statistic is the count of data and pad bytes
183 successfully received by the controller.
184 
185 "tx_pause" is equivalent to aPAUSEMACCtrlFramesTransmitted defined in IEEE
186 802.3-2012, Section 30.3.4.2. This statistic is a count of PAUSE frames
187 transmitted from the network controller.
188 
189 "rx_pause" is equivalent to aPAUSEMACCtrlFramesReceived defined in IEEE
190 802.3-2012, Section 30.3.4.3. This statistic is a count of PAUSE frames
191 received by the network controller.
192 
193 "rx_errors" is equivalent to ifInErrors defined in RFC 2863. This statistic is
194 a count of the number of packets received containing errors that prevented the
195 packet from being delivered to a higher level protocol.
196 
197 "tx_errors" is equivalent to ifOutErrors defined in RFC 2863. This statistic
198 is a count of the number of packets that could not be transmitted due to errors.
199 
200 "rx_unicast" is equivalent to ifInUcastPkts defined in RFC 2863. This
201 statistic is a count of the number of packets received that were not addressed
202 to the broadcast address or a multicast group.
203 
204 "rx_multicast" is equivalent to ifInMulticastPkts defined in RFC 2863. This
205 statistic is a count of the number of packets received that were addressed to
206 a multicast address group.
207 
208 "rx_broadcast" is equivalent to ifInBroadcastPkts defined in RFC 2863. This
209 statistic is a count of the number of packets received that were addressed to
210 the broadcast address.
211 
212 "tx_discards" is equivalent to ifOutDiscards defined in RFC 2863. This
213 statistic is the number of outbound packets not transmitted even though an
214 error was not detected. An example of a reason this might occur is to free up
215 internal buffer space.
216 
217 "tx_unicast" is equivalent to ifOutUcastPkts defined in RFC 2863. This
218 statistic counts the number of packets transmitted that were not addressed to
219 a multicast group or broadcast address.
220 
221 "tx_multicast" is equivalent to ifOutMulticastPkts defined in RFC 2863. This
222 statistic counts the number of packets transmitted that were addressed to a
223 multicast group.
224 
225 "tx_broadcast" is equivalent to ifOutBroadcastPkts defined in RFC 2863. This
226 statistic counts the number of packets transmitted that were addressed to a
227 broadcast address.
228 
229 "ether_drops" is equivalent to etherStatsDropEvents defined in RFC 2819.
230 This statistic counts the number of packets dropped due to lack of internal
231 controller resources.
232 
233 "rx_total_bytes" is equivalent to etherStatsOctets defined in RFC 2819.
234 This statistic counts the total number of bytes received by the controller,
235 including error and discarded packets.
236 
237 "rx_total_packets" is equivalent to etherStatsPkts defined in RFC 2819.
238 This statistic counts the total number of packets received by the controller,
239 including error, discarded, unicast, multicast, and broadcast packets.
240 
241 "rx_undersize" is equivalent to etherStatsUndersizePkts defined in RFC 2819.
242 This statistic counts the number of correctly formed packets received less
243 than 64 bytes long.
244 
245 "rx_oversize" is equivalent to etherStatsOversizePkts defined in RFC 2819.
246 This statistic counts the number of correctly formed packets greater than 1518
247 bytes long.
248 
249 "rx_64_bytes" is equivalent to etherStatsPkts64Octets defined in RFC 2819.
250 This statistic counts the total number of packets received that were 64 octets
251 in length.
252 
253 "rx_65_127_bytes" is equivalent to etherStatsPkts65to127Octets defined in RFC
254 2819. This statistic counts the total number of packets received that were
255 between 65 and 127 octets in length inclusive.
256 
257 "rx_128_255_bytes" is equivalent to etherStatsPkts128to255Octets defined in
258 RFC 2819. This statistic is the total number of packets received that were
259 between 128 and 255 octets in length inclusive.
260 
261 "rx_256_511_bytes" is equivalent to etherStatsPkts256to511Octets defined in
262 RFC 2819. This statistic is the total number of packets received that were
263 between 256 and 511 octets in length inclusive.
264 
265 "rx_512_1023_bytes" is equivalent to etherStatsPkts512to1023Octets defined in
266 RFC 2819. This statistic is the total number of packets received that were
267 between 512 and 1023 octets in length inclusive.
268 
269 "rx_1024_1518_bytes" is equivalent to etherStatsPkts1024to1518Octets define
270 in RFC 2819. This statistic is the total number of packets received that were
271 between 1024 and 1518 octets in length inclusive.
272 
273 "rx_gte_1519_bytes" is a statistic defined specific to the behavior of the
274 Altera TSE. This statistics counts the number of received good and errored
275 frames between the length of 1519 and the maximum frame length configured
276 in the frm_length register. See the Altera TSE User Guide for More details.
277 
278 "rx_jabbers" is equivalent to etherStatsJabbers defined in RFC 2819. This
279 statistic is the total number of packets received that were longer than 1518
280 octets, and had either a bad CRC with an integral number of octets (CRC Error)
281 or a bad CRC with a non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
282 
283 "rx_runts" is equivalent to etherStatsFragments defined in RFC 2819. This
284 statistic is the total number of packets received that were less than 64 octets
285 in length and had either a bad CRC with an integral number of octets (CRC
286 error) or a bad CRC with a non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).

~ [ source navigation ] ~ [ diff markup ] ~ [ identifier search ] ~

kernel.org | git.kernel.org | LWN.net | Project Home | SVN repository | Mail admin

Linux® is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States and other countries.
TOMOYO® is a registered trademark of NTT DATA CORPORATION.

sflogo.php