[Intel-wired-lan] [next-queue PATCH v4 6/8] igb: Add MAC address support for ethtool nftuple filters

Alexander Duyck alexander.duyck at gmail.com
Fri Mar 16 17:38:42 UTC 2018


On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 8:04 PM, Brown, Aaron F <aaron.f.brown at intel.com> wrote:
>> From: Intel-wired-lan [mailto:intel-wired-lan-bounces at osuosl.org] On
>> Behalf Of Vinicius Costa Gomes
>> Sent: Wednesday, March 7, 2018 4:37 PM
>> To: intel-wired-lan at lists.osuosl.org
>> Cc: netdev at vger.kernel.org; Sanchez-Palencia, Jesus <jesus.sanchez-
>> palencia at intel.com>
>> Subject: [Intel-wired-lan] [next-queue PATCH v4 6/8] igb: Add MAC address
>> support for ethtool nftuple filters
>>
>> This adds the capability of configuring the queue steering of arriving
>> packets based on their source and destination MAC addresses.
>>
>> In practical terms this adds support for the following use cases,
>> characterized by these examples:
>>
>> $ ethtool -N eth0 flow-type ether dst aa:aa:aa:aa:aa:aa action 0
>> (this will direct packets with destination address "aa:aa:aa:aa:aa:aa"
>> to the RX queue 0)
>>
>> $ ethtool -N eth0 flow-type ether src 44:44:44:44:44:44 action 3
>> (this will direct packets with source address "44:44:44:44:44:44" to
>> the RX queue 3)
>
> This seems to work fine on i210, and the patch series allows me to set the rx filters on the i350, i354 and i211, but it is not directing the packets to the queue I request.
>
> With the exception of i210 the rx_queues number does not seem to be effected by setting the filter.  In the case of i211 the rx packets stay on rx_queue 0 with or without an ether src or dst filter.  The first example one seems to work at first since it's directing to queue 0, but changing the filter to "action 1" does not change the behavior.  With the i350 and i354 ports the packets are spread across the rx_queues with or without the filter set.

Do any of the other parts actually support this functionality? I don't
think they do.

What we might look at doing instead of trying to add support for other
parts would be to explicitly limit this functionality to the i210
since if I am not mistaken this may be a feature only available in
that hardware.

Thanks.

- Alex


More information about the Intel-wired-lan mailing list