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1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
2 Copyright(c) 2010-2016 Intel Corporation.
3
4 .. _testpmd_runtime:
5
6 Testpmd Runtime Functions
7 =========================
8
9 Where the testpmd application is started in interactive mode, (``-i|--interactive``),
10 it displays a prompt that can be used to start and stop forwarding,
11 configure the application, display statistics (including the extended NIC
12 statistics aka xstats) , set the Flow Director and other tasks::
13
14 testpmd>
15
16 The testpmd prompt has some, limited, readline support.
17 Common bash command-line functions such as ``Ctrl+a`` and ``Ctrl+e`` to go to the start and end of the prompt line are supported
18 as well as access to the command history via the up-arrow.
19
20 There is also support for tab completion.
21 If you type a partial command and hit ``<TAB>`` you get a list of the available completions:
22
23 .. code-block:: console
24
25 testpmd> show port <TAB>
26
27 info [Mul-choice STRING]: show|clear port info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap X
28 info [Mul-choice STRING]: show|clear port info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap all
29 stats [Mul-choice STRING]: show|clear port info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap X
30 stats [Mul-choice STRING]: show|clear port info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap all
31 ...
32
33
34 .. note::
35
36 Some examples in this document are too long to fit on one line are shown wrapped at `"\\"` for display purposes::
37
38 testpmd> set flow_ctrl rx (on|off) tx (on|off) (high_water) (low_water) \
39 (pause_time) (send_xon) (port_id)
40
41 In the real ``testpmd>`` prompt these commands should be on a single line.
42
43 Help Functions
44 --------------
45
46 The testpmd has on-line help for the functions that are available at runtime.
47 These are divided into sections and can be accessed using help, help section or help all:
48
49 .. code-block:: console
50
51 testpmd> help
52
53 help control : Start and stop forwarding.
54 help display : Displaying port, stats and config information.
55 help config : Configuration information.
56 help ports : Configuring ports.
57 help registers : Reading and setting port registers.
58 help filters : Filters configuration help.
59 help all : All of the above sections.
60
61
62 Command File Functions
63 ----------------------
64
65 To facilitate loading large number of commands or to avoid cutting and pasting where not
66 practical or possible testpmd supports alternative methods for executing commands.
67
68 * If started with the ``--cmdline-file=FILENAME`` command line argument testpmd
69 will execute all CLI commands contained within the file immediately before
70 starting packet forwarding or entering interactive mode.
71
72 .. code-block:: console
73
74 ./testpmd -n4 -r2 ... -- -i --cmdline-file=/home/ubuntu/flow-create-commands.txt
75 Interactive-mode selected
76 CLI commands to be read from /home/ubuntu/flow-create-commands.txt
77 Configuring Port 0 (socket 0)
78 Port 0: 7C:FE:90:CB:74:CE
79 Configuring Port 1 (socket 0)
80 Port 1: 7C:FE:90:CB:74:CA
81 Checking link statuses...
82 Port 0 Link Up - speed 10000 Mbps - full-duplex
83 Port 1 Link Up - speed 10000 Mbps - full-duplex
84 Done
85 Flow rule #0 created
86 Flow rule #1 created
87 ...
88 ...
89 Flow rule #498 created
90 Flow rule #499 created
91 Read all CLI commands from /home/ubuntu/flow-create-commands.txt
92 testpmd>
93
94
95 * At run-time additional commands can be loaded in bulk by invoking the ``load FILENAME``
96 command.
97
98 .. code-block:: console
99
100 testpmd> load /home/ubuntu/flow-create-commands.txt
101 Flow rule #0 created
102 Flow rule #1 created
103 ...
104 ...
105 Flow rule #498 created
106 Flow rule #499 created
107 Read all CLI commands from /home/ubuntu/flow-create-commands.txt
108 testpmd>
109
110
111 In all cases output from any included command will be displayed as standard output.
112 Execution will continue until the end of the file is reached regardless of
113 whether any errors occur. The end user must examine the output to determine if
114 any failures occurred.
115
116
117 Control Functions
118 -----------------
119
120 start
121 ~~~~~
122
123 Start packet forwarding with current configuration::
124
125 testpmd> start
126
127 start tx_first
128 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
129
130 Start packet forwarding with current configuration after sending specified number of bursts of packets::
131
132 testpmd> start tx_first (""|burst_num)
133
134 The default burst number is 1 when ``burst_num`` not presented.
135
136 stop
137 ~~~~
138
139 Stop packet forwarding, and display accumulated statistics::
140
141 testpmd> stop
142
143 quit
144 ~~~~
145
146 Quit to prompt::
147
148 testpmd> quit
149
150
151 Display Functions
152 -----------------
153
154 The functions in the following sections are used to display information about the
155 testpmd configuration or the NIC status.
156
157 show port
158 ~~~~~~~~~
159
160 Display information for a given port or all ports::
161
162 testpmd> show port (info|summary|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap) (port_id|all)
163
164 The available information categories are:
165
166 * ``info``: General port information such as MAC address.
167
168 * ``summary``: Brief port summary such as Device Name, Driver Name etc.
169
170 * ``stats``: RX/TX statistics.
171
172 * ``xstats``: RX/TX extended NIC statistics.
173
174 * ``fdir``: Flow Director information and statistics.
175
176 * ``stat_qmap``: Queue statistics mapping.
177
178 * ``dcb_tc``: DCB information such as TC mapping.
179
180 * ``cap``: Supported offload capabilities.
181
182 For example:
183
184 .. code-block:: console
185
186 testpmd> show port info 0
187
188 ********************* Infos for port 0 *********************
189
190 MAC address: XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX
191 Connect to socket: 0
192 memory allocation on the socket: 0
193 Link status: up
194 Link speed: 40000 Mbps
195 Link duplex: full-duplex
196 Promiscuous mode: enabled
197 Allmulticast mode: disabled
198 Maximum number of MAC addresses: 64
199 Maximum number of MAC addresses of hash filtering: 0
200 VLAN offload:
201 strip on, filter on, extend off, qinq strip off
202 Redirection table size: 512
203 Supported flow types:
204 ipv4-frag
205 ipv4-tcp
206 ipv4-udp
207 ipv4-sctp
208 ipv4-other
209 ipv6-frag
210 ipv6-tcp
211 ipv6-udp
212 ipv6-sctp
213 ipv6-other
214 l2_payload
215 port
216 vxlan
217 geneve
218 nvgre
219 vxlan-gpe
220
221 show port rss reta
222 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
223
224 Display the rss redirection table entry indicated by masks on port X::
225
226 testpmd> show port (port_id) rss reta (size) (mask0, mask1...)
227
228 size is used to indicate the hardware supported reta size
229
230 show port rss-hash
231 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
232
233 Display the RSS hash functions and RSS hash key of a port::
234
235 testpmd> show port (port_id) rss-hash [key]
236
237 clear port
238 ~~~~~~~~~~
239
240 Clear the port statistics and forward engine statistics for a given port or for all ports::
241
242 testpmd> clear port (info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap) (port_id|all)
243
244 For example::
245
246 testpmd> clear port stats all
247
248 show (rxq|txq)
249 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
250
251 Display information for a given port's RX/TX queue::
252
253 testpmd> show (rxq|txq) info (port_id) (queue_id)
254
255 show desc status(rxq|txq)
256 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
257
258 Display information for a given port's RX/TX descriptor status::
259
260 testpmd> show port (port_id) (rxq|txq) (queue_id) desc (desc_id) status
261
262
263 show config
264 ~~~~~~~~~~~
265
266 Displays the configuration of the application.
267 The configuration comes from the command-line, the runtime or the application defaults::
268
269 testpmd> show config (rxtx|cores|fwd|txpkts)
270
271 The available information categories are:
272
273 * ``rxtx``: RX/TX configuration items.
274
275 * ``cores``: List of forwarding cores.
276
277 * ``fwd``: Packet forwarding configuration.
278
279 * ``txpkts``: Packets to TX configuration.
280
281 For example:
282
283 .. code-block:: console
284
285 testpmd> show config rxtx
286
287 io packet forwarding - CRC stripping disabled - packets/burst=16
288 nb forwarding cores=2 - nb forwarding ports=1
289 RX queues=1 - RX desc=128 - RX free threshold=0
290 RX threshold registers: pthresh=8 hthresh=8 wthresh=4
291 TX queues=1 - TX desc=512 - TX free threshold=0
292 TX threshold registers: pthresh=36 hthresh=0 wthresh=0
293 TX RS bit threshold=0 - TXQ flags=0x0
294
295 set fwd
296 ~~~~~~~
297
298 Set the packet forwarding mode::
299
300 testpmd> set fwd (io|mac|macswap|flowgen| \
301 rxonly|txonly|csum|icmpecho|noisy) (""|retry)
302
303 ``retry`` can be specified for forwarding engines except ``rx_only``.
304
305 The available information categories are:
306
307 * ``io``: Forwards packets "as-is" in I/O mode.
308 This is the fastest possible forwarding operation as it does not access packets data.
309 This is the default mode.
310
311 * ``mac``: Changes the source and the destination Ethernet addresses of packets before forwarding them.
312 Default application behavior is to set source Ethernet address to that of the transmitting interface, and destination
313 address to a dummy value (set during init). The user may specify a target destination Ethernet address via the 'eth-peer' or
314 'eth-peers-configfile' command-line options. It is not currently possible to specify a specific source Ethernet address.
315
316 * ``macswap``: MAC swap forwarding mode.
317 Swaps the source and the destination Ethernet addresses of packets before forwarding them.
318
319 * ``flowgen``: Multi-flow generation mode.
320 Originates a number of flows (with varying destination IP addresses), and terminate receive traffic.
321
322 * ``rxonly``: Receives packets but doesn't transmit them.
323
324 * ``txonly``: Generates and transmits packets without receiving any.
325
326 * ``csum``: Changes the checksum field with hardware or software methods depending on the offload flags on the packet.
327
328 * ``icmpecho``: Receives a burst of packets, lookup for ICMP echo requests and, if any, send back ICMP echo replies.
329
330 * ``ieee1588``: Demonstrate L2 IEEE1588 V2 PTP timestamping for RX and TX. Requires ``CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_IEEE1588=y``.
331
332 * ``softnic``: Demonstrates the softnic forwarding operation. In this mode, packet forwarding is
333 similar to I/O mode except for the fact that packets are loopback to the softnic ports only. Therefore, portmask parameter should be set to softnic port only. The various software based custom NIC pipelines specified through the softnic firmware (DPDK packet framework script) can be tested in this mode. Furthermore, it allows to build 5-level hierarchical QoS scheduler as a default option that can be enabled through CLI once testpmd application is initialised. The user can modify the default scheduler hierarchy or can specify the new QoS Scheduler hierarchy through CLI. Requires ``CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_SOFTNIC=y``.
334
335 * ``noisy``: Noisy neighbor simulation.
336 Simulate more realistic behavior of a guest machine engaged in receiving
337 and sending packets performing Virtual Network Function (VNF).
338
339 Example::
340
341 testpmd> set fwd rxonly
342
343 Set rxonly packet forwarding mode
344
345
346 show fwd
347 ~~~~~~~~
348
349 When running, forwarding engines maintain statistics from the time they have been started.
350 Example for the io forwarding engine, with some packet drops on the tx side::
351
352 testpmd> show fwd stats all
353
354 ------- Forward Stats for RX Port= 0/Queue= 0 -> TX Port= 1/Queue= 0 -------
355 RX-packets: 274293770 TX-packets: 274293642 TX-dropped: 128
356
357 ------- Forward Stats for RX Port= 1/Queue= 0 -> TX Port= 0/Queue= 0 -------
358 RX-packets: 274301850 TX-packets: 274301850 TX-dropped: 0
359
360 ---------------------- Forward statistics for port 0 ----------------------
361 RX-packets: 274293802 RX-dropped: 0 RX-total: 274293802
362 TX-packets: 274301862 TX-dropped: 0 TX-total: 274301862
363 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
364
365 ---------------------- Forward statistics for port 1 ----------------------
366 RX-packets: 274301894 RX-dropped: 0 RX-total: 274301894
367 TX-packets: 274293706 TX-dropped: 128 TX-total: 274293834
368 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
369
370 +++++++++++++++ Accumulated forward statistics for all ports+++++++++++++++
371 RX-packets: 548595696 RX-dropped: 0 RX-total: 548595696
372 TX-packets: 548595568 TX-dropped: 128 TX-total: 548595696
373 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
374
375 .. note::
376
377 Enabling CONFIG_RTE_TEST_PMD_RECORD_CORE_CYCLES appends "CPU cycles/packet" stats, like:
378
379 CPU cycles/packet=xx.dd (total cycles=xxxx / total RX packets=xxxx) at xxx MHz clock
380
381 clear fwd
382 ~~~~~~~~~
383
384 Clear the forwarding engines statistics::
385
386 testpmd> clear fwd stats all
387
388 read rxd
389 ~~~~~~~~
390
391 Display an RX descriptor for a port RX queue::
392
393 testpmd> read rxd (port_id) (queue_id) (rxd_id)
394
395 For example::
396
397 testpmd> read rxd 0 0 4
398 0x0000000B - 0x001D0180 / 0x0000000B - 0x001D0180
399
400 read txd
401 ~~~~~~~~
402
403 Display a TX descriptor for a port TX queue::
404
405 testpmd> read txd (port_id) (queue_id) (txd_id)
406
407 For example::
408
409 testpmd> read txd 0 0 4
410 0x00000001 - 0x24C3C440 / 0x000F0000 - 0x2330003C
411
412 ddp get list
413 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
414
415 Get loaded dynamic device personalization (DDP) package info list::
416
417 testpmd> ddp get list (port_id)
418
419 ddp get info
420 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
421
422 Display information about dynamic device personalization (DDP) profile::
423
424 testpmd> ddp get info (profile_path)
425
426 show vf stats
427 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
428
429 Display VF statistics::
430
431 testpmd> show vf stats (port_id) (vf_id)
432
433 clear vf stats
434 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
435
436 Reset VF statistics::
437
438 testpmd> clear vf stats (port_id) (vf_id)
439
440 show port pctype mapping
441 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
442
443 List all items from the pctype mapping table::
444
445 testpmd> show port (port_id) pctype mapping
446
447 show rx offloading capabilities
448 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
449
450 List all per queue and per port Rx offloading capabilities of a port::
451
452 testpmd> show port (port_id) rx_offload capabilities
453
454 show rx offloading configuration
455 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
456
457 List port level and all queue level Rx offloading configuration::
458
459 testpmd> show port (port_id) rx_offload configuration
460
461 show tx offloading capabilities
462 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
463
464 List all per queue and per port Tx offloading capabilities of a port::
465
466 testpmd> show port (port_id) tx_offload capabilities
467
468 show tx offloading configuration
469 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
470
471 List port level and all queue level Tx offloading configuration::
472
473 testpmd> show port (port_id) tx_offload configuration
474
475 show tx metadata setting
476 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
477
478 Show Tx metadata value set for a specific port::
479
480 testpmd> show port (port_id) tx_metadata
481
482 show port supported ptypes
483 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
484
485 Show ptypes supported for a specific port::
486
487 testpmd> show port (port_id) ptypes
488
489 set port supported ptypes
490 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
491
492 set packet types classification for a specific port::
493
494 testpmd> set port (port_id) ptypes_mask (mask)
495
496 show port mac addresses info
497 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
498
499 Show mac addresses added for a specific port::
500
501 testpmd> show port (port_id) macs
502
503
504 show port multicast mac addresses info
505 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
506
507 Show multicast mac addresses added for a specific port::
508
509 testpmd> show port (port_id) mcast_macs
510
511 show device info
512 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
513
514 Show general information about devices probed::
515
516 testpmd> show device info (<identifier>|all)
517
518 For example:
519
520 .. code-block:: console
521
522 testpmd> show device info net_pcap0
523
524 ********************* Infos for device net_pcap0 *********************
525 Bus name: vdev
526 Driver name: net_pcap
527 Devargs: iface=enP2p6s0,phy_mac=1
528 Connect to socket: -1
529
530 Port id: 2
531 MAC address: 1E:37:93:28:04:B8
532 Device name: net_pcap0
533
534 dump physmem
535 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
536
537 Dumps all physical memory segment layouts::
538
539 testpmd> dump_physmem
540
541 dump memzone
542 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
543
544 Dumps the layout of all memory zones::
545
546 testpmd> dump_memzone
547
548 dump socket memory
549 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
550
551 Dumps the memory usage of all sockets::
552
553 testpmd> dump_socket_mem
554
555 dump struct size
556 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
557
558 Dumps the size of all memory structures::
559
560 testpmd> dump_struct_sizes
561
562 dump ring
563 ~~~~~~~~~
564
565 Dumps the status of all or specific element in DPDK rings::
566
567 testpmd> dump_ring [ring_name]
568
569 dump mempool
570 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
571
572 Dumps the statistics of all or specific memory pool::
573
574 testpmd> dump_mempool [mempool_name]
575
576 dump devargs
577 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
578
579 Dumps the user device list::
580
581 testpmd> dump_devargs
582
583 dump log types
584 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
585
586 Dumps the log level for all the dpdk modules::
587
588 testpmd> dump_log_types
589
590 show (raw_encap|raw_decap)
591 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
592
593 Display content of raw_encap/raw_decap buffers in hex::
594
595 testpmd> show <raw_encap|raw_decap> <index>
596 testpmd> show <raw_encap|raw_decap> all
597
598 For example::
599
600 testpmd> show raw_encap 6
601
602 index: 6 at [0x1c565b0], len=50
603 00000000: 00 00 00 00 00 00 16 26 36 46 56 66 08 00 45 00 | .......&6FVf..E.
604 00000010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 11 00 00 C0 A8 01 06 C0 A8 | ................
605 00000020: 03 06 00 00 00 FA 00 00 00 00 08 00 00 00 00 00 | ................
606 00000030: 06 00 | ..
607
608
609 Configuration Functions
610 -----------------------
611
612 The testpmd application can be configured from the runtime as well as from the command-line.
613
614 This section details the available configuration functions that are available.
615
616 .. note::
617
618 Configuration changes only become active when forwarding is started/restarted.
619
620 set default
621 ~~~~~~~~~~~
622
623 Reset forwarding to the default configuration::
624
625 testpmd> set default
626
627 set verbose
628 ~~~~~~~~~~~
629
630 Set the debug verbosity level::
631
632 testpmd> set verbose (level)
633
634 Available levels are as following:
635
636 * ``0`` silent except for error.
637 * ``1`` fully verbose except for Tx packets.
638 * ``2`` fully verbose except for Rx packets.
639 * ``> 2`` fully verbose.
640
641 set log
642 ~~~~~~~
643
644 Set the log level for a log type::
645
646 testpmd> set log global|(type) (level)
647
648 Where:
649
650 * ``type`` is the log name.
651
652 * ``level`` is the log level.
653
654 For example, to change the global log level::
655
656 testpmd> set log global (level)
657
658 Regexes can also be used for type. To change log level of user1, user2 and user3::
659
660 testpmd> set log user[1-3] (level)
661
662 set nbport
663 ~~~~~~~~~~
664
665 Set the number of ports used by the application:
666
667 set nbport (num)
668
669 This is equivalent to the ``--nb-ports`` command-line option.
670
671 set nbcore
672 ~~~~~~~~~~
673
674 Set the number of cores used by the application::
675
676 testpmd> set nbcore (num)
677
678 This is equivalent to the ``--nb-cores`` command-line option.
679
680 .. note::
681
682 The number of cores used must not be greater than number of ports used multiplied by the number of queues per port.
683
684 set coremask
685 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
686
687 Set the forwarding cores hexadecimal mask::
688
689 testpmd> set coremask (mask)
690
691 This is equivalent to the ``--coremask`` command-line option.
692
693 .. note::
694
695 The master lcore is reserved for command line parsing only and cannot be masked on for packet forwarding.
696
697 set portmask
698 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
699
700 Set the forwarding ports hexadecimal mask::
701
702 testpmd> set portmask (mask)
703
704 This is equivalent to the ``--portmask`` command-line option.
705
706 set burst
707 ~~~~~~~~~
708
709 Set number of packets per burst::
710
711 testpmd> set burst (num)
712
713 This is equivalent to the ``--burst command-line`` option.
714
715 When retry is enabled, the transmit delay time and number of retries can also be set::
716
717 testpmd> set burst tx delay (microseconds) retry (num)
718
719 set txpkts
720 ~~~~~~~~~~
721
722 Set the length of each segment of the TX-ONLY packets or length of packet for FLOWGEN mode::
723
724 testpmd> set txpkts (x[,y]*)
725
726 Where x[,y]* represents a CSV list of values, without white space.
727
728 set txsplit
729 ~~~~~~~~~~~
730
731 Set the split policy for the TX packets, applicable for TX-ONLY and CSUM forwarding modes::
732
733 testpmd> set txsplit (off|on|rand)
734
735 Where:
736
737 * ``off`` disable packet copy & split for CSUM mode.
738
739 * ``on`` split outgoing packet into multiple segments. Size of each segment
740 and number of segments per packet is determined by ``set txpkts`` command
741 (see above).
742
743 * ``rand`` same as 'on', but number of segments per each packet is a random value between 1 and total number of segments.
744
745 set corelist
746 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
747
748 Set the list of forwarding cores::
749
750 testpmd> set corelist (x[,y]*)
751
752 For example, to change the forwarding cores:
753
754 .. code-block:: console
755
756 testpmd> set corelist 3,1
757 testpmd> show config fwd
758
759 io packet forwarding - ports=2 - cores=2 - streams=2 - NUMA support disabled
760 Logical Core 3 (socket 0) forwards packets on 1 streams:
761 RX P=0/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=1/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:01
762 Logical Core 1 (socket 0) forwards packets on 1 streams:
763 RX P=1/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=0/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:00
764
765 .. note::
766
767 The cores are used in the same order as specified on the command line.
768
769 set portlist
770 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
771
772 Set the list of forwarding ports::
773
774 testpmd> set portlist (x[,y]*)
775
776 For example, to change the port forwarding:
777
778 .. code-block:: console
779
780 testpmd> set portlist 0,2,1,3
781 testpmd> show config fwd
782
783 io packet forwarding - ports=4 - cores=1 - streams=4
784 Logical Core 3 (socket 0) forwards packets on 4 streams:
785 RX P=0/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=2/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:01
786 RX P=2/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=0/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:00
787 RX P=1/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=3/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:03
788 RX P=3/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=1/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:02
789
790 set port setup on
791 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
792
793 Select how to retrieve new ports created after "port attach" command::
794
795 testpmd> set port setup on (iterator|event)
796
797 For each new port, a setup is done.
798 It will find the probed ports via RTE_ETH_FOREACH_MATCHING_DEV loop
799 in iterator mode, or via RTE_ETH_EVENT_NEW in event mode.
800
801 set tx loopback
802 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
803
804 Enable/disable tx loopback::
805
806 testpmd> set tx loopback (port_id) (on|off)
807
808 set drop enable
809 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
810
811 set drop enable bit for all queues::
812
813 testpmd> set all queues drop (port_id) (on|off)
814
815 set split drop enable (for VF)
816 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
817
818 set split drop enable bit for VF from PF::
819
820 testpmd> set vf split drop (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off)
821
822 set mac antispoof (for VF)
823 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
824
825 Set mac antispoof for a VF from the PF::
826
827 testpmd> set vf mac antispoof (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off)
828
829 set macsec offload
830 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
831
832 Enable/disable MACsec offload::
833
834 testpmd> set macsec offload (port_id) on encrypt (on|off) replay-protect (on|off)
835 testpmd> set macsec offload (port_id) off
836
837 set macsec sc
838 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
839
840 Configure MACsec secure connection (SC)::
841
842 testpmd> set macsec sc (tx|rx) (port_id) (mac) (pi)
843
844 .. note::
845
846 The pi argument is ignored for tx.
847 Check the NIC Datasheet for hardware limits.
848
849 set macsec sa
850 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
851
852 Configure MACsec secure association (SA)::
853
854 testpmd> set macsec sa (tx|rx) (port_id) (idx) (an) (pn) (key)
855
856 .. note::
857
858 The IDX value must be 0 or 1.
859 Check the NIC Datasheet for hardware limits.
860
861 set broadcast mode (for VF)
862 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
863
864 Set broadcast mode for a VF from the PF::
865
866 testpmd> set vf broadcast (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off)
867
868 vlan set stripq
869 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
870
871 Set the VLAN strip for a queue on a port::
872
873 testpmd> vlan set stripq (on|off) (port_id,queue_id)
874
875 vlan set stripq (for VF)
876 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
877
878 Set VLAN strip for all queues in a pool for a VF from the PF::
879
880 testpmd> set vf vlan stripq (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off)
881
882 vlan set insert (for VF)
883 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
884
885 Set VLAN insert for a VF from the PF::
886
887 testpmd> set vf vlan insert (port_id) (vf_id) (vlan_id)
888
889 vlan set tag (for VF)
890 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
891
892 Set VLAN tag for a VF from the PF::
893
894 testpmd> set vf vlan tag (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off)
895
896 vlan set antispoof (for VF)
897 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
898
899 Set VLAN antispoof for a VF from the PF::
900
901 testpmd> set vf vlan antispoof (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off)
902
903 vlan set (strip|filter|qinq_strip|extend)
904 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
905 Set the VLAN strip/filter/QinQ strip/extend on for a port::
906
907 testpmd> vlan set (strip|filter|qinq_strip|extend) (on|off) (port_id)
908
909 vlan set tpid
910 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
911
912 Set the inner or outer VLAN TPID for packet filtering on a port::
913
914 testpmd> vlan set (inner|outer) tpid (value) (port_id)
915
916 .. note::
917
918 TPID value must be a 16-bit number (value <= 65536).
919
920 rx_vlan add
921 ~~~~~~~~~~~
922
923 Add a VLAN ID, or all identifiers, to the set of VLAN identifiers filtered by port ID::
924
925 testpmd> rx_vlan add (vlan_id|all) (port_id)
926
927 .. note::
928
929 VLAN filter must be set on that port. VLAN ID < 4096.
930 Depending on the NIC used, number of vlan_ids may be limited to the maximum entries
931 in VFTA table. This is important if enabling all vlan_ids.
932
933 rx_vlan rm
934 ~~~~~~~~~~
935
936 Remove a VLAN ID, or all identifiers, from the set of VLAN identifiers filtered by port ID::
937
938 testpmd> rx_vlan rm (vlan_id|all) (port_id)
939
940 rx_vlan add (for VF)
941 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
942
943 Add a VLAN ID, to the set of VLAN identifiers filtered for VF(s) for port ID::
944
945 testpmd> rx_vlan add (vlan_id) port (port_id) vf (vf_mask)
946
947 rx_vlan rm (for VF)
948 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
949
950 Remove a VLAN ID, from the set of VLAN identifiers filtered for VF(s) for port ID::
951
952 testpmd> rx_vlan rm (vlan_id) port (port_id) vf (vf_mask)
953
954 tunnel_filter add
955 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
956
957 Add a tunnel filter on a port::
958
959 testpmd> tunnel_filter add (port_id) (outer_mac) (inner_mac) (ip_addr) \
960 (inner_vlan) (vxlan|nvgre|ipingre|vxlan-gpe) (imac-ivlan|imac-ivlan-tenid|\
961 imac-tenid|imac|omac-imac-tenid|oip|iip) (tenant_id) (queue_id)
962
963 The available information categories are:
964
965 * ``vxlan``: Set tunnel type as VXLAN.
966
967 * ``nvgre``: Set tunnel type as NVGRE.
968
969 * ``ipingre``: Set tunnel type as IP-in-GRE.
970
971 * ``vxlan-gpe``: Set tunnel type as VXLAN-GPE
972
973 * ``imac-ivlan``: Set filter type as Inner MAC and VLAN.
974
975 * ``imac-ivlan-tenid``: Set filter type as Inner MAC, VLAN and tenant ID.
976
977 * ``imac-tenid``: Set filter type as Inner MAC and tenant ID.
978
979 * ``imac``: Set filter type as Inner MAC.
980
981 * ``omac-imac-tenid``: Set filter type as Outer MAC, Inner MAC and tenant ID.
982
983 * ``oip``: Set filter type as Outer IP.
984
985 * ``iip``: Set filter type as Inner IP.
986
987 Example::
988
989 testpmd> tunnel_filter add 0 68:05:CA:28:09:82 00:00:00:00:00:00 \
990 192.168.2.2 0 ipingre oip 1 1
991
992 Set an IP-in-GRE tunnel on port 0, and the filter type is Outer IP.
993
994 tunnel_filter remove
995 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
996
997 Remove a tunnel filter on a port::
998
999 testpmd> tunnel_filter rm (port_id) (outer_mac) (inner_mac) (ip_addr) \
1000 (inner_vlan) (vxlan|nvgre|ipingre|vxlan-gpe) (imac-ivlan|imac-ivlan-tenid|\
1001 imac-tenid|imac|omac-imac-tenid|oip|iip) (tenant_id) (queue_id)
1002
1003 rx_vxlan_port add
1004 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1005
1006 Add an UDP port for VXLAN packet filter on a port::
1007
1008 testpmd> rx_vxlan_port add (udp_port) (port_id)
1009
1010 rx_vxlan_port remove
1011 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1012
1013 Remove an UDP port for VXLAN packet filter on a port::
1014
1015 testpmd> rx_vxlan_port rm (udp_port) (port_id)
1016
1017 tx_vlan set
1018 ~~~~~~~~~~~
1019
1020 Set hardware insertion of VLAN IDs in packets sent on a port::
1021
1022 testpmd> tx_vlan set (port_id) vlan_id[, vlan_id_outer]
1023
1024 For example, set a single VLAN ID (5) insertion on port 0::
1025
1026 tx_vlan set 0 5
1027
1028 Or, set double VLAN ID (inner: 2, outer: 3) insertion on port 1::
1029
1030 tx_vlan set 1 2 3
1031
1032
1033 tx_vlan set pvid
1034 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1035
1036 Set port based hardware insertion of VLAN ID in packets sent on a port::
1037
1038 testpmd> tx_vlan set pvid (port_id) (vlan_id) (on|off)
1039
1040 tx_vlan reset
1041 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1042
1043 Disable hardware insertion of a VLAN header in packets sent on a port::
1044
1045 testpmd> tx_vlan reset (port_id)
1046
1047 csum set
1048 ~~~~~~~~
1049
1050 Select hardware or software calculation of the checksum when
1051 transmitting a packet using the ``csum`` forwarding engine::
1052
1053 testpmd> csum set (ip|udp|tcp|sctp|outer-ip|outer-udp) (hw|sw) (port_id)
1054
1055 Where:
1056
1057 * ``ip|udp|tcp|sctp`` always relate to the inner layer.
1058
1059 * ``outer-ip`` relates to the outer IP layer (only for IPv4) in the case where the packet is recognized
1060 as a tunnel packet by the forwarding engine (vxlan, gre and ipip are
1061 supported). See also the ``csum parse-tunnel`` command.
1062
1063 * ``outer-udp`` relates to the outer UDP layer in the case where the packet is recognized
1064 as a tunnel packet by the forwarding engine (vxlan, vxlan-gpe are
1065 supported). See also the ``csum parse-tunnel`` command.
1066
1067 .. note::
1068
1069 Check the NIC Datasheet for hardware limits.
1070
1071 RSS queue region
1072 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1073
1074 Set RSS queue region span on a port::
1075
1076 testpmd> set port (port_id) queue-region region_id (value) \
1077 queue_start_index (value) queue_num (value)
1078
1079 Set flowtype mapping on a RSS queue region on a port::
1080
1081 testpmd> set port (port_id) queue-region region_id (value) flowtype (value)
1082
1083 where:
1084
1085 * For the flowtype(pctype) of packet,the specific index for each type has
1086 been defined in file i40e_type.h as enum i40e_filter_pctype.
1087
1088 Set user priority mapping on a RSS queue region on a port::
1089
1090 testpmd> set port (port_id) queue-region UP (value) region_id (value)
1091
1092 Flush all queue region related configuration on a port::
1093
1094 testpmd> set port (port_id) queue-region flush (on|off)
1095
1096 where:
1097
1098 * ``on``: is just an enable function which server for other configuration,
1099 it is for all configuration about queue region from up layer,
1100 at first will only keep in DPDK software stored in driver,
1101 only after "flush on", it commit all configuration to HW.
1102
1103 * ``"off``: is just clean all configuration about queue region just now,
1104 and restore all to DPDK i40e driver default config when start up.
1105
1106 Show all queue region related configuration info on a port::
1107
1108 testpmd> show port (port_id) queue-region
1109
1110 .. note::
1111
1112 Queue region only support on PF by now, so these command is
1113 only for configuration of queue region on PF port.
1114
1115 csum parse-tunnel
1116 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1117
1118 Define how tunneled packets should be handled by the csum forward
1119 engine::
1120
1121 testpmd> csum parse-tunnel (on|off) (tx_port_id)
1122
1123 If enabled, the csum forward engine will try to recognize supported
1124 tunnel headers (vxlan, gre, ipip).
1125
1126 If disabled, treat tunnel packets as non-tunneled packets (a inner
1127 header is handled as a packet payload).
1128
1129 .. note::
1130
1131 The port argument is the TX port like in the ``csum set`` command.
1132
1133 Example:
1134
1135 Consider a packet in packet like the following::
1136
1137 eth_out/ipv4_out/udp_out/vxlan/eth_in/ipv4_in/tcp_in
1138
1139 * If parse-tunnel is enabled, the ``ip|udp|tcp|sctp`` parameters of ``csum set``
1140 command relate to the inner headers (here ``ipv4_in`` and ``tcp_in``), and the
1141 ``outer-ip|outer-udp`` parameter relates to the outer headers (here ``ipv4_out`` and ``udp_out``).
1142
1143 * If parse-tunnel is disabled, the ``ip|udp|tcp|sctp`` parameters of ``csum set``
1144 command relate to the outer headers, here ``ipv4_out`` and ``udp_out``.
1145
1146 csum show
1147 ~~~~~~~~~
1148
1149 Display tx checksum offload configuration::
1150
1151 testpmd> csum show (port_id)
1152
1153 tso set
1154 ~~~~~~~
1155
1156 Enable TCP Segmentation Offload (TSO) in the ``csum`` forwarding engine::
1157
1158 testpmd> tso set (segsize) (port_id)
1159
1160 .. note::
1161
1162 Check the NIC datasheet for hardware limits.
1163
1164 tso show
1165 ~~~~~~~~
1166
1167 Display the status of TCP Segmentation Offload::
1168
1169 testpmd> tso show (port_id)
1170
1171 tunnel tso set
1172 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1173
1174 Set tso segment size of tunneled packets for a port in csum engine::
1175
1176 testpmd> tunnel_tso set (tso_segsz) (port_id)
1177
1178 tunnel tso show
1179 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1180
1181 Display the status of tunneled TCP Segmentation Offload for a port::
1182
1183 testpmd> tunnel_tso show (port_id)
1184
1185 set port - gro
1186 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1187
1188 Enable or disable GRO in ``csum`` forwarding engine::
1189
1190 testpmd> set port <port_id> gro on|off
1191
1192 If enabled, the csum forwarding engine will perform GRO on the TCP/IPv4
1193 packets received from the given port.
1194
1195 If disabled, packets received from the given port won't be performed
1196 GRO. By default, GRO is disabled for all ports.
1197
1198 .. note::
1199
1200 When enable GRO for a port, TCP/IPv4 packets received from the port
1201 will be performed GRO. After GRO, all merged packets have bad
1202 checksums, since the GRO library doesn't re-calculate checksums for
1203 the merged packets. Therefore, if users want the merged packets to
1204 have correct checksums, please select HW IP checksum calculation and
1205 HW TCP checksum calculation for the port which the merged packets are
1206 transmitted to.
1207
1208 show port - gro
1209 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1210
1211 Display GRO configuration for a given port::
1212
1213 testpmd> show port <port_id> gro
1214
1215 set gro flush
1216 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1217
1218 Set the cycle to flush the GROed packets from reassembly tables::
1219
1220 testpmd> set gro flush <cycles>
1221
1222 When enable GRO, the csum forwarding engine performs GRO on received
1223 packets, and the GROed packets are stored in reassembly tables. Users
1224 can use this command to determine when the GROed packets are flushed
1225 from the reassembly tables.
1226
1227 The ``cycles`` is measured in GRO operation times. The csum forwarding
1228 engine flushes the GROed packets from the tables every ``cycles`` GRO
1229 operations.
1230
1231 By default, the value of ``cycles`` is 1, which means flush GROed packets
1232 from the reassembly tables as soon as one GRO operation finishes. The value
1233 of ``cycles`` should be in the range of 1 to ``GRO_MAX_FLUSH_CYCLES``.
1234
1235 Please note that the large value of ``cycles`` may cause the poor TCP/IP
1236 stack performance. Because the GROed packets are delayed to arrive the
1237 stack, thus causing more duplicated ACKs and TCP retransmissions.
1238
1239 set port - gso
1240 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1241
1242 Toggle per-port GSO support in ``csum`` forwarding engine::
1243
1244 testpmd> set port <port_id> gso on|off
1245
1246 If enabled, the csum forwarding engine will perform GSO on supported IPv4
1247 packets, transmitted on the given port.
1248
1249 If disabled, packets transmitted on the given port will not undergo GSO.
1250 By default, GSO is disabled for all ports.
1251
1252 .. note::
1253
1254 When GSO is enabled on a port, supported IPv4 packets transmitted on that
1255 port undergo GSO. Afterwards, the segmented packets are represented by
1256 multi-segment mbufs; however, the csum forwarding engine doesn't calculation
1257 of checksums for GSO'd segments in SW. As a result, if users want correct
1258 checksums in GSO segments, they should enable HW checksum calculation for
1259 GSO-enabled ports.
1260
1261 For example, HW checksum calculation for VxLAN GSO'd packets may be enabled
1262 by setting the following options in the csum forwarding engine:
1263
1264 testpmd> csum set outer_ip hw <port_id>
1265
1266 testpmd> csum set ip hw <port_id>
1267
1268 testpmd> csum set tcp hw <port_id>
1269
1270 UDP GSO is the same as IP fragmentation, which treats the UDP header
1271 as the payload and does not modify it during segmentation. That is,
1272 after UDP GSO, only the first output fragment has the original UDP
1273 header. Therefore, users need to enable HW IP checksum calculation
1274 and SW UDP checksum calculation for GSO-enabled ports, if they want
1275 correct checksums for UDP/IPv4 packets.
1276
1277 set gso segsz
1278 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1279
1280 Set the maximum GSO segment size (measured in bytes), which includes the
1281 packet header and the packet payload for GSO-enabled ports (global)::
1282
1283 testpmd> set gso segsz <length>
1284
1285 show port - gso
1286 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1287
1288 Display the status of Generic Segmentation Offload for a given port::
1289
1290 testpmd> show port <port_id> gso
1291
1292 mac_addr add
1293 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
1294
1295 Add an alternative MAC address to a port::
1296
1297 testpmd> mac_addr add (port_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX)
1298
1299 mac_addr remove
1300 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1301
1302 Remove a MAC address from a port::
1303
1304 testpmd> mac_addr remove (port_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX)
1305
1306 mcast_addr add
1307 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1308
1309 To add the multicast MAC address to/from the set of multicast addresses
1310 filtered by port::
1311
1312 testpmd> mcast_addr add (port_id) (mcast_addr)
1313
1314 mcast_addr remove
1315 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1316
1317 To remove the multicast MAC address to/from the set of multicast addresses
1318 filtered by port::
1319
1320 testpmd> mcast_addr remove (port_id) (mcast_addr)
1321
1322 mac_addr add (for VF)
1323 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1324
1325 Add an alternative MAC address for a VF to a port::
1326
1327 testpmd> mac_add add port (port_id) vf (vf_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX)
1328
1329 mac_addr set
1330 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
1331
1332 Set the default MAC address for a port::
1333
1334 testpmd> mac_addr set (port_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX)
1335
1336 mac_addr set (for VF)
1337 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1338
1339 Set the MAC address for a VF from the PF::
1340
1341 testpmd> set vf mac addr (port_id) (vf_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX)
1342
1343 set eth-peer
1344 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
1345
1346 Set the forwarding peer address for certain port::
1347
1348 testpmd> set eth-peer (port_id) (peer_addr)
1349
1350 This is equivalent to the ``--eth-peer`` command-line option.
1351
1352 set port-uta
1353 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
1354
1355 Set the unicast hash filter(s) on/off for a port::
1356
1357 testpmd> set port (port_id) uta (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX|all) (on|off)
1358
1359 set promisc
1360 ~~~~~~~~~~~
1361
1362 Set the promiscuous mode on for a port or for all ports.
1363 In promiscuous mode packets are not dropped if they aren't for the specified MAC address::
1364
1365 testpmd> set promisc (port_id|all) (on|off)
1366
1367 set allmulti
1368 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
1369
1370 Set the allmulti mode for a port or for all ports::
1371
1372 testpmd> set allmulti (port_id|all) (on|off)
1373
1374 Same as the ifconfig (8) option. Controls how multicast packets are handled.
1375
1376 set promisc (for VF)
1377 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1378
1379 Set the unicast promiscuous mode for a VF from PF.
1380 It's supported by Intel i40e NICs now.
1381 In promiscuous mode packets are not dropped if they aren't for the specified MAC address::
1382
1383 testpmd> set vf promisc (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off)
1384
1385 set allmulticast (for VF)
1386 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1387
1388 Set the multicast promiscuous mode for a VF from PF.
1389 It's supported by Intel i40e NICs now.
1390 In promiscuous mode packets are not dropped if they aren't for the specified MAC address::
1391
1392 testpmd> set vf allmulti (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off)
1393
1394 set tx max bandwidth (for VF)
1395 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1396
1397 Set TX max absolute bandwidth (Mbps) for a VF from PF::
1398
1399 testpmd> set vf tx max-bandwidth (port_id) (vf_id) (max_bandwidth)
1400
1401 set tc tx min bandwidth (for VF)
1402 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1403
1404 Set all TCs' TX min relative bandwidth (%) for a VF from PF::
1405
1406 testpmd> set vf tc tx min-bandwidth (port_id) (vf_id) (bw1, bw2, ...)
1407
1408 set tc tx max bandwidth (for VF)
1409 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1410
1411 Set a TC's TX max absolute bandwidth (Mbps) for a VF from PF::
1412
1413 testpmd> set vf tc tx max-bandwidth (port_id) (vf_id) (tc_no) (max_bandwidth)
1414
1415 set tc strict link priority mode
1416 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1417
1418 Set some TCs' strict link priority mode on a physical port::
1419
1420 testpmd> set tx strict-link-priority (port_id) (tc_bitmap)
1421
1422 set tc tx min bandwidth
1423 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1424
1425 Set all TCs' TX min relative bandwidth (%) globally for all PF and VFs::
1426
1427 testpmd> set tc tx min-bandwidth (port_id) (bw1, bw2, ...)
1428
1429 set flow_ctrl rx
1430 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1431
1432 Set the link flow control parameter on a port::
1433
1434 testpmd> set flow_ctrl rx (on|off) tx (on|off) (high_water) (low_water) \
1435 (pause_time) (send_xon) mac_ctrl_frame_fwd (on|off) \
1436 autoneg (on|off) (port_id)
1437
1438 Where:
1439
1440 * ``high_water`` (integer): High threshold value to trigger XOFF.
1441
1442 * ``low_water`` (integer): Low threshold value to trigger XON.
1443
1444 * ``pause_time`` (integer): Pause quota in the Pause frame.
1445
1446 * ``send_xon`` (0/1): Send XON frame.
1447
1448 * ``mac_ctrl_frame_fwd``: Enable receiving MAC control frames.
1449
1450 * ``autoneg``: Change the auto-negotiation parameter.
1451
1452 set pfc_ctrl rx
1453 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1454
1455 Set the priority flow control parameter on a port::
1456
1457 testpmd> set pfc_ctrl rx (on|off) tx (on|off) (high_water) (low_water) \
1458 (pause_time) (priority) (port_id)
1459
1460 Where:
1461
1462 * ``high_water`` (integer): High threshold value.
1463
1464 * ``low_water`` (integer): Low threshold value.
1465
1466 * ``pause_time`` (integer): Pause quota in the Pause frame.
1467
1468 * ``priority`` (0-7): VLAN User Priority.
1469
1470 set stat_qmap
1471 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1472
1473 Set statistics mapping (qmapping 0..15) for RX/TX queue on port::
1474
1475 testpmd> set stat_qmap (tx|rx) (port_id) (queue_id) (qmapping)
1476
1477 For example, to set rx queue 2 on port 0 to mapping 5::
1478
1479 testpmd>set stat_qmap rx 0 2 5
1480
1481 set xstats-hide-zero
1482 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1483
1484 Set the option to hide zero values for xstats display::
1485
1486 testpmd> set xstats-hide-zero on|off
1487
1488 .. note::
1489
1490 By default, the zero values are displayed for xstats.
1491
1492 set port - rx/tx (for VF)
1493 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1494
1495 Set VF receive/transmit from a port::
1496
1497 testpmd> set port (port_id) vf (vf_id) (rx|tx) (on|off)
1498
1499 set port - mac address filter (for VF)
1500 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1501
1502 Add/Remove unicast or multicast MAC addr filter for a VF::
1503
1504 testpmd> set port (port_id) vf (vf_id) (mac_addr) \
1505 (exact-mac|exact-mac-vlan|hashmac|hashmac-vlan) (on|off)
1506
1507 set port - rx mode(for VF)
1508 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1509
1510 Set the VF receive mode of a port::
1511
1512 testpmd> set port (port_id) vf (vf_id) \
1513 rxmode (AUPE|ROPE|BAM|MPE) (on|off)
1514
1515 The available receive modes are:
1516
1517 * ``AUPE``: Accepts untagged VLAN.
1518
1519 * ``ROPE``: Accepts unicast hash.
1520
1521 * ``BAM``: Accepts broadcast packets.
1522
1523 * ``MPE``: Accepts all multicast packets.
1524
1525 set port - tx_rate (for Queue)
1526 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1527
1528 Set TX rate limitation for a queue on a port::
1529
1530 testpmd> set port (port_id) queue (queue_id) rate (rate_value)
1531
1532 set port - tx_rate (for VF)
1533 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1534
1535 Set TX rate limitation for queues in VF on a port::
1536
1537 testpmd> set port (port_id) vf (vf_id) rate (rate_value) queue_mask (queue_mask)
1538
1539 set port - mirror rule
1540 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1541
1542 Set pool or vlan type mirror rule for a port::
1543
1544 testpmd> set port (port_id) mirror-rule (rule_id) \
1545 (pool-mirror-up|pool-mirror-down|vlan-mirror) \
1546 (poolmask|vlanid[,vlanid]*) dst-pool (pool_id) (on|off)
1547
1548 Set link mirror rule for a port::
1549
1550 testpmd> set port (port_id) mirror-rule (rule_id) \
1551 (uplink-mirror|downlink-mirror) dst-pool (pool_id) (on|off)
1552
1553 For example to enable mirror traffic with vlan 0,1 to pool 0::
1554
1555 set port 0 mirror-rule 0 vlan-mirror 0,1 dst-pool 0 on
1556
1557 reset port - mirror rule
1558 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1559
1560 Reset a mirror rule for a port::
1561
1562 testpmd> reset port (port_id) mirror-rule (rule_id)
1563
1564 set flush_rx
1565 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
1566
1567 Set the flush on RX streams before forwarding.
1568 The default is flush ``on``.
1569 Mainly used with PCAP drivers to turn off the default behavior of flushing the first 512 packets on RX streams::
1570
1571 testpmd> set flush_rx off
1572
1573 set bypass mode
1574 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1575
1576 Set the bypass mode for the lowest port on bypass enabled NIC::
1577
1578 testpmd> set bypass mode (normal|bypass|isolate) (port_id)
1579
1580 set bypass event
1581 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1582
1583 Set the event required to initiate specified bypass mode for the lowest port on a bypass enabled::
1584
1585 testpmd> set bypass event (timeout|os_on|os_off|power_on|power_off) \
1586 mode (normal|bypass|isolate) (port_id)
1587
1588 Where:
1589
1590 * ``timeout``: Enable bypass after watchdog timeout.
1591
1592 * ``os_on``: Enable bypass when OS/board is powered on.
1593
1594 * ``os_off``: Enable bypass when OS/board is powered off.
1595
1596 * ``power_on``: Enable bypass when power supply is turned on.
1597
1598 * ``power_off``: Enable bypass when power supply is turned off.
1599
1600
1601 set bypass timeout
1602 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1603
1604 Set the bypass watchdog timeout to ``n`` seconds where 0 = instant::
1605
1606 testpmd> set bypass timeout (0|1.5|2|3|4|8|16|32)
1607
1608 show bypass config
1609 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1610
1611 Show the bypass configuration for a bypass enabled NIC using the lowest port on the NIC::
1612
1613 testpmd> show bypass config (port_id)
1614
1615 set link up
1616 ~~~~~~~~~~~
1617
1618 Set link up for a port::
1619
1620 testpmd> set link-up port (port id)
1621
1622 set link down
1623 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1624
1625 Set link down for a port::
1626
1627 testpmd> set link-down port (port id)
1628
1629 E-tag set
1630 ~~~~~~~~~
1631
1632 Enable E-tag insertion for a VF on a port::
1633
1634 testpmd> E-tag set insertion on port-tag-id (value) port (port_id) vf (vf_id)
1635
1636 Disable E-tag insertion for a VF on a port::
1637
1638 testpmd> E-tag set insertion off port (port_id) vf (vf_id)
1639
1640 Enable/disable E-tag stripping on a port::
1641
1642 testpmd> E-tag set stripping (on|off) port (port_id)
1643
1644 Enable/disable E-tag based forwarding on a port::
1645
1646 testpmd> E-tag set forwarding (on|off) port (port_id)
1647
1648 Add an E-tag forwarding filter on a port::
1649
1650 testpmd> E-tag set filter add e-tag-id (value) dst-pool (pool_id) port (port_id)
1651
1652 Delete an E-tag forwarding filter on a port::
1653 testpmd> E-tag set filter del e-tag-id (value) port (port_id)
1654
1655 ddp add
1656 ~~~~~~~
1657
1658 Load a dynamic device personalization (DDP) profile and store backup profile::
1659
1660 testpmd> ddp add (port_id) (profile_path[,backup_profile_path])
1661
1662 ddp del
1663 ~~~~~~~
1664
1665 Delete a dynamic device personalization profile and restore backup profile::
1666
1667 testpmd> ddp del (port_id) (backup_profile_path)
1668
1669 ptype mapping
1670 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1671
1672 List all items from the ptype mapping table::
1673
1674 testpmd> ptype mapping get (port_id) (valid_only)
1675
1676 Where:
1677
1678 * ``valid_only``: A flag indicates if only list valid items(=1) or all itemss(=0).
1679
1680 Replace a specific or a group of software defined ptype with a new one::
1681
1682 testpmd> ptype mapping replace (port_id) (target) (mask) (pkt_type)
1683
1684 where:
1685
1686 * ``target``: A specific software ptype or a mask to represent a group of software ptypes.
1687
1688 * ``mask``: A flag indicate if "target" is a specific software ptype(=0) or a ptype mask(=1).
1689
1690 * ``pkt_type``: The new software ptype to replace the old ones.
1691
1692 Update hardware defined ptype to software defined packet type mapping table::
1693
1694 testpmd> ptype mapping update (port_id) (hw_ptype) (sw_ptype)
1695
1696 where:
1697
1698 * ``hw_ptype``: hardware ptype as the index of the ptype mapping table.
1699
1700 * ``sw_ptype``: software ptype as the value of the ptype mapping table.
1701
1702 Reset ptype mapping table::
1703
1704 testpmd> ptype mapping reset (port_id)
1705
1706 config per port Rx offloading
1707 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1708
1709 Enable or disable a per port Rx offloading on all Rx queues of a port::
1710
1711 testpmd> port config (port_id) rx_offload (offloading) on|off
1712
1713 * ``offloading``: can be any of these offloading capability:
1714 vlan_strip, ipv4_cksum, udp_cksum, tcp_cksum, tcp_lro,
1715 qinq_strip, outer_ipv4_cksum, macsec_strip,
1716 header_split, vlan_filter, vlan_extend, jumbo_frame,
1717 scatter, timestamp, security, keep_crc, rss_hash
1718
1719 This command should be run when the port is stopped, or else it will fail.
1720
1721 config per queue Rx offloading
1722 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1723
1724 Enable or disable a per queue Rx offloading only on a specific Rx queue::
1725
1726 testpmd> port (port_id) rxq (queue_id) rx_offload (offloading) on|off
1727
1728 * ``offloading``: can be any of these offloading capability:
1729 vlan_strip, ipv4_cksum, udp_cksum, tcp_cksum, tcp_lro,
1730 qinq_strip, outer_ipv4_cksum, macsec_strip,
1731 header_split, vlan_filter, vlan_extend, jumbo_frame,
1732 scatter, timestamp, security, keep_crc
1733
1734 This command should be run when the port is stopped, or else it will fail.
1735
1736 config per port Tx offloading
1737 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1738
1739 Enable or disable a per port Tx offloading on all Tx queues of a port::
1740
1741 testpmd> port config (port_id) tx_offload (offloading) on|off
1742
1743 * ``offloading``: can be any of these offloading capability:
1744 vlan_insert, ipv4_cksum, udp_cksum, tcp_cksum,
1745 sctp_cksum, tcp_tso, udp_tso, outer_ipv4_cksum,
1746 qinq_insert, vxlan_tnl_tso, gre_tnl_tso,
1747 ipip_tnl_tso, geneve_tnl_tso, macsec_insert,
1748 mt_lockfree, multi_segs, mbuf_fast_free, security
1749
1750 This command should be run when the port is stopped, or else it will fail.
1751
1752 config per queue Tx offloading
1753 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1754
1755 Enable or disable a per queue Tx offloading only on a specific Tx queue::
1756
1757 testpmd> port (port_id) txq (queue_id) tx_offload (offloading) on|off
1758
1759 * ``offloading``: can be any of these offloading capability:
1760 vlan_insert, ipv4_cksum, udp_cksum, tcp_cksum,
1761 sctp_cksum, tcp_tso, udp_tso, outer_ipv4_cksum,
1762 qinq_insert, vxlan_tnl_tso, gre_tnl_tso,
1763 ipip_tnl_tso, geneve_tnl_tso, macsec_insert,
1764 mt_lockfree, multi_segs, mbuf_fast_free, security
1765
1766 This command should be run when the port is stopped, or else it will fail.
1767
1768 Config VXLAN Encap outer layers
1769 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1770
1771 Configure the outer layer to encapsulate a packet inside a VXLAN tunnel::
1772
1773 set vxlan ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) vni (vni) udp-src (udp-src) \
1774 udp-dst (udp-dst) ip-src (ip-src) ip-dst (ip-dst) eth-src (eth-src) \
1775 eth-dst (eth-dst)
1776
1777 set vxlan-with-vlan ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) vni (vni) udp-src (udp-src) \
1778 udp-dst (udp-dst) ip-src (ip-src) ip-dst (ip-dst) vlan-tci (vlan-tci) \
1779 eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1780
1781 set vxlan-tos-ttl ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) vni (vni) udp-src (udp-src) \
1782 udp-dst (udp-dst) ip-tos (ip-tos) ip-ttl (ip-ttl) ip-src (ip-src) \
1783 ip-dst (ip-dst) eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1784
1785 These commands will set an internal configuration inside testpmd, any following
1786 flow rule using the action vxlan_encap will use the last configuration set.
1787 To have a different encapsulation header, one of those commands must be called
1788 before the flow rule creation.
1789
1790 Config NVGRE Encap outer layers
1791 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1792
1793 Configure the outer layer to encapsulate a packet inside a NVGRE tunnel::
1794
1795 set nvgre ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) tni (tni) ip-src (ip-src) ip-dst (ip-dst) \
1796 eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1797 set nvgre-with-vlan ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) tni (tni) ip-src (ip-src) \
1798 ip-dst (ip-dst) vlan-tci (vlan-tci) eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1799
1800 These commands will set an internal configuration inside testpmd, any following
1801 flow rule using the action nvgre_encap will use the last configuration set.
1802 To have a different encapsulation header, one of those commands must be called
1803 before the flow rule creation.
1804
1805 Config L2 Encap
1806 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1807
1808 Configure the l2 to be used when encapsulating a packet with L2::
1809
1810 set l2_encap ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1811 set l2_encap-with-vlan ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) vlan-tci (vlan-tci) \
1812 eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1813
1814 Those commands will set an internal configuration inside testpmd, any following
1815 flow rule using the action l2_encap will use the last configuration set.
1816 To have a different encapsulation header, one of those commands must be called
1817 before the flow rule creation.
1818
1819 Config L2 Decap
1820 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1821
1822 Configure the l2 to be removed when decapsulating a packet with L2::
1823
1824 set l2_decap ip-version (ipv4|ipv6)
1825 set l2_decap-with-vlan ip-version (ipv4|ipv6)
1826
1827 Those commands will set an internal configuration inside testpmd, any following
1828 flow rule using the action l2_decap will use the last configuration set.
1829 To have a different encapsulation header, one of those commands must be called
1830 before the flow rule creation.
1831
1832 Config MPLSoGRE Encap outer layers
1833 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1834
1835 Configure the outer layer to encapsulate a packet inside a MPLSoGRE tunnel::
1836
1837 set mplsogre_encap ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) label (label) \
1838 ip-src (ip-src) ip-dst (ip-dst) eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1839 set mplsogre_encap-with-vlan ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) label (label) \
1840 ip-src (ip-src) ip-dst (ip-dst) vlan-tci (vlan-tci) \
1841 eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1842
1843 These commands will set an internal configuration inside testpmd, any following
1844 flow rule using the action mplsogre_encap will use the last configuration set.
1845 To have a different encapsulation header, one of those commands must be called
1846 before the flow rule creation.
1847
1848 Config MPLSoGRE Decap outer layers
1849 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1850
1851 Configure the outer layer to decapsulate MPLSoGRE packet::
1852
1853 set mplsogre_decap ip-version (ipv4|ipv6)
1854 set mplsogre_decap-with-vlan ip-version (ipv4|ipv6)
1855
1856 These commands will set an internal configuration inside testpmd, any following
1857 flow rule using the action mplsogre_decap will use the last configuration set.
1858 To have a different decapsulation header, one of those commands must be called
1859 before the flow rule creation.
1860
1861 Config MPLSoUDP Encap outer layers
1862 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1863
1864 Configure the outer layer to encapsulate a packet inside a MPLSoUDP tunnel::
1865
1866 set mplsoudp_encap ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) label (label) udp-src (udp-src) \
1867 udp-dst (udp-dst) ip-src (ip-src) ip-dst (ip-dst) \
1868 eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1869 set mplsoudp_encap-with-vlan ip-version (ipv4|ipv6) label (label) \
1870 udp-src (udp-src) udp-dst (udp-dst) ip-src (ip-src) ip-dst (ip-dst) \
1871 vlan-tci (vlan-tci) eth-src (eth-src) eth-dst (eth-dst)
1872
1873 These commands will set an internal configuration inside testpmd, any following
1874 flow rule using the action mplsoudp_encap will use the last configuration set.
1875 To have a different encapsulation header, one of those commands must be called
1876 before the flow rule creation.
1877
1878 Config MPLSoUDP Decap outer layers
1879 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1880
1881 Configure the outer layer to decapsulate MPLSoUDP packet::
1882
1883 set mplsoudp_decap ip-version (ipv4|ipv6)
1884 set mplsoudp_decap-with-vlan ip-version (ipv4|ipv6)
1885
1886 These commands will set an internal configuration inside testpmd, any following
1887 flow rule using the action mplsoudp_decap will use the last configuration set.
1888 To have a different decapsulation header, one of those commands must be called
1889 before the flow rule creation.
1890
1891 Config Raw Encapsulation
1892 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1893
1894 Configure the raw data to be used when encapsulating a packet by
1895 rte_flow_action_raw_encap::
1896
1897 set raw_encap {index} {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end_set
1898
1899 There are multiple global buffers for ``raw_encap``, this command will set one
1900 internal buffer index by ``{index}``.
1901 If there is no ``{index}`` specified::
1902
1903 set raw_encap {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end_set
1904
1905 the default index ``0`` is used.
1906 In order to use different encapsulating header, ``index`` must be specified
1907 during the flow rule creation::
1908
1909 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / ipv4 / end actions
1910 raw_encap index 2 / end
1911
1912 Otherwise the default index ``0`` is used.
1913
1914 Config Raw Decapsulation
1915 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1916
1917 Configure the raw data to be used when decapsulating a packet by
1918 rte_flow_action_raw_decap::
1919
1920 set raw_decap {index} {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end_set
1921
1922 There are multiple global buffers for ``raw_decap``, this command will set
1923 one internal buffer index by ``{index}``.
1924 If there is no ``{index}`` specified::
1925
1926 set raw_decap {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end_set
1927
1928 the default index ``0`` is used.
1929 In order to use different decapsulating header, ``index`` must be specified
1930 during the flow rule creation::
1931
1932 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / ipv4 / end actions
1933 raw_encap index 3 / end
1934
1935 Otherwise the default index ``0`` is used.
1936
1937 Port Functions
1938 --------------
1939
1940 The following sections show functions for configuring ports.
1941
1942 .. note::
1943
1944 Port configuration changes only become active when forwarding is started/restarted.
1945
1946 port attach
1947 ~~~~~~~~~~~
1948
1949 Attach a port specified by pci address or virtual device args::
1950
1951 testpmd> port attach (identifier)
1952
1953 To attach a new pci device, the device should be recognized by kernel first.
1954 Then it should be moved under DPDK management.
1955 Finally the port can be attached to testpmd.
1956
1957 For example, to move a pci device using ixgbe under DPDK management:
1958
1959 .. code-block:: console
1960
1961 # Check the status of the available devices.
1962 ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --status
1963
1964 Network devices using DPDK-compatible driver
1965 ============================================
1966 <none>
1967
1968 Network devices using kernel driver
1969 ===================================
1970 0000:0a:00.0 '82599ES 10-Gigabit' if=eth2 drv=ixgbe unused=
1971
1972
1973 # Bind the device to igb_uio.
1974 sudo ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -b igb_uio 0000:0a:00.0
1975
1976
1977 # Recheck the status of the devices.
1978 ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --status
1979 Network devices using DPDK-compatible driver
1980 ============================================
1981 0000:0a:00.0 '82599ES 10-Gigabit' drv=igb_uio unused=
1982
1983 To attach a port created by virtual device, above steps are not needed.
1984
1985 For example, to attach a port whose pci address is 0000:0a:00.0.
1986
1987 .. code-block:: console
1988
1989 testpmd> port attach 0000:0a:00.0
1990 Attaching a new port...
1991 EAL: PCI device 0000:0a:00.0 on NUMA socket -1
1992 EAL: probe driver: 8086:10fb rte_ixgbe_pmd
1993 EAL: PCI memory mapped at 0x7f83bfa00000
1994 EAL: PCI memory mapped at 0x7f83bfa80000
1995 PMD: eth_ixgbe_dev_init(): MAC: 2, PHY: 18, SFP+: 5
1996 PMD: eth_ixgbe_dev_init(): port 0 vendorID=0x8086 deviceID=0x10fb
1997 Port 0 is attached. Now total ports is 1
1998 Done
1999
2000 For example, to attach a port created by pcap PMD.
2001
2002 .. code-block:: console
2003
2004 testpmd> port attach net_pcap0
2005 Attaching a new port...
2006 PMD: Initializing pmd_pcap for net_pcap0
2007 PMD: Creating pcap-backed ethdev on numa socket 0
2008 Port 0 is attached. Now total ports is 1
2009 Done
2010
2011 In this case, identifier is ``net_pcap0``.
2012 This identifier format is the same as ``--vdev`` format of DPDK applications.
2013
2014 For example, to re-attach a bonded port which has been previously detached,
2015 the mode and slave parameters must be given.
2016
2017 .. code-block:: console
2018
2019 testpmd> port attach net_bond_0,mode=0,slave=1
2020 Attaching a new port...
2021 EAL: Initializing pmd_bond for net_bond_0
2022 EAL: Create bonded device net_bond_0 on port 0 in mode 0 on socket 0.
2023 Port 0 is attached. Now total ports is 1
2024 Done
2025
2026
2027 port detach
2028 ~~~~~~~~~~~
2029
2030 Detach a specific port::
2031
2032 testpmd> port detach (port_id)
2033
2034 Before detaching a port, the port should be stopped and closed.
2035
2036 For example, to detach a pci device port 0.
2037
2038 .. code-block:: console
2039
2040 testpmd> port stop 0
2041 Stopping ports...
2042 Done
2043 testpmd> port close 0
2044 Closing ports...
2045 Done
2046
2047 testpmd> port detach 0
2048 Detaching a port...
2049 EAL: PCI device 0000:0a:00.0 on NUMA socket -1
2050 EAL: remove driver: 8086:10fb rte_ixgbe_pmd
2051 EAL: PCI memory unmapped at 0x7f83bfa00000
2052 EAL: PCI memory unmapped at 0x7f83bfa80000
2053 Done
2054
2055
2056 For example, to detach a virtual device port 0.
2057
2058 .. code-block:: console
2059
2060 testpmd> port stop 0
2061 Stopping ports...
2062 Done
2063 testpmd> port close 0
2064 Closing ports...
2065 Done
2066
2067 testpmd> port detach 0
2068 Detaching a port...
2069 PMD: Closing pcap ethdev on numa socket 0
2070 Port 'net_pcap0' is detached. Now total ports is 0
2071 Done
2072
2073 To remove a pci device completely from the system, first detach the port from testpmd.
2074 Then the device should be moved under kernel management.
2075 Finally the device can be removed using kernel pci hotplug functionality.
2076
2077 For example, to move a pci device under kernel management:
2078
2079 .. code-block:: console
2080
2081 sudo ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -b ixgbe 0000:0a:00.0
2082
2083 ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --status
2084
2085 Network devices using DPDK-compatible driver
2086 ============================================
2087 <none>
2088
2089 Network devices using kernel driver
2090 ===================================
2091 0000:0a:00.0 '82599ES 10-Gigabit' if=eth2 drv=ixgbe unused=igb_uio
2092
2093 To remove a port created by a virtual device, above steps are not needed.
2094
2095 port start
2096 ~~~~~~~~~~
2097
2098 Start all ports or a specific port::
2099
2100 testpmd> port start (port_id|all)
2101
2102 port stop
2103 ~~~~~~~~~
2104
2105 Stop all ports or a specific port::
2106
2107 testpmd> port stop (port_id|all)
2108
2109 port close
2110 ~~~~~~~~~~
2111
2112 Close all ports or a specific port::
2113
2114 testpmd> port close (port_id|all)
2115
2116 port reset
2117 ~~~~~~~~~~
2118
2119 Reset all ports or a specific port::
2120
2121 testpmd> port reset (port_id|all)
2122
2123 User should stop port(s) before resetting and (re-)start after reset.
2124
2125 port config - queue ring size
2126 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2127
2128 Configure a rx/tx queue ring size::
2129
2130 testpmd> port (port_id) (rxq|txq) (queue_id) ring_size (value)
2131
2132 Only take effect after command that (re-)start the port or command that setup specific queue.
2133
2134 port start/stop queue
2135 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2136
2137 Start/stop a rx/tx queue on a specific port::
2138
2139 testpmd> port (port_id) (rxq|txq) (queue_id) (start|stop)
2140
2141 port config - queue deferred start
2142 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2143
2144 Switch on/off deferred start of a specific port queue::
2145
2146 testpmd> port (port_id) (rxq|txq) (queue_id) deferred_start (on|off)
2147
2148 port setup queue
2149 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2150
2151 Setup a rx/tx queue on a specific port::
2152
2153 testpmd> port (port_id) (rxq|txq) (queue_id) setup
2154
2155 Only take effect when port is started.
2156
2157 port config - speed
2158 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2159
2160 Set the speed and duplex mode for all ports or a specific port::
2161
2162 testpmd> port config (port_id|all) speed (10|100|1000|10000|25000|40000|50000|100000|200000|auto) \
2163 duplex (half|full|auto)
2164
2165 port config - queues/descriptors
2166 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2167
2168 Set number of queues/descriptors for rxq, txq, rxd and txd::
2169
2170 testpmd> port config all (rxq|txq|rxd|txd) (value)
2171
2172 This is equivalent to the ``--rxq``, ``--txq``, ``--rxd`` and ``--txd`` command-line options.
2173
2174 port config - max-pkt-len
2175 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2176
2177 Set the maximum packet length::
2178
2179 testpmd> port config all max-pkt-len (value)
2180
2181 This is equivalent to the ``--max-pkt-len`` command-line option.
2182
2183 port config - max-lro-pkt-size
2184 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2185
2186 Set the maximum LRO aggregated packet size::
2187
2188 testpmd> port config all max-lro-pkt-size (value)
2189
2190 This is equivalent to the ``--max-lro-pkt-size`` command-line option.
2191
2192 port config - Drop Packets
2193 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2194
2195 Enable or disable packet drop on all RX queues of all ports when no receive buffers available::
2196
2197 testpmd> port config all drop-en (on|off)
2198
2199 Packet dropping when no receive buffers available is off by default.
2200
2201 The ``on`` option is equivalent to the ``--enable-drop-en`` command-line option.
2202
2203 port config - RSS
2204 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2205
2206 Set the RSS (Receive Side Scaling) mode on or off::
2207
2208 testpmd> port config all rss (all|default|eth|vlan|ip|tcp|udp|sctp|ether|port|vxlan|geneve|nvgre|vxlan-gpe|l2tpv3|esp|ah|pfcp|none)
2209
2210 RSS is on by default.
2211
2212 The ``all`` option is equivalent to eth|vlan|ip|tcp|udp|sctp|ether|l2tpv3|esp|ah|pfcp.
2213
2214 The ``default`` option enables all supported RSS types reported by device info.
2215
2216 The ``none`` option is equivalent to the ``--disable-rss`` command-line option.
2217
2218 port config - RSS Reta
2219 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2220
2221 Set the RSS (Receive Side Scaling) redirection table::
2222
2223 testpmd> port config all rss reta (hash,queue)[,(hash,queue)]
2224
2225 port config - DCB
2226 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2227
2228 Set the DCB mode for an individual port::
2229
2230 testpmd> port config (port_id) dcb vt (on|off) (traffic_class) pfc (on|off)
2231
2232 The traffic class should be 4 or 8.
2233
2234 port config - Burst
2235 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2236
2237 Set the number of packets per burst::
2238
2239 testpmd> port config all burst (value)
2240
2241 This is equivalent to the ``--burst`` command-line option.
2242
2243 port config - Threshold
2244 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2245
2246 Set thresholds for TX/RX queues::
2247
2248 testpmd> port config all (threshold) (value)
2249
2250 Where the threshold type can be:
2251
2252 * ``txpt:`` Set the prefetch threshold register of the TX rings, 0 <= value <= 255.
2253
2254 * ``txht:`` Set the host threshold register of the TX rings, 0 <= value <= 255.
2255
2256 * ``txwt:`` Set the write-back threshold register of the TX rings, 0 <= value <= 255.
2257
2258 * ``rxpt:`` Set the prefetch threshold register of the RX rings, 0 <= value <= 255.
2259
2260 * ``rxht:`` Set the host threshold register of the RX rings, 0 <= value <= 255.
2261
2262 * ``rxwt:`` Set the write-back threshold register of the RX rings, 0 <= value <= 255.
2263
2264 * ``txfreet:`` Set the transmit free threshold of the TX rings, 0 <= value <= txd.
2265
2266 * ``rxfreet:`` Set the transmit free threshold of the RX rings, 0 <= value <= rxd.
2267
2268 * ``txrst:`` Set the transmit RS bit threshold of TX rings, 0 <= value <= txd.
2269
2270 These threshold options are also available from the command-line.
2271
2272 port config - E-tag
2273 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2274
2275 Set the value of ether-type for E-tag::
2276
2277 testpmd> port config (port_id|all) l2-tunnel E-tag ether-type (value)
2278
2279 Enable/disable the E-tag support::
2280
2281 testpmd> port config (port_id|all) l2-tunnel E-tag (enable|disable)
2282
2283 port config pctype mapping
2284 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2285
2286 Reset pctype mapping table::
2287
2288 testpmd> port config (port_id) pctype mapping reset
2289
2290 Update hardware defined pctype to software defined flow type mapping table::
2291
2292 testpmd> port config (port_id) pctype mapping update (pctype_id_0[,pctype_id_1]*) (flow_type_id)
2293
2294 where:
2295
2296 * ``pctype_id_x``: hardware pctype id as index of bit in bitmask value of the pctype mapping table.
2297
2298 * ``flow_type_id``: software flow type id as the index of the pctype mapping table.
2299
2300 port config input set
2301 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2302
2303 Config RSS/FDIR/FDIR flexible payload input set for some pctype::
2304
2305 testpmd> port config (port_id) pctype (pctype_id) \
2306 (hash_inset|fdir_inset|fdir_flx_inset) \
2307 (get|set|clear) field (field_idx)
2308
2309 Clear RSS/FDIR/FDIR flexible payload input set for some pctype::
2310
2311 testpmd> port config (port_id) pctype (pctype_id) \
2312 (hash_inset|fdir_inset|fdir_flx_inset) clear all
2313
2314 where:
2315
2316 * ``pctype_id``: hardware packet classification types.
2317 * ``field_idx``: hardware field index.
2318
2319 port config udp_tunnel_port
2320 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2321
2322 Add/remove UDP tunnel port for VXLAN/GENEVE tunneling protocols::
2323
2324 testpmd> port config (port_id) udp_tunnel_port add|rm vxlan|geneve|vxlan-gpe (udp_port)
2325
2326 port config tx_metadata
2327 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2328
2329 Set Tx metadata value per port.
2330 testpmd will add this value to any Tx packet sent from this port::
2331
2332 testpmd> port config (port_id) tx_metadata (value)
2333
2334 port config dynf
2335 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2336
2337 Set/clear dynamic flag per port.
2338 testpmd will register this flag in the mbuf (same registration
2339 for both Tx and Rx). Then set/clear this flag for each Tx
2340 packet sent from this port. The set bit only works for Tx packet::
2341
2342 testpmd> port config (port_id) dynf (name) (set|clear)
2343
2344 port config mtu
2345 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2346
2347 To configure MTU(Maximum Transmission Unit) on devices using testpmd::
2348
2349 testpmd> port config mtu (port_id) (value)
2350
2351 port config rss hash key
2352 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2353
2354 To configure the RSS hash key used to compute the RSS
2355 hash of input [IP] packets received on port::
2356
2357 testpmd> port config <port_id> rss-hash-key (ipv4|ipv4-frag|\
2358 ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp|ipv4-other|\
2359 ipv6|ipv6-frag|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp|\
2360 ipv6-other|l2-payload|ipv6-ex|ipv6-tcp-ex|\
2361 ipv6-udp-ex <string of hex digits \
2362 (variable length, NIC dependent)>)
2363
2364 Device Functions
2365 ----------------
2366
2367 The following sections show functions for device operations.
2368
2369 device detach
2370 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2371
2372 Detach a device specified by pci address or virtual device args::
2373
2374 testpmd> device detach (identifier)
2375
2376 Before detaching a device associated with ports, the ports should be stopped and closed.
2377
2378 For example, to detach a pci device whose address is 0002:03:00.0.
2379
2380 .. code-block:: console
2381
2382 testpmd> device detach 0002:03:00.0
2383 Removing a device...
2384 Port 1 is now closed
2385 EAL: Releasing pci mapped resource for 0002:03:00.0
2386 EAL: Calling pci_unmap_resource for 0002:03:00.0 at 0x218a050000
2387 EAL: Calling pci_unmap_resource for 0002:03:00.0 at 0x218c050000
2388 Device 0002:03:00.0 is detached
2389 Now total ports is 1
2390
2391 For example, to detach a port created by pcap PMD.
2392
2393 .. code-block:: console
2394
2395 testpmd> device detach net_pcap0
2396 Removing a device...
2397 Port 0 is now closed
2398 Device net_pcap0 is detached
2399 Now total ports is 0
2400 Done
2401
2402 In this case, identifier is ``net_pcap0``.
2403 This identifier format is the same as ``--vdev`` format of DPDK applications.
2404
2405 Link Bonding Functions
2406 ----------------------
2407
2408 The Link Bonding functions make it possible to dynamically create and
2409 manage link bonding devices from within testpmd interactive prompt.
2410
2411 create bonded device
2412 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2413
2414 Create a new bonding device::
2415
2416 testpmd> create bonded device (mode) (socket)
2417
2418 For example, to create a bonded device in mode 1 on socket 0::
2419
2420 testpmd> create bonded device 1 0
2421 created new bonded device (port X)
2422
2423 add bonding slave
2424 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2425
2426 Adds Ethernet device to a Link Bonding device::
2427
2428 testpmd> add bonding slave (slave id) (port id)
2429
2430 For example, to add Ethernet device (port 6) to a Link Bonding device (port 10)::
2431
2432 testpmd> add bonding slave 6 10
2433
2434
2435 remove bonding slave
2436 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2437
2438 Removes an Ethernet slave device from a Link Bonding device::
2439
2440 testpmd> remove bonding slave (slave id) (port id)
2441
2442 For example, to remove Ethernet slave device (port 6) to a Link Bonding device (port 10)::
2443
2444 testpmd> remove bonding slave 6 10
2445
2446 set bonding mode
2447 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2448
2449 Set the Link Bonding mode of a Link Bonding device::
2450
2451 testpmd> set bonding mode (value) (port id)
2452
2453 For example, to set the bonding mode of a Link Bonding device (port 10) to broadcast (mode 3)::
2454
2455 testpmd> set bonding mode 3 10
2456
2457 set bonding primary
2458 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2459
2460 Set an Ethernet slave device as the primary device on a Link Bonding device::
2461
2462 testpmd> set bonding primary (slave id) (port id)
2463
2464 For example, to set the Ethernet slave device (port 6) as the primary port of a Link Bonding device (port 10)::
2465
2466 testpmd> set bonding primary 6 10
2467
2468 set bonding mac
2469 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2470
2471 Set the MAC address of a Link Bonding device::
2472
2473 testpmd> set bonding mac (port id) (mac)
2474
2475 For example, to set the MAC address of a Link Bonding device (port 10) to 00:00:00:00:00:01::
2476
2477 testpmd> set bonding mac 10 00:00:00:00:00:01
2478
2479 set bonding xmit_balance_policy
2480 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2481
2482 Set the transmission policy for a Link Bonding device when it is in Balance XOR mode::
2483
2484 testpmd> set bonding xmit_balance_policy (port_id) (l2|l23|l34)
2485
2486 For example, set a Link Bonding device (port 10) to use a balance policy of layer 3+4 (IP addresses & UDP ports)::
2487
2488 testpmd> set bonding xmit_balance_policy 10 l34
2489
2490
2491 set bonding mon_period
2492 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2493
2494 Set the link status monitoring polling period in milliseconds for a bonding device.
2495
2496 This adds support for PMD slave devices which do not support link status interrupts.
2497 When the mon_period is set to a value greater than 0 then all PMD's which do not support
2498 link status ISR will be queried every polling interval to check if their link status has changed::
2499
2500 testpmd> set bonding mon_period (port_id) (value)
2501
2502 For example, to set the link status monitoring polling period of bonded device (port 5) to 150ms::
2503
2504 testpmd> set bonding mon_period 5 150
2505
2506
2507 set bonding lacp dedicated_queue
2508 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2509
2510 Enable dedicated tx/rx queues on bonding devices slaves to handle LACP control plane traffic
2511 when in mode 4 (link-aggregation-802.3ad)::
2512
2513 testpmd> set bonding lacp dedicated_queues (port_id) (enable|disable)
2514
2515
2516 set bonding agg_mode
2517 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2518
2519 Enable one of the specific aggregators mode when in mode 4 (link-aggregation-802.3ad)::
2520
2521 testpmd> set bonding agg_mode (port_id) (bandwidth|count|stable)
2522
2523
2524 show bonding config
2525 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2526
2527 Show the current configuration of a Link Bonding device::
2528
2529 testpmd> show bonding config (port id)
2530
2531 For example,
2532 to show the configuration a Link Bonding device (port 9) with 3 slave devices (1, 3, 4)
2533 in balance mode with a transmission policy of layer 2+3::
2534
2535 testpmd> show bonding config 9
2536 Bonding mode: 2
2537 Balance Xmit Policy: BALANCE_XMIT_POLICY_LAYER23
2538 Slaves (3): [1 3 4]
2539 Active Slaves (3): [1 3 4]
2540 Primary: [3]
2541
2542
2543 Register Functions
2544 ------------------
2545
2546 The Register Functions can be used to read from and write to registers on the network card referenced by a port number.
2547 This is mainly useful for debugging purposes.
2548 Reference should be made to the appropriate datasheet for the network card for details on the register addresses
2549 and fields that can be accessed.
2550
2551 read reg
2552 ~~~~~~~~
2553
2554 Display the value of a port register::
2555
2556 testpmd> read reg (port_id) (address)
2557
2558 For example, to examine the Flow Director control register (FDIRCTL, 0x0000EE000) on an Intel 82599 10 GbE Controller::
2559
2560 testpmd> read reg 0 0xEE00
2561 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: 0x4A060029 (1241907241)
2562
2563 read regfield
2564 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2565
2566 Display a port register bit field::
2567
2568 testpmd> read regfield (port_id) (address) (bit_x) (bit_y)
2569
2570 For example, reading the lowest two bits from the register in the example above::
2571
2572 testpmd> read regfield 0 0xEE00 0 1
2573 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: bits[0, 1]=0x1 (1)
2574
2575 read regbit
2576 ~~~~~~~~~~~
2577
2578 Display a single port register bit::
2579
2580 testpmd> read regbit (port_id) (address) (bit_x)
2581
2582 For example, reading the lowest bit from the register in the example above::
2583
2584 testpmd> read regbit 0 0xEE00 0
2585 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: bit 0=1
2586
2587 write reg
2588 ~~~~~~~~~
2589
2590 Set the value of a port register::
2591
2592 testpmd> write reg (port_id) (address) (value)
2593
2594 For example, to clear a register::
2595
2596 testpmd> write reg 0 0xEE00 0x0
2597 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: 0x00000000 (0)
2598
2599 write regfield
2600 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2601
2602 Set bit field of a port register::
2603
2604 testpmd> write regfield (port_id) (address) (bit_x) (bit_y) (value)
2605
2606 For example, writing to the register cleared in the example above::
2607
2608 testpmd> write regfield 0 0xEE00 0 1 2
2609 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: 0x00000002 (2)
2610
2611 write regbit
2612 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
2613
2614 Set single bit value of a port register::
2615
2616 testpmd> write regbit (port_id) (address) (bit_x) (value)
2617
2618 For example, to set the high bit in the register from the example above::
2619
2620 testpmd> write regbit 0 0xEE00 31 1
2621 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: 0x8000000A (2147483658)
2622
2623 Traffic Metering and Policing
2624 -----------------------------
2625
2626 The following section shows functions for configuring traffic metering and
2627 policing on the ethernet device through the use of generic ethdev API.
2628
2629 show port traffic management capability
2630 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2631
2632 Show traffic metering and policing capability of the port::
2633
2634 testpmd> show port meter cap (port_id)
2635
2636 add port meter profile (srTCM rfc2967)
2637 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2638
2639 Add meter profile (srTCM rfc2697) to the ethernet device::
2640
2641 testpmd> add port meter profile srtcm_rfc2697 (port_id) (profile_id) \
2642 (cir) (cbs) (ebs)
2643
2644 where:
2645
2646 * ``profile_id``: ID for the meter profile.
2647 * ``cir``: Committed Information Rate (CIR) (bytes/second).
2648 * ``cbs``: Committed Burst Size (CBS) (bytes).
2649 * ``ebs``: Excess Burst Size (EBS) (bytes).
2650
2651 add port meter profile (trTCM rfc2968)
2652 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2653
2654 Add meter profile (srTCM rfc2698) to the ethernet device::
2655
2656 testpmd> add port meter profile trtcm_rfc2698 (port_id) (profile_id) \
2657 (cir) (pir) (cbs) (pbs)
2658
2659 where:
2660
2661 * ``profile_id``: ID for the meter profile.
2662 * ``cir``: Committed information rate (bytes/second).
2663 * ``pir``: Peak information rate (bytes/second).
2664 * ``cbs``: Committed burst size (bytes).
2665 * ``pbs``: Peak burst size (bytes).
2666
2667 add port meter profile (trTCM rfc4115)
2668 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2669
2670 Add meter profile (trTCM rfc4115) to the ethernet device::
2671
2672 testpmd> add port meter profile trtcm_rfc4115 (port_id) (profile_id) \
2673 (cir) (eir) (cbs) (ebs)
2674
2675 where:
2676
2677 * ``profile_id``: ID for the meter profile.
2678 * ``cir``: Committed information rate (bytes/second).
2679 * ``eir``: Excess information rate (bytes/second).
2680 * ``cbs``: Committed burst size (bytes).
2681 * ``ebs``: Excess burst size (bytes).
2682
2683 delete port meter profile
2684 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2685
2686 Delete meter profile from the ethernet device::
2687
2688 testpmd> del port meter profile (port_id) (profile_id)
2689
2690 create port meter
2691 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2692
2693 Create new meter object for the ethernet device::
2694
2695 testpmd> create port meter (port_id) (mtr_id) (profile_id) \
2696 (meter_enable) (g_action) (y_action) (r_action) (stats_mask) (shared) \
2697 (use_pre_meter_color) [(dscp_tbl_entry0) (dscp_tbl_entry1)...\
2698 (dscp_tbl_entry63)]
2699
2700 where:
2701
2702 * ``mtr_id``: meter object ID.
2703 * ``profile_id``: ID for the meter profile.
2704 * ``meter_enable``: When this parameter has a non-zero value, the meter object
2705 gets enabled at the time of creation, otherwise remains disabled.
2706 * ``g_action``: Policer action for the packet with green color.
2707 * ``y_action``: Policer action for the packet with yellow color.
2708 * ``r_action``: Policer action for the packet with red color.
2709 * ``stats_mask``: Mask of statistics counter types to be enabled for the
2710 meter object.
2711 * ``shared``: When this parameter has a non-zero value, the meter object is
2712 shared by multiple flows. Otherwise, meter object is used by single flow.
2713 * ``use_pre_meter_color``: When this parameter has a non-zero value, the
2714 input color for the current meter object is determined by the latest meter
2715 object in the same flow. Otherwise, the current meter object uses the
2716 *dscp_table* to determine the input color.
2717 * ``dscp_tbl_entryx``: DSCP table entry x providing meter providing input
2718 color, 0 <= x <= 63.
2719
2720 enable port meter
2721 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2722
2723 Enable meter for the ethernet device::
2724
2725 testpmd> enable port meter (port_id) (mtr_id)
2726
2727 disable port meter
2728 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2729
2730 Disable meter for the ethernet device::
2731
2732 testpmd> disable port meter (port_id) (mtr_id)
2733
2734 delete port meter
2735 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2736
2737 Delete meter for the ethernet device::
2738
2739 testpmd> del port meter (port_id) (mtr_id)
2740
2741 Set port meter profile
2742 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2743
2744 Set meter profile for the ethernet device::
2745
2746 testpmd> set port meter profile (port_id) (mtr_id) (profile_id)
2747
2748 set port meter dscp table
2749 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2750
2751 Set meter dscp table for the ethernet device::
2752
2753 testpmd> set port meter dscp table (port_id) (mtr_id) [(dscp_tbl_entry0) \
2754 (dscp_tbl_entry1)...(dscp_tbl_entry63)]
2755
2756 set port meter policer action
2757 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2758
2759 Set meter policer action for the ethernet device::
2760
2761 testpmd> set port meter policer action (port_id) (mtr_id) (action_mask) \
2762 (action0) [(action1) (action1)]
2763
2764 where:
2765
2766 * ``action_mask``: Bit mask indicating which policer actions need to be
2767 updated. One or more policer actions can be updated in a single function
2768 invocation. To update the policer action associated with color C, bit
2769 (1 << C) needs to be set in *action_mask* and element at position C
2770 in the *actions* array needs to be valid.
2771 * ``actionx``: Policer action for the color x,
2772 RTE_MTR_GREEN <= x < RTE_MTR_COLORS
2773
2774 set port meter stats mask
2775 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2776
2777 Set meter stats mask for the ethernet device::
2778
2779 testpmd> set port meter stats mask (port_id) (mtr_id) (stats_mask)
2780
2781 where:
2782
2783 * ``stats_mask``: Bit mask indicating statistics counter types to be enabled.
2784
2785 show port meter stats
2786 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2787
2788 Show meter stats of the ethernet device::
2789
2790 testpmd> show port meter stats (port_id) (mtr_id) (clear)
2791
2792 where:
2793
2794 * ``clear``: Flag that indicates whether the statistics counters should
2795 be cleared (i.e. set to zero) immediately after they have been read or not.
2796
2797 Traffic Management
2798 ------------------
2799
2800 The following section shows functions for configuring traffic management on
2801 the ethernet device through the use of generic TM API.
2802
2803 show port traffic management capability
2804 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2805
2806 Show traffic management capability of the port::
2807
2808 testpmd> show port tm cap (port_id)
2809
2810 show port traffic management capability (hierarchy level)
2811 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2812
2813 Show traffic management hierarchy level capability of the port::
2814
2815 testpmd> show port tm level cap (port_id) (level_id)
2816
2817 show port traffic management capability (hierarchy node level)
2818 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2819
2820 Show the traffic management hierarchy node capability of the port::
2821
2822 testpmd> show port tm node cap (port_id) (node_id)
2823
2824 show port traffic management hierarchy node type
2825 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2826
2827 Show the port traffic management hierarchy node type::
2828
2829 testpmd> show port tm node type (port_id) (node_id)
2830
2831 show port traffic management hierarchy node stats
2832 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2833
2834 Show the port traffic management hierarchy node statistics::
2835
2836 testpmd> show port tm node stats (port_id) (node_id) (clear)
2837
2838 where:
2839
2840 * ``clear``: When this parameter has a non-zero value, the statistics counters
2841 are cleared (i.e. set to zero) immediately after they have been read,
2842 otherwise the statistics counters are left untouched.
2843
2844 Add port traffic management private shaper profile
2845 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2846
2847 Add the port traffic management private shaper profile::
2848
2849 testpmd> add port tm node shaper profile (port_id) (shaper_profile_id) \
2850 (cmit_tb_rate) (cmit_tb_size) (peak_tb_rate) (peak_tb_size) \
2851 (packet_length_adjust)
2852
2853 where:
2854
2855 * ``shaper_profile id``: Shaper profile ID for the new profile.
2856 * ``cmit_tb_rate``: Committed token bucket rate (bytes per second).
2857 * ``cmit_tb_size``: Committed token bucket size (bytes).
2858 * ``peak_tb_rate``: Peak token bucket rate (bytes per second).
2859 * ``peak_tb_size``: Peak token bucket size (bytes).
2860 * ``packet_length_adjust``: The value (bytes) to be added to the length of
2861 each packet for the purpose of shaping. This parameter value can be used to
2862 correct the packet length with the framing overhead bytes that are consumed
2863 on the wire.
2864
2865 Delete port traffic management private shaper profile
2866 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2867
2868 Delete the port traffic management private shaper::
2869
2870 testpmd> del port tm node shaper profile (port_id) (shaper_profile_id)
2871
2872 where:
2873
2874 * ``shaper_profile id``: Shaper profile ID that needs to be deleted.
2875
2876 Add port traffic management shared shaper
2877 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2878
2879 Create the port traffic management shared shaper::
2880
2881 testpmd> add port tm node shared shaper (port_id) (shared_shaper_id) \
2882 (shaper_profile_id)
2883
2884 where:
2885
2886 * ``shared_shaper_id``: Shared shaper ID to be created.
2887 * ``shaper_profile id``: Shaper profile ID for shared shaper.
2888
2889 Set port traffic management shared shaper
2890 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2891
2892 Update the port traffic management shared shaper::
2893
2894 testpmd> set port tm node shared shaper (port_id) (shared_shaper_id) \
2895 (shaper_profile_id)
2896
2897 where:
2898
2899 * ``shared_shaper_id``: Shared shaper ID to be update.
2900 * ``shaper_profile id``: Shaper profile ID for shared shaper.
2901
2902 Delete port traffic management shared shaper
2903 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2904
2905 Delete the port traffic management shared shaper::
2906
2907 testpmd> del port tm node shared shaper (port_id) (shared_shaper_id)
2908
2909 where:
2910
2911 * ``shared_shaper_id``: Shared shaper ID to be deleted.
2912
2913 Set port traffic management hierarchy node private shaper
2914 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2915
2916 set the port traffic management hierarchy node private shaper::
2917
2918 testpmd> set port tm node shaper profile (port_id) (node_id) \
2919 (shaper_profile_id)
2920
2921 where:
2922
2923 * ``shaper_profile id``: Private shaper profile ID to be enabled on the
2924 hierarchy node.
2925
2926 Add port traffic management WRED profile
2927 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2928
2929 Create a new WRED profile::
2930
2931 testpmd> add port tm node wred profile (port_id) (wred_profile_id) \
2932 (color_g) (min_th_g) (max_th_g) (maxp_inv_g) (wq_log2_g) \
2933 (color_y) (min_th_y) (max_th_y) (maxp_inv_y) (wq_log2_y) \
2934 (color_r) (min_th_r) (max_th_r) (maxp_inv_r) (wq_log2_r)
2935
2936 where:
2937
2938 * ``wred_profile id``: Identifier for the newly create WRED profile
2939 * ``color_g``: Packet color (green)
2940 * ``min_th_g``: Minimum queue threshold for packet with green color
2941 * ``max_th_g``: Minimum queue threshold for packet with green color
2942 * ``maxp_inv_g``: Inverse of packet marking probability maximum value (maxp)
2943 * ``wq_log2_g``: Negated log2 of queue weight (wq)
2944 * ``color_y``: Packet color (yellow)
2945 * ``min_th_y``: Minimum queue threshold for packet with yellow color
2946 * ``max_th_y``: Minimum queue threshold for packet with yellow color
2947 * ``maxp_inv_y``: Inverse of packet marking probability maximum value (maxp)
2948 * ``wq_log2_y``: Negated log2 of queue weight (wq)
2949 * ``color_r``: Packet color (red)
2950 * ``min_th_r``: Minimum queue threshold for packet with yellow color
2951 * ``max_th_r``: Minimum queue threshold for packet with yellow color
2952 * ``maxp_inv_r``: Inverse of packet marking probability maximum value (maxp)
2953 * ``wq_log2_r``: Negated log2 of queue weight (wq)
2954
2955 Delete port traffic management WRED profile
2956 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2957
2958 Delete the WRED profile::
2959
2960 testpmd> del port tm node wred profile (port_id) (wred_profile_id)
2961
2962 Add port traffic management hierarchy nonleaf node
2963 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2964
2965 Add nonleaf node to port traffic management hierarchy::
2966
2967 testpmd> add port tm nonleaf node (port_id) (node_id) (parent_node_id) \
2968 (priority) (weight) (level_id) (shaper_profile_id) \
2969 (n_sp_priorities) (stats_mask) (n_shared_shapers) \
2970 [(shared_shaper_0) (shared_shaper_1) ...] \
2971
2972 where:
2973
2974 * ``parent_node_id``: Node ID of the parent.
2975 * ``priority``: Node priority (highest node priority is zero). This is used by
2976 the SP algorithm running on the parent node for scheduling this node.
2977 * ``weight``: Node weight (lowest weight is one). The node weight is relative
2978 to the weight sum of all siblings that have the same priority. It is used by
2979 the WFQ algorithm running on the parent node for scheduling this node.
2980 * ``level_id``: Hierarchy level of the node.
2981 * ``shaper_profile_id``: Shaper profile ID of the private shaper to be used by
2982 the node.
2983 * ``n_sp_priorities``: Number of strict priorities.
2984 * ``stats_mask``: Mask of statistics counter types to be enabled for this node.
2985 * ``n_shared_shapers``: Number of shared shapers.
2986 * ``shared_shaper_id``: Shared shaper id.
2987
2988 Add port traffic management hierarchy leaf node
2989 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2990
2991 Add leaf node to port traffic management hierarchy::
2992
2993 testpmd> add port tm leaf node (port_id) (node_id) (parent_node_id) \
2994 (priority) (weight) (level_id) (shaper_profile_id) \
2995 (cman_mode) (wred_profile_id) (stats_mask) (n_shared_shapers) \
2996 [(shared_shaper_id) (shared_shaper_id) ...] \
2997
2998 where:
2999
3000 * ``parent_node_id``: Node ID of the parent.
3001 * ``priority``: Node priority (highest node priority is zero). This is used by
3002 the SP algorithm running on the parent node for scheduling this node.
3003 * ``weight``: Node weight (lowest weight is one). The node weight is relative
3004 to the weight sum of all siblings that have the same priority. It is used by
3005 the WFQ algorithm running on the parent node for scheduling this node.
3006 * ``level_id``: Hierarchy level of the node.
3007 * ``shaper_profile_id``: Shaper profile ID of the private shaper to be used by
3008 the node.
3009 * ``cman_mode``: Congestion management mode to be enabled for this node.
3010 * ``wred_profile_id``: WRED profile id to be enabled for this node.
3011 * ``stats_mask``: Mask of statistics counter types to be enabled for this node.
3012 * ``n_shared_shapers``: Number of shared shapers.
3013 * ``shared_shaper_id``: Shared shaper id.
3014
3015 Delete port traffic management hierarchy node
3016 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3017
3018 Delete node from port traffic management hierarchy::
3019
3020 testpmd> del port tm node (port_id) (node_id)
3021
3022 Update port traffic management hierarchy parent node
3023 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3024
3025 Update port traffic management hierarchy parent node::
3026
3027 testpmd> set port tm node parent (port_id) (node_id) (parent_node_id) \
3028 (priority) (weight)
3029
3030 This function can only be called after the hierarchy commit invocation. Its
3031 success depends on the port support for this operation, as advertised through
3032 the port capability set. This function is valid for all nodes of the traffic
3033 management hierarchy except root node.
3034
3035 Suspend port traffic management hierarchy node
3036 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3037
3038 testpmd> suspend port tm node (port_id) (node_id)
3039
3040 Resume port traffic management hierarchy node
3041 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3042
3043 testpmd> resume port tm node (port_id) (node_id)
3044
3045 Commit port traffic management hierarchy
3046 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3047
3048 Commit the traffic management hierarchy on the port::
3049
3050 testpmd> port tm hierarchy commit (port_id) (clean_on_fail)
3051
3052 where:
3053
3054 * ``clean_on_fail``: When set to non-zero, hierarchy is cleared on function
3055 call failure. On the other hand, hierarchy is preserved when this parameter
3056 is equal to zero.
3057
3058 Set port traffic management mark VLAN dei
3059 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3060
3061 Enables/Disables the traffic management marking on the port for VLAN packets::
3062
3063 testpmd> set port tm mark vlan_dei <port_id> <green> <yellow> <red>
3064
3065 where:
3066
3067 * ``port_id``: The port which on which VLAN packets marked as ``green`` or
3068 ``yellow`` or ``red`` will have dei bit enabled
3069
3070 * ``green`` enable 1, disable 0 marking for dei bit of VLAN packets marked as green
3071
3072 * ``yellow`` enable 1, disable 0 marking for dei bit of VLAN packets marked as yellow
3073
3074 * ``red`` enable 1, disable 0 marking for dei bit of VLAN packets marked as red
3075
3076 Set port traffic management mark IP dscp
3077 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3078
3079 Enables/Disables the traffic management marking on the port for IP dscp packets::
3080
3081 testpmd> set port tm mark ip_dscp <port_id> <green> <yellow> <red>
3082
3083 where:
3084
3085 * ``port_id``: The port which on which IP packets marked as ``green`` or
3086 ``yellow`` or ``red`` will have IP dscp bits updated
3087
3088 * ``green`` enable 1, disable 0 marking IP dscp to low drop precedence for green packets
3089
3090 * ``yellow`` enable 1, disable 0 marking IP dscp to medium drop precedence for yellow packets
3091
3092 * ``red`` enable 1, disable 0 marking IP dscp to high drop precedence for red packets
3093
3094 Set port traffic management mark IP ecn
3095 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3096
3097 Enables/Disables the traffic management marking on the port for IP ecn packets::
3098
3099 testpmd> set port tm mark ip_ecn <port_id> <green> <yellow> <red>
3100
3101 where:
3102
3103 * ``port_id``: The port which on which IP packets marked as ``green`` or
3104 ``yellow`` or ``red`` will have IP ecn bits updated
3105
3106 * ``green`` enable 1, disable 0 marking IP ecn for green marked packets with ecn of 2'b01 or 2'b10
3107 to ecn of 2'b11 when IP is caring TCP or SCTP
3108
3109 * ``yellow`` enable 1, disable 0 marking IP ecn for yellow marked packets with ecn of 2'b01 or 2'b10
3110 to ecn of 2'b11 when IP is caring TCP or SCTP
3111
3112 * ``red`` enable 1, disable 0 marking IP ecn for yellow marked packets with ecn of 2'b01 or 2'b10
3113 to ecn of 2'b11 when IP is caring TCP or SCTP
3114
3115 Set port traffic management default hierarchy (softnic forwarding mode)
3116 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3117
3118 set the traffic management default hierarchy on the port::
3119
3120 testpmd> set port tm hierarchy default (port_id)
3121
3122 Filter Functions
3123 ----------------
3124
3125 This section details the available filter functions that are available.
3126
3127 Note these functions interface the deprecated legacy filtering framework,
3128 superseded by *rte_flow*. See `Flow rules management`_.
3129
3130 ethertype_filter
3131 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3132
3133 Add or delete a L2 Ethertype filter, which identify packets by their L2 Ethertype mainly assign them to a receive queue::
3134
3135 ethertype_filter (port_id) (add|del) (mac_addr|mac_ignr) (mac_address) \
3136 ethertype (ether_type) (drop|fwd) queue (queue_id)
3137
3138 The available information parameters are:
3139
3140 * ``port_id``: The port which the Ethertype filter assigned on.
3141
3142 * ``mac_addr``: Compare destination mac address.
3143
3144 * ``mac_ignr``: Ignore destination mac address match.
3145
3146 * ``mac_address``: Destination mac address to match.
3147
3148 * ``ether_type``: The EtherType value want to match,
3149 for example 0x0806 for ARP packet. 0x0800 (IPv4) and 0x86DD (IPv6) are invalid.
3150
3151 * ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this EtherType filter.
3152 It is meaningless when deleting or dropping.
3153
3154 Example, to add/remove an ethertype filter rule::
3155
3156 testpmd> ethertype_filter 0 add mac_ignr 00:11:22:33:44:55 \
3157 ethertype 0x0806 fwd queue 3
3158
3159 testpmd> ethertype_filter 0 del mac_ignr 00:11:22:33:44:55 \
3160 ethertype 0x0806 fwd queue 3
3161
3162 2tuple_filter
3163 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3164
3165 Add or delete a 2-tuple filter,
3166 which identifies packets by specific protocol and destination TCP/UDP port
3167 and forwards packets into one of the receive queues::
3168
3169 2tuple_filter (port_id) (add|del) dst_port (dst_port_value) \
3170 protocol (protocol_value) mask (mask_value) \
3171 tcp_flags (tcp_flags_value) priority (prio_value) \
3172 queue (queue_id)
3173
3174 The available information parameters are:
3175
3176 * ``port_id``: The port which the 2-tuple filter assigned on.
3177
3178 * ``dst_port_value``: Destination port in L4.
3179
3180 * ``protocol_value``: IP L4 protocol.
3181
3182 * ``mask_value``: Participates in the match or not by bit for field above, 1b means participate.
3183
3184 * ``tcp_flags_value``: TCP control bits. The non-zero value is invalid, when the pro_value is not set to 0x06 (TCP).
3185
3186 * ``prio_value``: Priority of this filter.
3187
3188 * ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this 2-tuple filter.
3189
3190 Example, to add/remove an 2tuple filter rule::
3191
3192 testpmd> 2tuple_filter 0 add dst_port 32 protocol 0x06 mask 0x03 \
3193 tcp_flags 0x02 priority 3 queue 3
3194
3195 testpmd> 2tuple_filter 0 del dst_port 32 protocol 0x06 mask 0x03 \
3196 tcp_flags 0x02 priority 3 queue 3
3197
3198 5tuple_filter
3199 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3200
3201 Add or delete a 5-tuple filter,
3202 which consists of a 5-tuple (protocol, source and destination IP addresses, source and destination TCP/UDP/SCTP port)
3203 and routes packets into one of the receive queues::
3204
3205 5tuple_filter (port_id) (add|del) dst_ip (dst_address) src_ip \
3206 (src_address) dst_port (dst_port_value) \
3207 src_port (src_port_value) protocol (protocol_value) \
3208 mask (mask_value) tcp_flags (tcp_flags_value) \
3209 priority (prio_value) queue (queue_id)
3210
3211 The available information parameters are:
3212
3213 * ``port_id``: The port which the 5-tuple filter assigned on.
3214
3215 * ``dst_address``: Destination IP address.
3216
3217 * ``src_address``: Source IP address.
3218
3219 * ``dst_port_value``: TCP/UDP destination port.
3220
3221 * ``src_port_value``: TCP/UDP source port.
3222
3223 * ``protocol_value``: L4 protocol.
3224
3225 * ``mask_value``: Participates in the match or not by bit for field above, 1b means participate
3226
3227 * ``tcp_flags_value``: TCP control bits. The non-zero value is invalid, when the protocol_value is not set to 0x06 (TCP).
3228
3229 * ``prio_value``: The priority of this filter.
3230
3231 * ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this 5-tuple filter.
3232
3233 Example, to add/remove an 5tuple filter rule::
3234
3235 testpmd> 5tuple_filter 0 add dst_ip 2.2.2.5 src_ip 2.2.2.4 \
3236 dst_port 64 src_port 32 protocol 0x06 mask 0x1F \
3237 flags 0x0 priority 3 queue 3
3238
3239 testpmd> 5tuple_filter 0 del dst_ip 2.2.2.5 src_ip 2.2.2.4 \
3240 dst_port 64 src_port 32 protocol 0x06 mask 0x1F \
3241 flags 0x0 priority 3 queue 3
3242
3243 syn_filter
3244 ~~~~~~~~~~
3245
3246 Using the SYN filter, TCP packets whose *SYN* flag is set can be forwarded to a separate queue::
3247
3248 syn_filter (port_id) (add|del) priority (high|low) queue (queue_id)
3249
3250 The available information parameters are:
3251
3252 * ``port_id``: The port which the SYN filter assigned on.
3253
3254 * ``high``: This SYN filter has higher priority than other filters.
3255
3256 * ``low``: This SYN filter has lower priority than other filters.
3257
3258 * ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this SYN filter
3259
3260 Example::
3261
3262 testpmd> syn_filter 0 add priority high queue 3
3263
3264 flex_filter
3265 ~~~~~~~~~~~
3266
3267 With flex filter, packets can be recognized by any arbitrary pattern within the first 128 bytes of the packet
3268 and routed into one of the receive queues::
3269
3270 flex_filter (port_id) (add|del) len (len_value) bytes (bytes_value) \
3271 mask (mask_value) priority (prio_value) queue (queue_id)
3272
3273 The available information parameters are:
3274
3275 * ``port_id``: The port which the Flex filter is assigned on.
3276
3277 * ``len_value``: Filter length in bytes, no greater than 128.
3278
3279 * ``bytes_value``: A string in hexadecimal, means the value the flex filter needs to match.
3280
3281 * ``mask_value``: A string in hexadecimal, bit 1 means corresponding byte participates in the match.
3282
3283 * ``prio_value``: The priority of this filter.
3284
3285 * ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this Flex filter.
3286
3287 Example::
3288
3289 testpmd> flex_filter 0 add len 16 bytes 0x00000000000000000000000008060000 \
3290 mask 000C priority 3 queue 3
3291
3292 testpmd> flex_filter 0 del len 16 bytes 0x00000000000000000000000008060000 \
3293 mask 000C priority 3 queue 3
3294
3295
3296 .. _testpmd_flow_director:
3297
3298 flow_director_filter
3299 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3300
3301 The Flow Director works in receive mode to identify specific flows or sets of flows and route them to specific queues.
3302
3303 Four types of filtering are supported which are referred to as Perfect Match, Signature, Perfect-mac-vlan and
3304 Perfect-tunnel filters, the match mode is set by the ``--pkt-filter-mode`` command-line parameter:
3305
3306 * Perfect match filters.
3307 The hardware checks a match between the masked fields of the received packets and the programmed filters.
3308 The masked fields are for IP flow.
3309
3310 * Signature filters.
3311 The hardware checks a match between a hash-based signature of the masked fields of the received packet.
3312
3313 * Perfect-mac-vlan match filters.
3314 The hardware checks a match between the masked fields of the received packets and the programmed filters.
3315 The masked fields are for MAC VLAN flow.
3316
3317 * Perfect-tunnel match filters.
3318 The hardware checks a match between the masked fields of the received packets and the programmed filters.
3319 The masked fields are for tunnel flow.
3320
3321 * Perfect-raw-flow-type match filters.
3322 The hardware checks a match between the masked fields of the received packets and pre-loaded raw (template) packet.
3323 The masked fields are specified by input sets.
3324
3325 The Flow Director filters can match the different fields for different type of packet: flow type, specific input set
3326 per flow type and the flexible payload.
3327
3328 The Flow Director can also mask out parts of all of these fields so that filters
3329 are only applied to certain fields or parts of the fields.
3330
3331 Note that for raw flow type mode the source and destination fields in the
3332 raw packet buffer need to be presented in a reversed order with respect
3333 to the expected received packets.
3334 For example: IP source and destination addresses or TCP/UDP/SCTP
3335 source and destination ports
3336
3337 Different NICs may have different capabilities, command show port fdir (port_id) can be used to acquire the information.
3338
3339 # Commands to add flow director filters of different flow types::
3340
3341 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode IP (add|del|update) \
3342 flow (ipv4-other|ipv4-frag|ipv6-other|ipv6-frag) \
3343 src (src_ip_address) dst (dst_ip_address) \
3344 tos (tos_value) proto (proto_value) ttl (ttl_value) \
3345 vlan (vlan_value) flexbytes (flexbytes_value) \
3346 (drop|fwd) pf|vf(vf_id) queue (queue_id) \
3347 fd_id (fd_id_value)
3348
3349 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode IP (add|del|update) \
3350 flow (ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp) \
3351 src (src_ip_address) (src_port) \
3352 dst (dst_ip_address) (dst_port) \
3353 tos (tos_value) ttl (ttl_value) \
3354 vlan (vlan_value) flexbytes (flexbytes_value) \
3355 (drop|fwd) queue pf|vf(vf_id) (queue_id) \
3356 fd_id (fd_id_value)
3357
3358 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode IP (add|del|update) \
3359 flow (ipv4-sctp|ipv6-sctp) \
3360 src (src_ip_address) (src_port) \
3361 dst (dst_ip_address) (dst_port) \
3362 tos (tos_value) ttl (ttl_value) \
3363 tag (verification_tag) vlan (vlan_value) \
3364 flexbytes (flexbytes_value) (drop|fwd) \
3365 pf|vf(vf_id) queue (queue_id) fd_id (fd_id_value)
3366
3367 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode IP (add|del|update) flow l2_payload \
3368 ether (ethertype) flexbytes (flexbytes_value) \
3369 (drop|fwd) pf|vf(vf_id) queue (queue_id)
3370 fd_id (fd_id_value)
3371
3372 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode MAC-VLAN (add|del|update) \
3373 mac (mac_address) vlan (vlan_value) \
3374 flexbytes (flexbytes_value) (drop|fwd) \
3375 queue (queue_id) fd_id (fd_id_value)
3376
3377 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode Tunnel (add|del|update) \
3378 mac (mac_address) vlan (vlan_value) \
3379 tunnel (NVGRE|VxLAN) tunnel-id (tunnel_id_value) \
3380 flexbytes (flexbytes_value) (drop|fwd) \
3381 queue (queue_id) fd_id (fd_id_value)
3382
3383 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode raw (add|del|update) flow (flow_id) \
3384 (drop|fwd) queue (queue_id) fd_id (fd_id_value) \
3385 packet (packet file name)
3386
3387 For example, to add an ipv4-udp flow type filter::
3388
3389 testpmd> flow_director_filter 0 mode IP add flow ipv4-udp src 2.2.2.3 32 \
3390 dst 2.2.2.5 33 tos 2 ttl 40 vlan 0x1 flexbytes (0x88,0x48) \
3391 fwd pf queue 1 fd_id 1
3392
3393 For example, add an ipv4-other flow type filter::
3394
3395 testpmd> flow_director_filter 0 mode IP add flow ipv4-other src 2.2.2.3 \
3396 dst 2.2.2.5 tos 2 proto 20 ttl 40 vlan 0x1 \
3397 flexbytes (0x88,0x48) fwd pf queue 1 fd_id 1
3398
3399 flush_flow_director
3400 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3401
3402 Flush all flow director filters on a device::
3403
3404 testpmd> flush_flow_director (port_id)
3405
3406 Example, to flush all flow director filter on port 0::
3407
3408 testpmd> flush_flow_director 0
3409
3410 flow_director_mask
3411 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3412
3413 Set flow director's input masks::
3414
3415 flow_director_mask (port_id) mode IP vlan (vlan_value) \
3416 src_mask (ipv4_src) (ipv6_src) (src_port) \
3417 dst_mask (ipv4_dst) (ipv6_dst) (dst_port)
3418
3419 flow_director_mask (port_id) mode MAC-VLAN vlan (vlan_value)
3420
3421 flow_director_mask (port_id) mode Tunnel vlan (vlan_value) \
3422 mac (mac_value) tunnel-type (tunnel_type_value) \
3423 tunnel-id (tunnel_id_value)
3424
3425 Example, to set flow director mask on port 0::
3426
3427 testpmd> flow_director_mask 0 mode IP vlan 0xefff \
3428 src_mask 255.255.255.255 \
3429 FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF 0xFFFF \
3430 dst_mask 255.255.255.255 \
3431 FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF 0xFFFF
3432
3433 flow_director_flex_mask
3434 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3435
3436 set masks of flow director's flexible payload based on certain flow type::
3437
3438 testpmd> flow_director_flex_mask (port_id) \
3439 flow (none|ipv4-other|ipv4-frag|ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp| \
3440 ipv6-other|ipv6-frag|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp| \
3441 l2_payload|all) (mask)
3442
3443 Example, to set flow director's flex mask for all flow type on port 0::
3444
3445 testpmd> flow_director_flex_mask 0 flow all \
3446 (0xff,0xff,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0)
3447
3448
3449 flow_director_flex_payload
3450 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3451
3452 Configure flexible payload selection::
3453
3454 flow_director_flex_payload (port_id) (raw|l2|l3|l4) (config)
3455
3456 For example, to select the first 16 bytes from the offset 4 (bytes) of packet's payload as flexible payload::
3457
3458 testpmd> flow_director_flex_payload 0 l4 \
3459 (4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19)
3460
3461 get_sym_hash_ena_per_port
3462 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3463
3464 Get symmetric hash enable configuration per port::
3465
3466 get_sym_hash_ena_per_port (port_id)
3467
3468 For example, to get symmetric hash enable configuration of port 1::
3469
3470 testpmd> get_sym_hash_ena_per_port 1
3471
3472 set_sym_hash_ena_per_port
3473 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3474
3475 Set symmetric hash enable configuration per port to enable or disable::
3476
3477 set_sym_hash_ena_per_port (port_id) (enable|disable)
3478
3479 For example, to set symmetric hash enable configuration of port 1 to enable::
3480
3481 testpmd> set_sym_hash_ena_per_port 1 enable
3482
3483 get_hash_global_config
3484 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3485
3486 Get the global configurations of hash filters::
3487
3488 get_hash_global_config (port_id)
3489
3490 For example, to get the global configurations of hash filters of port 1::
3491
3492 testpmd> get_hash_global_config 1
3493
3494 set_hash_global_config
3495 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3496
3497 Set the global configurations of hash filters::
3498
3499 set_hash_global_config (port_id) (toeplitz|simple_xor|symmetric_toeplitz|default) \
3500 (ipv4|ipv4-frag|ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp|ipv4-other|ipv6|ipv6-frag| \
3501 ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp|ipv6-other|l2_payload|<flow_id>) \
3502 (enable|disable)
3503
3504 For example, to enable simple_xor for flow type of ipv6 on port 2::
3505
3506 testpmd> set_hash_global_config 2 simple_xor ipv6 enable
3507
3508 set_hash_input_set
3509 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3510
3511 Set the input set for hash::
3512
3513 set_hash_input_set (port_id) (ipv4-frag|ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp| \
3514 ipv4-other|ipv6-frag|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp|ipv6-other| \
3515 l2_payload|<flow_id>) (ovlan|ivlan|src-ipv4|dst-ipv4|src-ipv6|dst-ipv6| \
3516 ipv4-tos|ipv4-proto|ipv6-tc|ipv6-next-header|udp-src-port|udp-dst-port| \
3517 tcp-src-port|tcp-dst-port|sctp-src-port|sctp-dst-port|sctp-veri-tag| \
3518 udp-key|gre-key|fld-1st|fld-2nd|fld-3rd|fld-4th|fld-5th|fld-6th|fld-7th| \
3519 fld-8th|none) (select|add)
3520
3521 For example, to add source IP to hash input set for flow type of ipv4-udp on port 0::
3522
3523 testpmd> set_hash_input_set 0 ipv4-udp src-ipv4 add
3524
3525 set_fdir_input_set
3526 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3527
3528 The Flow Director filters can match the different fields for different type of packet, i.e. specific input set
3529 on per flow type and the flexible payload. This command can be used to change input set for each flow type.
3530
3531 Set the input set for flow director::
3532
3533 set_fdir_input_set (port_id) (ipv4-frag|ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp| \
3534 ipv4-other|ipv6|ipv6-frag|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp|ipv6-other| \
3535 l2_payload|<flow_id>) (ivlan|ethertype|src-ipv4|dst-ipv4|src-ipv6|dst-ipv6| \
3536 ipv4-tos|ipv4-proto|ipv4-ttl|ipv6-tc|ipv6-next-header|ipv6-hop-limits| \
3537 tudp-src-port|udp-dst-port|cp-src-port|tcp-dst-port|sctp-src-port| \
3538 sctp-dst-port|sctp-veri-tag|none) (select|add)
3539
3540 For example to add source IP to FD input set for flow type of ipv4-udp on port 0::
3541
3542 testpmd> set_fdir_input_set 0 ipv4-udp src-ipv4 add
3543
3544 global_config
3545 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3546
3547 Set different GRE key length for input set::
3548
3549 global_config (port_id) gre-key-len (number in bytes)
3550
3551 For example to set GRE key length for input set to 4 bytes on port 0::
3552
3553 testpmd> global_config 0 gre-key-len 4
3554
3555
3556 .. _testpmd_rte_flow:
3557
3558 Flow rules management
3559 ---------------------
3560
3561 Control of the generic flow API (*rte_flow*) is fully exposed through the
3562 ``flow`` command (validation, creation, destruction, queries and operation
3563 modes).
3564
3565 Considering *rte_flow* overlaps with all `Filter Functions`_, using both
3566 features simultaneously may cause undefined side-effects and is therefore
3567 not recommended.
3568
3569 ``flow`` syntax
3570 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3571
3572 Because the ``flow`` command uses dynamic tokens to handle the large number
3573 of possible flow rules combinations, its behavior differs slightly from
3574 other commands, in particular:
3575
3576 - Pressing *?* or the *<tab>* key displays contextual help for the current
3577 token, not that of the entire command.
3578
3579 - Optional and repeated parameters are supported (provided they are listed
3580 in the contextual help).
3581
3582 The first parameter stands for the operation mode. Possible operations and
3583 their general syntax are described below. They are covered in detail in the
3584 following sections.
3585
3586 - Check whether a flow rule can be created::
3587
3588 flow validate {port_id}
3589 [group {group_id}] [priority {level}] [ingress] [egress] [transfer]
3590 pattern {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end
3591 actions {action} [/ {action} [...]] / end
3592
3593 - Create a flow rule::
3594
3595 flow create {port_id}
3596 [group {group_id}] [priority {level}] [ingress] [egress] [transfer]
3597 pattern {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end
3598 actions {action} [/ {action} [...]] / end
3599
3600 - Destroy specific flow rules::
3601
3602 flow destroy {port_id} rule {rule_id} [...]
3603
3604 - Destroy all flow rules::
3605
3606 flow flush {port_id}
3607
3608 - Query an existing flow rule::
3609
3610 flow query {port_id} {rule_id} {action}
3611
3612 - List existing flow rules sorted by priority, filtered by group
3613 identifiers::
3614
3615 flow list {port_id} [group {group_id}] [...]
3616
3617 - Restrict ingress traffic to the defined flow rules::
3618
3619 flow isolate {port_id} {boolean}
3620
3621 - Dump internal representation information of all flows in hardware::
3622
3623 flow dump {port_id} {output_file}
3624
3625 - List and destroy aged flow rules::
3626
3627 flow aged {port_id} [destroy]
3628
3629 Validating flow rules
3630 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3631
3632 ``flow validate`` reports whether a flow rule would be accepted by the
3633 underlying device in its current state but stops short of creating it. It is
3634 bound to ``rte_flow_validate()``::
3635
3636 flow validate {port_id}
3637 [group {group_id}] [priority {level}] [ingress] [egress] [transfer]
3638 pattern {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end
3639 actions {action} [/ {action} [...]] / end
3640
3641 If successful, it will show::
3642
3643 Flow rule validated
3644
3645 Otherwise it will show an error message of the form::
3646
3647 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...]
3648
3649 This command uses the same parameters as ``flow create``, their format is
3650 described in `Creating flow rules`_.
3651
3652 Check whether redirecting any Ethernet packet received on port 0 to RX queue
3653 index 6 is supported::
3654
3655 testpmd> flow validate 0 ingress pattern eth / end
3656 actions queue index 6 / end
3657 Flow rule validated
3658 testpmd>
3659
3660 Port 0 does not support TCPv6 rules::
3661
3662 testpmd> flow validate 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / tcp / end
3663 actions drop / end
3664 Caught error type 9 (specific pattern item): Invalid argument
3665 testpmd>
3666
3667 Creating flow rules
3668 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3669
3670 ``flow create`` validates and creates the specified flow rule. It is bound
3671 to ``rte_flow_create()``::
3672
3673 flow create {port_id}
3674 [group {group_id}] [priority {level}] [ingress] [egress] [transfer]
3675 pattern {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end
3676 actions {action} [/ {action} [...]] / end
3677
3678 If successful, it will return a flow rule ID usable with other commands::
3679
3680 Flow rule #[...] created
3681
3682 Otherwise it will show an error message of the form::
3683
3684 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...]
3685
3686 Parameters describe in the following order:
3687
3688 - Attributes (*group*, *priority*, *ingress*, *egress*, *transfer* tokens).
3689 - A matching pattern, starting with the *pattern* token and terminated by an
3690 *end* pattern item.
3691 - Actions, starting with the *actions* token and terminated by an *end*
3692 action.
3693
3694 These translate directly to *rte_flow* objects provided as-is to the
3695 underlying functions.
3696
3697 The shortest valid definition only comprises mandatory tokens::
3698
3699 testpmd> flow create 0 pattern end actions end
3700
3701 Note that PMDs may refuse rules that essentially do nothing such as this
3702 one.
3703
3704 **All unspecified object values are automatically initialized to 0.**
3705
3706 Attributes
3707 ^^^^^^^^^^
3708
3709 These tokens affect flow rule attributes (``struct rte_flow_attr``) and are
3710 specified before the ``pattern`` token.
3711
3712 - ``group {group id}``: priority group.
3713 - ``priority {level}``: priority level within group.
3714 - ``ingress``: rule applies to ingress traffic.
3715 - ``egress``: rule applies to egress traffic.
3716 - ``transfer``: apply rule directly to endpoints found in pattern.
3717
3718 Each instance of an attribute specified several times overrides the previous
3719 value as shown below (group 4 is used)::
3720
3721 testpmd> flow create 0 group 42 group 24 group 4 [...]
3722
3723 Note that once enabled, ``ingress`` and ``egress`` cannot be disabled.
3724
3725 While not specifying a direction is an error, some rules may allow both
3726 simultaneously.
3727
3728 Most rules affect RX therefore contain the ``ingress`` token::
3729
3730 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern [...]
3731
3732 Matching pattern
3733 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3734
3735 A matching pattern starts after the ``pattern`` token. It is made of pattern
3736 items and is terminated by a mandatory ``end`` item.
3737
3738 Items are named after their type (*RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_* from ``enum
3739 rte_flow_item_type``).
3740
3741 The ``/`` token is used as a separator between pattern items as shown
3742 below::
3743
3744 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end [...]
3745
3746 Note that protocol items like these must be stacked from lowest to highest
3747 layer to make sense. For instance, the following rule is either invalid or
3748 unlikely to match any packet::
3749
3750 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / udp / ipv4 / end [...]
3751
3752 More information on these restrictions can be found in the *rte_flow*
3753 documentation.
3754
3755 Several items support additional specification structures, for example
3756 ``ipv4`` allows specifying source and destination addresses as follows::
3757
3758 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1
3759 dst is 10.2.0.0 / end [...]
3760
3761 This rule matches all IPv4 traffic with the specified properties.
3762
3763 In this example, ``src`` and ``dst`` are field names of the underlying
3764 ``struct rte_flow_item_ipv4`` object. All item properties can be specified
3765 in a similar fashion.
3766
3767 The ``is`` token means that the subsequent value must be matched exactly,
3768 and assigns ``spec`` and ``mask`` fields in ``struct rte_flow_item``
3769 accordingly. Possible assignment tokens are:
3770
3771 - ``is``: match value perfectly (with full bit-mask).
3772 - ``spec``: match value according to configured bit-mask.
3773 - ``last``: specify upper bound to establish a range.
3774 - ``mask``: specify bit-mask with relevant bits set to one.
3775 - ``prefix``: generate bit-mask with <prefix-length> most-significant bits set to one.
3776
3777 These yield identical results::
3778
3779 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1
3780
3781 ::
3782
3783 ipv4 src spec 10.1.1.1 src mask 255.255.255.255
3784
3785 ::
3786
3787 ipv4 src spec 10.1.1.1 src prefix 32
3788
3789 ::
3790
3791 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src last 10.1.1.1 # range with a single value
3792
3793 ::
3794
3795 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src last 0 # 0 disables range
3796
3797 Inclusive ranges can be defined with ``last``::
3798
3799 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src last 10.2.3.4 # 10.1.1.1 to 10.2.3.4
3800
3801 Note that ``mask`` affects both ``spec`` and ``last``::
3802
3803 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src last 10.2.3.4 src mask 255.255.0.0
3804 # matches 10.1.0.0 to 10.2.255.255
3805
3806 Properties can be modified multiple times::
3807
3808 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src is 10.1.2.3 src is 10.2.3.4 # matches 10.2.3.4
3809
3810 ::
3811
3812 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src prefix 24 src prefix 16 # matches 10.1.0.0/16
3813
3814 Pattern items
3815 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3816
3817 This section lists supported pattern items and their attributes, if any.
3818
3819 - ``end``: end list of pattern items.
3820
3821 - ``void``: no-op pattern item.
3822
3823 - ``invert``: perform actions when pattern does not match.
3824
3825 - ``any``: match any protocol for the current layer.
3826
3827 - ``num {unsigned}``: number of layers covered.
3828
3829 - ``pf``: match traffic from/to the physical function.
3830
3831 - ``vf``: match traffic from/to a virtual function ID.
3832
3833 - ``id {unsigned}``: VF ID.
3834
3835 - ``phy_port``: match traffic from/to a specific physical port.
3836
3837 - ``index {unsigned}``: physical port index.
3838
3839 - ``port_id``: match traffic from/to a given DPDK port ID.
3840
3841 - ``id {unsigned}``: DPDK port ID.
3842
3843 - ``mark``: match value set in previously matched flow rule using the mark action.
3844
3845 - ``id {unsigned}``: arbitrary integer value.
3846
3847 - ``raw``: match an arbitrary byte string.
3848
3849 - ``relative {boolean}``: look for pattern after the previous item.
3850 - ``search {boolean}``: search pattern from offset (see also limit).
3851 - ``offset {integer}``: absolute or relative offset for pattern.
3852 - ``limit {unsigned}``: search area limit for start of pattern.
3853 - ``pattern {string}``: byte string to look for.
3854
3855 - ``eth``: match Ethernet header.
3856
3857 - ``dst {MAC-48}``: destination MAC.
3858 - ``src {MAC-48}``: source MAC.
3859 - ``type {unsigned}``: EtherType or TPID.
3860
3861 - ``vlan``: match 802.1Q/ad VLAN tag.
3862
3863 - ``tci {unsigned}``: tag control information.
3864 - ``pcp {unsigned}``: priority code point.
3865 - ``dei {unsigned}``: drop eligible indicator.
3866 - ``vid {unsigned}``: VLAN identifier.
3867 - ``inner_type {unsigned}``: inner EtherType or TPID.
3868
3869 - ``ipv4``: match IPv4 header.
3870
3871 - ``tos {unsigned}``: type of service.
3872 - ``ttl {unsigned}``: time to live.
3873 - ``proto {unsigned}``: next protocol ID.
3874 - ``src {ipv4 address}``: source address.
3875 - ``dst {ipv4 address}``: destination address.
3876
3877 - ``ipv6``: match IPv6 header.
3878
3879 - ``tc {unsigned}``: traffic class.
3880 - ``flow {unsigned}``: flow label.
3881 - ``proto {unsigned}``: protocol (next header).
3882 - ``hop {unsigned}``: hop limit.
3883 - ``src {ipv6 address}``: source address.
3884 - ``dst {ipv6 address}``: destination address.
3885
3886 - ``icmp``: match ICMP header.
3887
3888 - ``type {unsigned}``: ICMP packet type.
3889 - ``code {unsigned}``: ICMP packet code.
3890
3891 - ``udp``: match UDP header.
3892
3893 - ``src {unsigned}``: UDP source port.
3894 - ``dst {unsigned}``: UDP destination port.
3895
3896 - ``tcp``: match TCP header.
3897
3898 - ``src {unsigned}``: TCP source port.
3899 - ``dst {unsigned}``: TCP destination port.
3900
3901 - ``sctp``: match SCTP header.
3902
3903 - ``src {unsigned}``: SCTP source port.
3904 - ``dst {unsigned}``: SCTP destination port.
3905 - ``tag {unsigned}``: validation tag.
3906 - ``cksum {unsigned}``: checksum.
3907
3908 - ``vxlan``: match VXLAN header.
3909
3910 - ``vni {unsigned}``: VXLAN identifier.
3911
3912 - ``e_tag``: match IEEE 802.1BR E-Tag header.
3913
3914 - ``grp_ecid_b {unsigned}``: GRP and E-CID base.
3915
3916 - ``nvgre``: match NVGRE header.
3917
3918 - ``tni {unsigned}``: virtual subnet ID.
3919
3920 - ``mpls``: match MPLS header.
3921
3922 - ``label {unsigned}``: MPLS label.
3923
3924 - ``gre``: match GRE header.
3925
3926 - ``protocol {unsigned}``: protocol type.
3927
3928 - ``gre_key``: match GRE optional key field.
3929
3930 - ``value {unsigned}``: key value.
3931
3932 - ``fuzzy``: fuzzy pattern match, expect faster than default.
3933
3934 - ``thresh {unsigned}``: accuracy threshold.
3935
3936 - ``gtp``, ``gtpc``, ``gtpu``: match GTPv1 header.
3937
3938 - ``teid {unsigned}``: tunnel endpoint identifier.
3939
3940 - ``geneve``: match GENEVE header.
3941
3942 - ``vni {unsigned}``: virtual network identifier.
3943 - ``protocol {unsigned}``: protocol type.
3944
3945 - ``vxlan-gpe``: match VXLAN-GPE header.
3946
3947 - ``vni {unsigned}``: VXLAN-GPE identifier.
3948
3949 - ``arp_eth_ipv4``: match ARP header for Ethernet/IPv4.
3950
3951 - ``sha {MAC-48}``: sender hardware address.
3952 - ``spa {ipv4 address}``: sender IPv4 address.
3953 - ``tha {MAC-48}``: target hardware address.
3954 - ``tpa {ipv4 address}``: target IPv4 address.
3955
3956 - ``ipv6_ext``: match presence of any IPv6 extension header.
3957
3958 - ``next_hdr {unsigned}``: next header.
3959
3960 - ``icmp6``: match any ICMPv6 header.
3961
3962 - ``type {unsigned}``: ICMPv6 type.
3963 - ``code {unsigned}``: ICMPv6 code.
3964
3965 - ``icmp6_nd_ns``: match ICMPv6 neighbor discovery solicitation.
3966
3967 - ``target_addr {ipv6 address}``: target address.
3968
3969 - ``icmp6_nd_na``: match ICMPv6 neighbor discovery advertisement.
3970
3971 - ``target_addr {ipv6 address}``: target address.
3972
3973 - ``icmp6_nd_opt``: match presence of any ICMPv6 neighbor discovery option.
3974
3975 - ``type {unsigned}``: ND option type.
3976
3977 - ``icmp6_nd_opt_sla_eth``: match ICMPv6 neighbor discovery source Ethernet
3978 link-layer address option.
3979
3980 - ``sla {MAC-48}``: source Ethernet LLA.
3981
3982 - ``icmp6_nd_opt_tla_eth``: match ICMPv6 neighbor discovery target Ethernet
3983 link-layer address option.
3984
3985 - ``tla {MAC-48}``: target Ethernet LLA.
3986
3987 - ``meta``: match application specific metadata.
3988
3989 - ``data {unsigned}``: metadata value.
3990
3991 - ``gtp_psc``: match GTP PDU extension header with type 0x85.
3992
3993 - ``pdu_type {unsigned}``: PDU type.
3994 - ``qfi {unsigned}``: QoS flow identifier.
3995
3996 - ``pppoes``, ``pppoed``: match PPPoE header.
3997
3998 - ``session_id {unsigned}``: session identifier.
3999
4000 - ``pppoe_proto_id``: match PPPoE session protocol identifier.
4001
4002 - ``proto_id {unsigned}``: PPP protocol identifier.
4003
4004 - ``l2tpv3oip``: match L2TPv3 over IP header.
4005
4006 - ``session_id {unsigned}``: L2TPv3 over IP session identifier.
4007
4008 - ``ah``: match AH header.
4009
4010 - ``spi {unsigned}``: security parameters index.
4011
4012 - ``pfcp``: match PFCP header.
4013
4014 - ``s_field {unsigned}``: S field.
4015 - ``seid {unsigned}``: session endpoint identifier.
4016
4017 Actions list
4018 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
4019
4020 A list of actions starts after the ``actions`` token in the same fashion as
4021 `Matching pattern`_; actions are separated by ``/`` tokens and the list is
4022 terminated by a mandatory ``end`` action.
4023
4024 Actions are named after their type (*RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_* from ``enum
4025 rte_flow_action_type``).
4026
4027 Dropping all incoming UDPv4 packets can be expressed as follows::
4028
4029 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end
4030 actions drop / end
4031
4032 Several actions have configurable properties which must be specified when
4033 there is no valid default value. For example, ``queue`` requires a target
4034 queue index.
4035
4036 This rule redirects incoming UDPv4 traffic to queue index 6::
4037
4038 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end
4039 actions queue index 6 / end
4040
4041 While this one could be rejected by PMDs (unspecified queue index)::
4042
4043 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end
4044 actions queue / end
4045
4046 As defined by *rte_flow*, the list is not ordered, all actions of a given
4047 rule are performed simultaneously. These are equivalent::
4048
4049 queue index 6 / void / mark id 42 / end
4050
4051 ::
4052
4053 void / mark id 42 / queue index 6 / end
4054
4055 All actions in a list should have different types, otherwise only the last
4056 action of a given type is taken into account::
4057
4058 queue index 4 / queue index 5 / queue index 6 / end # will use queue 6
4059
4060 ::
4061
4062 drop / drop / drop / end # drop is performed only once
4063
4064 ::
4065
4066 mark id 42 / queue index 3 / mark id 24 / end # mark will be 24
4067
4068 Considering they are performed simultaneously, opposite and overlapping
4069 actions can sometimes be combined when the end result is unambiguous::
4070
4071 drop / queue index 6 / end # drop has no effect
4072
4073 ::
4074
4075 queue index 6 / rss queues 6 7 8 / end # queue has no effect
4076
4077 ::
4078
4079 drop / passthru / end # drop has no effect
4080
4081 Note that PMDs may still refuse such combinations.
4082
4083 Actions
4084 ^^^^^^^
4085
4086 This section lists supported actions and their attributes, if any.
4087
4088 - ``end``: end list of actions.
4089
4090 - ``void``: no-op action.
4091
4092 - ``passthru``: let subsequent rule process matched packets.
4093
4094 - ``jump``: redirect traffic to group on device.
4095
4096 - ``group {unsigned}``: group to redirect to.
4097
4098 - ``mark``: attach 32 bit value to packets.
4099
4100 - ``id {unsigned}``: 32 bit value to return with packets.
4101
4102 - ``flag``: flag packets.
4103
4104 - ``queue``: assign packets to a given queue index.
4105
4106 - ``index {unsigned}``: queue index to use.
4107
4108 - ``drop``: drop packets (note: passthru has priority).
4109
4110 - ``count``: enable counters for this rule.
4111
4112 - ``rss``: spread packets among several queues.
4113
4114 - ``func {hash function}``: RSS hash function to apply, allowed tokens are
4115 the same as `set_hash_global_config`_.
4116
4117 - ``level {unsigned}``: encapsulation level for ``types``.
4118
4119 - ``types [{RSS hash type} [...]] end``: specific RSS hash types, allowed
4120 tokens are the same as `set_hash_input_set`_, except that an empty list
4121 does not disable RSS but instead requests unspecified "best-effort"
4122 settings.
4123
4124 - ``key {string}``: RSS hash key, overrides ``key_len``.
4125
4126 - ``key_len {unsigned}``: RSS hash key length in bytes, can be used in
4127 conjunction with ``key`` to pad or truncate it.
4128
4129 - ``queues [{unsigned} [...]] end``: queue indices to use.
4130
4131 - ``pf``: direct traffic to physical function.
4132
4133 - ``vf``: direct traffic to a virtual function ID.
4134
4135 - ``original {boolean}``: use original VF ID if possible.
4136 - ``id {unsigned}``: VF ID.
4137
4138 - ``phy_port``: direct packets to physical port index.
4139
4140 - ``original {boolean}``: use original port index if possible.
4141 - ``index {unsigned}``: physical port index.
4142
4143 - ``port_id``: direct matching traffic to a given DPDK port ID.
4144
4145 - ``original {boolean}``: use original DPDK port ID if possible.
4146 - ``id {unsigned}``: DPDK port ID.
4147
4148 - ``of_set_mpls_ttl``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_SET_MPLS_TTL``.
4149
4150 - ``mpls_ttl``: MPLS TTL.
4151
4152 - ``of_dec_mpls_ttl``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_DEC_MPLS_TTL``.
4153
4154 - ``of_set_nw_ttl``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_SET_NW_TTL``.
4155
4156 - ``nw_ttl``: IP TTL.
4157
4158 - ``of_dec_nw_ttl``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_DEC_NW_TTL``.
4159
4160 - ``of_copy_ttl_out``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_COPY_TTL_OUT``.
4161
4162 - ``of_copy_ttl_in``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_COPY_TTL_IN``.
4163
4164 - ``of_pop_vlan``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_POP_VLAN``.
4165
4166 - ``of_push_vlan``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_PUSH_VLAN``.
4167
4168 - ``ethertype``: Ethertype.
4169
4170 - ``of_set_vlan_vid``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_SET_VLAN_VID``.
4171
4172 - ``vlan_vid``: VLAN id.
4173
4174 - ``of_set_vlan_pcp``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_SET_VLAN_PCP``.
4175
4176 - ``vlan_pcp``: VLAN priority.
4177
4178 - ``of_pop_mpls``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_POP_MPLS``.
4179
4180 - ``ethertype``: Ethertype.
4181
4182 - ``of_push_mpls``: OpenFlow's ``OFPAT_PUSH_MPLS``.
4183
4184 - ``ethertype``: Ethertype.
4185
4186 - ``vxlan_encap``: Performs a VXLAN encapsulation, outer layer configuration
4187 is done through `Config VXLAN Encap outer layers`_.
4188
4189 - ``vxlan_decap``: Performs a decapsulation action by stripping all headers of
4190 the VXLAN tunnel network overlay from the matched flow.
4191
4192 - ``nvgre_encap``: Performs a NVGRE encapsulation, outer layer configuration
4193 is done through `Config NVGRE Encap outer layers`_.
4194
4195 - ``nvgre_decap``: Performs a decapsulation action by stripping all headers of
4196 the NVGRE tunnel network overlay from the matched flow.
4197
4198 - ``l2_encap``: Performs a L2 encapsulation, L2 configuration
4199 is done through `Config L2 Encap`_.
4200
4201 - ``l2_decap``: Performs a L2 decapsulation, L2 configuration
4202 is done through `Config L2 Decap`_.
4203
4204 - ``mplsogre_encap``: Performs a MPLSoGRE encapsulation, outer layer
4205 configuration is done through `Config MPLSoGRE Encap outer layers`_.
4206
4207 - ``mplsogre_decap``: Performs a MPLSoGRE decapsulation, outer layer
4208 configuration is done through `Config MPLSoGRE Decap outer layers`_.
4209
4210 - ``mplsoudp_encap``: Performs a MPLSoUDP encapsulation, outer layer
4211 configuration is done through `Config MPLSoUDP Encap outer layers`_.
4212
4213 - ``mplsoudp_decap``: Performs a MPLSoUDP decapsulation, outer layer
4214 configuration is done through `Config MPLSoUDP Decap outer layers`_.
4215
4216 - ``set_ipv4_src``: Set a new IPv4 source address in the outermost IPv4 header.
4217
4218 - ``ipv4_addr``: New IPv4 source address.
4219
4220 - ``set_ipv4_dst``: Set a new IPv4 destination address in the outermost IPv4
4221 header.
4222
4223 - ``ipv4_addr``: New IPv4 destination address.
4224
4225 - ``set_ipv6_src``: Set a new IPv6 source address in the outermost IPv6 header.
4226
4227 - ``ipv6_addr``: New IPv6 source address.
4228
4229 - ``set_ipv6_dst``: Set a new IPv6 destination address in the outermost IPv6
4230 header.
4231
4232 - ``ipv6_addr``: New IPv6 destination address.
4233
4234 - ``set_tp_src``: Set a new source port number in the outermost TCP/UDP
4235 header.
4236
4237 - ``port``: New TCP/UDP source port number.
4238
4239 - ``set_tp_dst``: Set a new destination port number in the outermost TCP/UDP
4240 header.
4241
4242 - ``port``: New TCP/UDP destination port number.
4243
4244 - ``mac_swap``: Swap the source and destination MAC addresses in the outermost
4245 Ethernet header.
4246
4247 - ``dec_ttl``: Performs a decrease TTL value action
4248
4249 - ``set_ttl``: Set TTL value with specified value
4250 - ``ttl_value {unsigned}``: The new TTL value to be set
4251
4252 - ``set_mac_src``: set source MAC address
4253
4254 - ``mac_addr {MAC-48}``: new source MAC address
4255
4256 - ``set_mac_dst``: set destination MAC address
4257
4258 - ``mac_addr {MAC-48}``: new destination MAC address
4259
4260 - ``inc_tcp_seq``: Increase sequence number in the outermost TCP header.
4261
4262 - ``value {unsigned}``: Value to increase TCP sequence number by.
4263
4264 - ``dec_tcp_seq``: Decrease sequence number in the outermost TCP header.
4265
4266 - ``value {unsigned}``: Value to decrease TCP sequence number by.
4267
4268 - ``inc_tcp_ack``: Increase acknowledgment number in the outermost TCP header.
4269
4270 - ``value {unsigned}``: Value to increase TCP acknowledgment number by.
4271
4272 - ``dec_tcp_ack``: Decrease acknowledgment number in the outermost TCP header.
4273
4274 - ``value {unsigned}``: Value to decrease TCP acknowledgment number by.
4275
4276 - ``set_ipv4_dscp``: Set IPv4 DSCP value with specified value
4277
4278 - ``dscp_value {unsigned}``: The new DSCP value to be set
4279
4280 - ``set_ipv6_dscp``: Set IPv6 DSCP value with specified value
4281
4282 - ``dscp_value {unsigned}``: The new DSCP value to be set
4283
4284 Destroying flow rules
4285 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4286
4287 ``flow destroy`` destroys one or more rules from their rule ID (as returned
4288 by ``flow create``), this command calls ``rte_flow_destroy()`` as many
4289 times as necessary::
4290
4291 flow destroy {port_id} rule {rule_id} [...]
4292
4293 If successful, it will show::
4294
4295 Flow rule #[...] destroyed
4296
4297 It does not report anything for rule IDs that do not exist. The usual error
4298 message is shown when a rule cannot be destroyed::
4299
4300 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...]
4301
4302 ``flow flush`` destroys all rules on a device and does not take extra
4303 arguments. It is bound to ``rte_flow_flush()``::
4304
4305 flow flush {port_id}
4306
4307 Any errors are reported as above.
4308
4309 Creating several rules and destroying them::
4310
4311 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / end
4312 actions queue index 2 / end
4313 Flow rule #0 created
4314 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / end
4315 actions queue index 3 / end
4316 Flow rule #1 created
4317 testpmd> flow destroy 0 rule 0 rule 1
4318 Flow rule #1 destroyed
4319 Flow rule #0 destroyed
4320 testpmd>
4321
4322 The same result can be achieved using ``flow flush``::
4323
4324 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / end
4325 actions queue index 2 / end
4326 Flow rule #0 created
4327 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / end
4328 actions queue index 3 / end
4329 Flow rule #1 created
4330 testpmd> flow flush 0
4331 testpmd>
4332
4333 Non-existent rule IDs are ignored::
4334
4335 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / end
4336 actions queue index 2 / end
4337 Flow rule #0 created
4338 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / end
4339 actions queue index 3 / end
4340 Flow rule #1 created
4341 testpmd> flow destroy 0 rule 42 rule 10 rule 2
4342 testpmd>
4343 testpmd> flow destroy 0 rule 0
4344 Flow rule #0 destroyed
4345 testpmd>
4346
4347 Querying flow rules
4348 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4349
4350 ``flow query`` queries a specific action of a flow rule having that
4351 ability. Such actions collect information that can be reported using this
4352 command. It is bound to ``rte_flow_query()``::
4353
4354 flow query {port_id} {rule_id} {action}
4355
4356 If successful, it will display either the retrieved data for known actions
4357 or the following message::
4358
4359 Cannot display result for action type [...] ([...])
4360
4361 Otherwise, it will complain either that the rule does not exist or that some
4362 error occurred::
4363
4364 Flow rule #[...] not found
4365
4366 ::
4367
4368 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...]
4369
4370 Currently only the ``count`` action is supported. This action reports the
4371 number of packets that hit the flow rule and the total number of bytes. Its
4372 output has the following format::
4373
4374 count:
4375 hits_set: [...] # whether "hits" contains a valid value
4376 bytes_set: [...] # whether "bytes" contains a valid value
4377 hits: [...] # number of packets
4378 bytes: [...] # number of bytes
4379
4380 Querying counters for TCPv6 packets redirected to queue 6::
4381
4382 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / tcp / end
4383 actions queue index 6 / count / end
4384 Flow rule #4 created
4385 testpmd> flow query 0 4 count
4386 count:
4387 hits_set: 1
4388 bytes_set: 0
4389 hits: 386446
4390 bytes: 0
4391 testpmd>
4392
4393 Listing flow rules
4394 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4395
4396 ``flow list`` lists existing flow rules sorted by priority and optionally
4397 filtered by group identifiers::
4398
4399 flow list {port_id} [group {group_id}] [...]
4400
4401 This command only fails with the following message if the device does not
4402 exist::
4403
4404 Invalid port [...]
4405
4406 Output consists of a header line followed by a short description of each
4407 flow rule, one per line. There is no output at all when no flow rules are
4408 configured on the device::
4409
4410 ID Group Prio Attr Rule
4411 [...] [...] [...] [...] [...]
4412
4413 ``Attr`` column flags:
4414
4415 - ``i`` for ``ingress``.
4416 - ``e`` for ``egress``.
4417
4418 Creating several flow rules and listing them::
4419
4420 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / end
4421 actions queue index 6 / end
4422 Flow rule #0 created
4423 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / end
4424 actions queue index 2 / end
4425 Flow rule #1 created
4426 testpmd> flow create 0 priority 5 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end
4427 actions rss queues 6 7 8 end / end
4428 Flow rule #2 created
4429 testpmd> flow list 0
4430 ID Group Prio Attr Rule
4431 0 0 0 i- ETH IPV4 => QUEUE
4432 1 0 0 i- ETH IPV6 => QUEUE
4433 2 0 5 i- ETH IPV4 UDP => RSS
4434 testpmd>
4435
4436 Rules are sorted by priority (i.e. group ID first, then priority level)::
4437
4438 testpmd> flow list 1
4439 ID Group Prio Attr Rule
4440 0 0 0 i- ETH => COUNT
4441 6 0 500 i- ETH IPV6 TCP => DROP COUNT
4442 5 0 1000 i- ETH IPV6 ICMP => QUEUE
4443 1 24 0 i- ETH IPV4 UDP => QUEUE
4444 4 24 10 i- ETH IPV4 TCP => DROP
4445 3 24 20 i- ETH IPV4 => DROP
4446 2 24 42 i- ETH IPV4 UDP => QUEUE
4447 7 63 0 i- ETH IPV6 UDP VXLAN => MARK QUEUE
4448 testpmd>
4449
4450 Output can be limited to specific groups::
4451
4452 testpmd> flow list 1 group 0 group 63
4453 ID Group Prio Attr Rule
4454 0 0 0 i- ETH => COUNT
4455 6 0 500 i- ETH IPV6 TCP => DROP COUNT
4456 5 0 1000 i- ETH IPV6 ICMP => QUEUE
4457 7 63 0 i- ETH IPV6 UDP VXLAN => MARK QUEUE
4458 testpmd>
4459
4460 Toggling isolated mode
4461 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4462
4463 ``flow isolate`` can be used to tell the underlying PMD that ingress traffic
4464 must only be injected from the defined flow rules; that no default traffic
4465 is expected outside those rules and the driver is free to assign more
4466 resources to handle them. It is bound to ``rte_flow_isolate()``::
4467
4468 flow isolate {port_id} {boolean}
4469
4470 If successful, enabling or disabling isolated mode shows either::
4471
4472 Ingress traffic on port [...]
4473 is now restricted to the defined flow rules
4474
4475 Or::
4476
4477 Ingress traffic on port [...]
4478 is not restricted anymore to the defined flow rules
4479
4480 Otherwise, in case of error::
4481
4482 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...]
4483
4484 Mainly due to its side effects, PMDs supporting this mode may not have the
4485 ability to toggle it more than once without reinitializing affected ports
4486 first (e.g. by exiting testpmd).
4487
4488 Enabling isolated mode::
4489
4490 testpmd> flow isolate 0 true
4491 Ingress traffic on port 0 is now restricted to the defined flow rules
4492 testpmd>
4493
4494 Disabling isolated mode::
4495
4496 testpmd> flow isolate 0 false
4497 Ingress traffic on port 0 is not restricted anymore to the defined flow rules
4498 testpmd>
4499
4500 Dumping HW internal information
4501 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4502
4503 ``flow dump`` dumps the hardware's internal representation information of
4504 all flows. It is bound to ``rte_flow_dev_dump()``::
4505
4506 flow dump {port_id} {output_file}
4507
4508 If successful, it will show::
4509
4510 Flow dump finished
4511
4512 Otherwise, it will complain error occurred::
4513
4514 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...]
4515
4516 Listing and destroying aged flow rules
4517 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4518
4519 ``flow aged`` simply lists aged flow rules be get from api ``rte_flow_get_aged_flows``,
4520 and ``destroy`` parameter can be used to destroy those flow rules in PMD.
4521
4522 flow aged {port_id} [destroy]
4523
4524 Listing current aged flow rules::
4525
4526 testpmd> flow aged 0
4527 Port 0 total aged flows: 0
4528 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 src is 2.2.2.14 / end
4529 actions age timeout 5 / queue index 0 / end
4530 Flow rule #0 created
4531 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 src is 2.2.2.15 / end
4532 actions age timeout 4 / queue index 0 / end
4533 Flow rule #1 created
4534 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 src is 2.2.2.16 / end
4535 actions age timeout 2 / queue index 0 / end
4536 Flow rule #2 created
4537 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 src is 2.2.2.17 / end
4538 actions age timeout 3 / queue index 0 / end
4539 Flow rule #3 created
4540
4541
4542 Aged Rules are simply list as command ``flow list {port_id}``, but strip the detail rule
4543 information, all the aged flows are sorted by the longest timeout time. For example, if
4544 those rules be configured in the same time, ID 2 will be the first aged out rule, the next
4545 will be ID 3, ID 1, ID 0::
4546
4547 testpmd> flow aged 0
4548 Port 0 total aged flows: 4
4549 ID Group Prio Attr
4550 2 0 0 i--
4551 3 0 0 i--
4552 1 0 0 i--
4553 0 0 0 i--
4554
4555 If attach ``destroy`` parameter, the command will destroy all the list aged flow rules.
4556
4557 testpmd> flow aged 0 destroy
4558 Port 0 total aged flows: 4
4559 ID Group Prio Attr
4560 2 0 0 i--
4561 3 0 0 i--
4562 1 0 0 i--
4563 0 0 0 i--
4564
4565 Flow rule #2 destroyed
4566 Flow rule #3 destroyed
4567 Flow rule #1 destroyed
4568 Flow rule #0 destroyed
4569 4 flows be destroyed
4570 testpmd> flow aged 0
4571 Port 0 total aged flows: 0
4572
4573
4574 Sample QinQ flow rules
4575 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4576
4577 Before creating QinQ rule(s) the following commands should be issued to enable QinQ::
4578
4579 testpmd> port stop 0
4580 testpmd> vlan set qinq_strip on 0
4581
4582 The above command sets the inner and outer TPID's to 0x8100.
4583
4584 To change the TPID's the following commands should be used::
4585
4586 testpmd> vlan set outer tpid 0xa100 0
4587 testpmd> vlan set inner tpid 0x9100 0
4588 testpmd> port start 0
4589
4590 Validate and create a QinQ rule on port 0 to steer traffic to a VF queue in a VM.
4591
4592 ::
4593
4594 testpmd> flow validate 0 ingress pattern eth / vlan tci is 123 /
4595 vlan tci is 456 / end actions vf id 1 / queue index 0 / end
4596 Flow rule #0 validated
4597
4598 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / vlan tci is 4 /
4599 vlan tci is 456 / end actions vf id 123 / queue index 0 / end
4600 Flow rule #0 created
4601
4602 testpmd> flow list 0
4603 ID Group Prio Attr Rule
4604 0 0 0 i- ETH VLAN VLAN=>VF QUEUE
4605
4606 Validate and create a QinQ rule on port 0 to steer traffic to a queue on the host.
4607
4608 ::
4609
4610 testpmd> flow validate 0 ingress pattern eth / vlan tci is 321 /
4611 vlan tci is 654 / end actions pf / queue index 0 / end
4612 Flow rule #1 validated
4613
4614 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / vlan tci is 321 /
4615 vlan tci is 654 / end actions pf / queue index 1 / end
4616 Flow rule #1 created
4617
4618 testpmd> flow list 0
4619 ID Group Prio Attr Rule
4620 0 0 0 i- ETH VLAN VLAN=>VF QUEUE
4621 1 0 0 i- ETH VLAN VLAN=>PF QUEUE
4622
4623 Sample VXLAN encapsulation rule
4624 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4625
4626 VXLAN encapsulation outer layer has default value pre-configured in testpmd
4627 source code, those can be changed by using the following commands
4628
4629 IPv4 VXLAN outer header::
4630
4631 testpmd> set vxlan ip-version ipv4 vni 4 udp-src 4 udp-dst 4 ip-src 127.0.0.1
4632 ip-dst 128.0.0.1 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4633 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions vxlan_encap /
4634 queue index 0 / end
4635
4636 testpmd> set vxlan-with-vlan ip-version ipv4 vni 4 udp-src 4 udp-dst 4 ip-src
4637 127.0.0.1 ip-dst 128.0.0.1 vlan-tci 34 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11
4638 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4639 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions vxlan_encap /
4640 queue index 0 / end
4641
4642 testpmd> set vxlan-tos-ttl ip-version ipv4 vni 4 udp-src 4 udp-dst 4 ip-tos 0
4643 ip-ttl 255 ip-src 127.0.0.1 ip-dst 128.0.0.1 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11
4644 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4645 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions vxlan_encap /
4646 queue index 0 / end
4647
4648 IPv6 VXLAN outer header::
4649
4650 testpmd> set vxlan ip-version ipv6 vni 4 udp-src 4 udp-dst 4 ip-src ::1
4651 ip-dst ::2222 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4652 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions vxlan_encap /
4653 queue index 0 / end
4654
4655 testpmd> set vxlan-with-vlan ip-version ipv6 vni 4 udp-src 4 udp-dst 4
4656 ip-src ::1 ip-dst ::2222 vlan-tci 34 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11
4657 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4658 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions vxlan_encap /
4659 queue index 0 / end
4660
4661 testpmd> set vxlan-tos-ttl ip-version ipv6 vni 4 udp-src 4 udp-dst 4
4662 ip-tos 0 ip-ttl 255 ::1 ip-dst ::2222 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11
4663 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4664 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions vxlan_encap /
4665 queue index 0 / end
4666
4667 Sample NVGRE encapsulation rule
4668 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4669
4670 NVGRE encapsulation outer layer has default value pre-configured in testpmd
4671 source code, those can be changed by using the following commands
4672
4673 IPv4 NVGRE outer header::
4674
4675 testpmd> set nvgre ip-version ipv4 tni 4 ip-src 127.0.0.1 ip-dst 128.0.0.1
4676 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4677 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions nvgre_encap /
4678 queue index 0 / end
4679
4680 testpmd> set nvgre-with-vlan ip-version ipv4 tni 4 ip-src 127.0.0.1
4681 ip-dst 128.0.0.1 vlan-tci 34 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11
4682 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4683 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions nvgre_encap /
4684 queue index 0 / end
4685
4686 IPv6 NVGRE outer header::
4687
4688 testpmd> set nvgre ip-version ipv6 tni 4 ip-src ::1 ip-dst ::2222
4689 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4690 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions nvgre_encap /
4691 queue index 0 / end
4692
4693 testpmd> set nvgre-with-vlan ip-version ipv6 tni 4 ip-src ::1 ip-dst ::2222
4694 vlan-tci 34 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4695 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern end actions nvgre_encap /
4696 queue index 0 / end
4697
4698 Sample L2 encapsulation rule
4699 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4700
4701 L2 encapsulation has default value pre-configured in testpmd
4702 source code, those can be changed by using the following commands
4703
4704 L2 header::
4705
4706 testpmd> set l2_encap ip-version ipv4
4707 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4708 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / mpls / end actions
4709 mplsoudp_decap / l2_encap / end
4710
4711 L2 with VXLAN header::
4712
4713 testpmd> set l2_encap-with-vlan ip-version ipv4 vlan-tci 34
4714 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4715 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / mpls / end actions
4716 mplsoudp_decap / l2_encap / end
4717
4718 Sample L2 decapsulation rule
4719 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4720
4721 L2 decapsulation has default value pre-configured in testpmd
4722 source code, those can be changed by using the following commands
4723
4724 L2 header::
4725
4726 testpmd> set l2_decap
4727 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_decap / mplsoudp_encap /
4728 queue index 0 / end
4729
4730 L2 with VXLAN header::
4731
4732 testpmd> set l2_encap-with-vlan
4733 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_encap / mplsoudp_encap /
4734 queue index 0 / end
4735
4736 Sample MPLSoGRE encapsulation rule
4737 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4738
4739 MPLSoGRE encapsulation outer layer has default value pre-configured in testpmd
4740 source code, those can be changed by using the following commands
4741
4742 IPv4 MPLSoGRE outer header::
4743
4744 testpmd> set mplsogre_encap ip-version ipv4 label 4
4745 ip-src 127.0.0.1 ip-dst 128.0.0.1 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11
4746 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4747 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_decap /
4748 mplsogre_encap / end
4749
4750 IPv4 MPLSoGRE with VLAN outer header::
4751
4752 testpmd> set mplsogre_encap-with-vlan ip-version ipv4 label 4
4753 ip-src 127.0.0.1 ip-dst 128.0.0.1 vlan-tci 34
4754 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4755 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_decap /
4756 mplsogre_encap / end
4757
4758 IPv6 MPLSoGRE outer header::
4759
4760 testpmd> set mplsogre_encap ip-version ipv6 mask 4
4761 ip-src ::1 ip-dst ::2222 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11
4762 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4763 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_decap /
4764 mplsogre_encap / end
4765
4766 IPv6 MPLSoGRE with VLAN outer header::
4767
4768 testpmd> set mplsogre_encap-with-vlan ip-version ipv6 mask 4
4769 ip-src ::1 ip-dst ::2222 vlan-tci 34
4770 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4771 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_decap /
4772 mplsogre_encap / end
4773
4774 Sample MPLSoGRE decapsulation rule
4775 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4776
4777 MPLSoGRE decapsulation outer layer has default value pre-configured in testpmd
4778 source code, those can be changed by using the following commands
4779
4780 IPv4 MPLSoGRE outer header::
4781
4782 testpmd> set mplsogre_decap ip-version ipv4
4783 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / gre / mpls / end actions
4784 mplsogre_decap / l2_encap / end
4785
4786 IPv4 MPLSoGRE with VLAN outer header::
4787
4788 testpmd> set mplsogre_decap-with-vlan ip-version ipv4
4789 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / vlan / ipv4 / gre / mpls / end
4790 actions mplsogre_decap / l2_encap / end
4791
4792 IPv6 MPLSoGRE outer header::
4793
4794 testpmd> set mplsogre_decap ip-version ipv6
4795 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / gre / mpls / end
4796 actions mplsogre_decap / l2_encap / end
4797
4798 IPv6 MPLSoGRE with VLAN outer header::
4799
4800 testpmd> set mplsogre_decap-with-vlan ip-version ipv6
4801 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / vlan / ipv6 / gre / mpls / end
4802 actions mplsogre_decap / l2_encap / end
4803
4804 Sample MPLSoUDP encapsulation rule
4805 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4806
4807 MPLSoUDP encapsulation outer layer has default value pre-configured in testpmd
4808 source code, those can be changed by using the following commands
4809
4810 IPv4 MPLSoUDP outer header::
4811
4812 testpmd> set mplsoudp_encap ip-version ipv4 label 4 udp-src 5 udp-dst 10
4813 ip-src 127.0.0.1 ip-dst 128.0.0.1 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11
4814 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4815 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_decap /
4816 mplsoudp_encap / end
4817
4818 IPv4 MPLSoUDP with VLAN outer header::
4819
4820 testpmd> set mplsoudp_encap-with-vlan ip-version ipv4 label 4 udp-src 5
4821 udp-dst 10 ip-src 127.0.0.1 ip-dst 128.0.0.1 vlan-tci 34
4822 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4823 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_decap /
4824 mplsoudp_encap / end
4825
4826 IPv6 MPLSoUDP outer header::
4827
4828 testpmd> set mplsoudp_encap ip-version ipv6 mask 4 udp-src 5 udp-dst 10
4829 ip-src ::1 ip-dst ::2222 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11
4830 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4831 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_decap /
4832 mplsoudp_encap / end
4833
4834 IPv6 MPLSoUDP with VLAN outer header::
4835
4836 testpmd> set mplsoudp_encap-with-vlan ip-version ipv6 mask 4 udp-src 5
4837 udp-dst 10 ip-src ::1 ip-dst ::2222 vlan-tci 34
4838 eth-src 11:11:11:11:11:11 eth-dst 22:22:22:22:22:22
4839 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / end actions l2_decap /
4840 mplsoudp_encap / end
4841
4842 Sample MPLSoUDP decapsulation rule
4843 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4844
4845 MPLSoUDP decapsulation outer layer has default value pre-configured in testpmd
4846 source code, those can be changed by using the following commands
4847
4848 IPv4 MPLSoUDP outer header::
4849
4850 testpmd> set mplsoudp_decap ip-version ipv4
4851 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / mpls / end actions
4852 mplsoudp_decap / l2_encap / end
4853
4854 IPv4 MPLSoUDP with VLAN outer header::
4855
4856 testpmd> set mplsoudp_decap-with-vlan ip-version ipv4
4857 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / vlan / ipv4 / udp / mpls / end
4858 actions mplsoudp_decap / l2_encap / end
4859
4860 IPv6 MPLSoUDP outer header::
4861
4862 testpmd> set mplsoudp_decap ip-version ipv6
4863 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / udp / mpls / end
4864 actions mplsoudp_decap / l2_encap / end
4865
4866 IPv6 MPLSoUDP with VLAN outer header::
4867
4868 testpmd> set mplsoudp_decap-with-vlan ip-version ipv6
4869 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / vlan / ipv6 / udp / mpls / end
4870 actions mplsoudp_decap / l2_encap / end
4871
4872 Sample Raw encapsulation rule
4873 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4874
4875 Raw encapsulation configuration can be set by the following commands
4876
4877 Eecapsulating VxLAN::
4878
4879 testpmd> set raw_encap 4 eth src is 10:11:22:33:44:55 / vlan tci is 1
4880 inner_type is 0x0800 / ipv4 / udp dst is 4789 / vxlan vni
4881 is 2 / end_set
4882 testpmd> flow create 0 egress pattern eth / ipv4 / end actions
4883 raw_encap index 4 / end
4884
4885 Sample Raw decapsulation rule
4886 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4887
4888 Raw decapsulation configuration can be set by the following commands
4889
4890 Decapsulating VxLAN::
4891
4892 testpmd> set raw_decap eth / ipv4 / udp / vxlan / end_set
4893 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / vxlan / eth / ipv4 /
4894 end actions raw_decap / queue index 0 / end
4895
4896 Sample ESP rules
4897 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4898
4899 ESP rules can be created by the following commands::
4900
4901 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / esp spi is 1 / end actions
4902 queue index 3 / end
4903 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / esp spi is 1 / end
4904 actions queue index 3 / end
4905 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / esp spi is 1 / end actions
4906 queue index 3 / end
4907 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / udp / esp spi is 1 / end
4908 actions queue index 3 / end
4909
4910 Sample AH rules
4911 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4912
4913 AH rules can be created by the following commands::
4914
4915 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / ah spi is 1 / end actions
4916 queue index 3 / end
4917 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / ah spi is 1 / end
4918 actions queue index 3 / end
4919 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / ah spi is 1 / end actions
4920 queue index 3 / end
4921 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / udp / ah spi is 1 / end
4922 actions queue index 3 / end
4923
4924 Sample PFCP rules
4925 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4926
4927 PFCP rules can be created by the following commands(s_field need to be 1
4928 if seid is set)::
4929
4930 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / pfcp s_field is 0 / end
4931 actions queue index 3 / end
4932 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / pfcp s_field is 1
4933 seid is 1 / end actions queue index 3 / end
4934 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / pfcp s_field is 0 / end
4935 actions queue index 3 / end
4936 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / pfcp s_field is 1
4937 seid is 1 / end actions queue index 3 / end
4938
4939 BPF Functions
4940 --------------
4941
4942 The following sections show functions to load/unload eBPF based filters.
4943
4944 bpf-load
4945 ~~~~~~~~
4946
4947 Load an eBPF program as a callback for particular RX/TX queue::
4948
4949 testpmd> bpf-load rx|tx (portid) (queueid) (load-flags) (bpf-prog-filename)
4950
4951 The available load-flags are:
4952
4953 * ``J``: use JIT generated native code, otherwise BPF interpreter will be used.
4954
4955 * ``M``: assume input parameter is a pointer to rte_mbuf, otherwise assume it is a pointer to first segment's data.
4956
4957 * ``-``: none.
4958
4959 .. note::
4960
4961 You'll need clang v3.7 or above to build bpf program you'd like to load
4962
4963 For example:
4964
4965 .. code-block:: console
4966
4967 cd examples/bpf
4968 clang -O2 -target bpf -c t1.c
4969
4970 Then to load (and JIT compile) t1.o at RX queue 0, port 1:
4971
4972 .. code-block:: console
4973
4974 testpmd> bpf-load rx 1 0 J ./dpdk.org/examples/bpf/t1.o
4975
4976 To load (not JITed) t1.o at TX queue 0, port 0:
4977
4978 .. code-block:: console
4979
4980 testpmd> bpf-load tx 0 0 - ./dpdk.org/examples/bpf/t1.o
4981
4982 bpf-unload
4983 ~~~~~~~~~~
4984
4985 Unload previously loaded eBPF program for particular RX/TX queue::
4986
4987 testpmd> bpf-unload rx|tx (portid) (queueid)
4988
4989 For example to unload BPF filter from TX queue 0, port 0:
4990
4991 .. code-block:: console
4992
4993 testpmd> bpf-unload tx 0 0