1 # Chelsio T4 Factory Default configuration file.
3 # Copyright (C) 2010-2014 Chelsio Communications. All rights reserved.
5 # DO NOT MODIFY THIS FILE UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES. MODIFICATION OF
6 # THIS FILE WILL RESULT IN A NON-FUNCTIONAL T4 ADAPTER AND MAY RESULT
7 # IN PHYSICAL DAMAGE TO T4 ADAPTERS.
9 # This file provides the default, power-on configuration for 4-port T4-based
10 # adapters shipped from the factory. These defaults are designed to address
11 # the needs of the vast majority of T4 customers. The basic idea is to have
12 # a default configuration which allows a customer to plug a T4 adapter in and
13 # have it work regardless of OS, driver or application except in the most
14 # unusual and/or demanding customer applications.
16 # Many of the T4 resources which are described by this configuration are
17 # finite. This requires balancing the configuration/operation needs of
18 # device drivers across OSes and a large number of customer application.
20 # Some of the more important resources to allocate and their constaints are:
21 # 1. Virtual Interfaces: 128.
22 # 2. Ingress Queues with Free Lists: 1024. PCI-E SR-IOV Virtual Functions
23 # must use a power of 2 Ingress Queues.
24 # 3. Egress Queues: 128K. PCI-E SR-IOV Virtual Functions must use a
25 # power of 2 Egress Queues.
26 # 4. MSI-X Vectors: 1088. A complication here is that the PCI-E SR-IOV
27 # Virtual Functions based off of a Physical Function all get the
28 # same umber of MSI-X Vectors as the base Physical Function.
29 # Additionally, regardless of whether Virtual Functions are enabled or
30 # not, their MSI-X "needs" are counted by the PCI-E implementation.
31 # And finally, all Physical Funcations capable of supporting Virtual
32 # Functions (PF0-3) must have the same number of configured TotalVFs in
33 # their SR-IOV Capabilities.
34 # 5. Multi-Port Support (MPS) TCAM: 336 entries to support MAC destination
35 # address matching on Ingress Packets.
37 # Some of the important OS/Driver resource needs are:
38 # 6. Some OS Drivers will manage all resources through a single Physical
39 # Function (currently PF0 but it could be any Physical Function). Thus,
40 # this "Unified PF" will need to have enough resources allocated to it
41 # to allow for this. And because of the MSI-X resource allocation
42 # constraints mentioned above, this probably means we'll either have to
43 # severely limit the TotalVFs if we continue to use PF0 as the Unified PF
44 # or we'll need to move the Unified PF into the PF4-7 range since those
45 # Physical Functions don't have any Virtual Functions associated with
47 # 7. Some OS Drivers will manage different ports and functions (NIC,
48 # storage, etc.) on different Physical Functions. For example, NIC
49 # functions for ports 0-3 on PF0-3, FCoE on PF4, iSCSI on PF5, etc.
51 # Some of the customer application needs which need to be accommodated:
52 # 8. Some customers will want to support large CPU count systems with
53 # good scaling. Thus, we'll need to accommodate a number of
54 # Ingress Queues and MSI-X Vectors to allow up to some number of CPUs
55 # to be involved per port and per application function. For example,
56 # in the case where all ports and application functions will be
57 # managed via a single Unified PF and we want to accommodate scaling up
58 # to 8 CPUs, we would want:
61 # 3 application functions (NIC, FCoE, iSCSI) per port *
62 # 8 Ingress Queue/MSI-X Vectors per application function
64 # for a total of 96 Ingress Queues and MSI-X Vectors on the Unified PF.
65 # (Plus a few for Firmware Event Queues, etc.)
67 # 9. Some customers will want to use T4's PCI-E SR-IOV Capability to allow
68 # Virtual Machines to directly access T4 functionality via SR-IOV
69 # Virtual Functions and "PCI Device Passthrough" -- this is especially
70 # true for the NIC application functionality. (Note that there is
71 # currently no ability to use the TOE, FCoE, iSCSI, etc. via Virtual
72 # Functions so this is in fact solely limited to NIC.)
76 # Global configuration settings.
79 rss_glb_config_mode = basicvirtual
80 rss_glb_config_options = tnlmapen,hashtoeplitz,tnlalllkp
82 # The following Scatter Gather Engine (SGE) settings assume a 4KB Host
83 # Page Size and a 64B L1 Cache Line Size. It programs the
84 # EgrStatusPageSize and IngPadBoundary to 64B and the PktShift to 2.
85 # If a Master PF Driver finds itself on a machine with different
86 # parameters, then the Master PF Driver is responsible for initializing
87 # these parameters to appropriate values.
90 # 1. The Free List Buffer Sizes below are raw and the firmware will
91 # round them up to the Ingress Padding Boundary.
92 # 2. The SGE Timer Values below are expressed below in microseconds.
93 # The firmware will convert these values to Core Clock Ticks when
94 # it processes the configuration parameters.
96 reg[0x1008] = 0x40810/0x21c70 # SGE_CONTROL
97 reg[0x100c] = 0x22222222 # SGE_HOST_PAGE_SIZE
98 reg[0x10a0] = 0x01040810 # SGE_INGRESS_RX_THRESHOLD
99 reg[0x1044] = 4096 # SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE0
100 reg[0x1048] = 65536 # SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE1
101 reg[0x104c] = 1536 # SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE2
102 reg[0x1050] = 9024 # SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE3
103 reg[0x1054] = 9216 # SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE4
104 reg[0x1058] = 2048 # SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE5
105 reg[0x105c] = 128 # SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE6
106 reg[0x1060] = 8192 # SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE7
107 reg[0x1064] = 16384 # SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE8
108 reg[0x10a4] = 0xa000a000/0xf000f000 # SGE_DBFIFO_STATUS
109 reg[0x10a8] = 0x2000/0x2000 # SGE_DOORBELL_CONTROL
110 sge_timer_value = 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 # SGE_TIMER_VALUE* in usecs
112 # enable TP_OUT_CONFIG.IPIDSPLITMODE
113 reg[0x7d04] = 0x00010000/0x00010000
115 reg[0x7dc0] = 0x62f8849 # TP_SHIFT_CNT
117 # TP_VLAN_PRI_MAP to select filter tuples
118 # filter tuples : fragmentation, mpshittype, macmatch, ethertype,
119 # protocol, tos, vlan, vnic_id, port, fcoe
120 # valid filterModes are described the Terminator 4 Data Book
121 filterMode = fragmentation, mpshittype, protocol, vlan, port, fcoe
123 # filter tuples enforced in LE active region (equal to or subset of filterMode)
124 filterMask = protocol, fcoe
126 # Percentage of dynamic memory (in either the EDRAM or external MEM)
127 # to use for TP RX payload
130 # TP RX payload page size
131 tp_pmrx_pagesize = 64K
133 # TP number of RX channels
134 tp_nrxch = 0 # 0 (auto) = 1
136 # Percentage of dynamic memory (in either the EDRAM or external MEM)
137 # to use for TP TX payload
140 # TP TX payload page size
141 tp_pmtx_pagesize = 64K
143 # TP number of TX channels
144 tp_ntxch = 0 # 0 (auto) = equal number of ports
147 tp_mtus = 88, 256, 512, 576, 808, 1024, 1280, 1488, 1500, 2002, 2048, 4096, 4352, 8192, 9000, 9600
149 # Some "definitions" to make the rest of this a bit more readable. We support
150 # 4 ports, 3 functions (NIC, FCoE and iSCSI), scaling up to 8 "CPU Queue Sets"
151 # per function per port ...
153 # NMSIX = 1088 # available MSI-X Vectors
154 # NVI = 128 # available Virtual Interfaces
155 # NMPSTCAM = 336 # MPS TCAM entries
158 # NCPUS = 8 # CPUs we want to support scalably
159 # NFUNCS = 3 # functions per port (NIC, FCoE, iSCSI)
161 # Breakdown of Virtual Interface/Queue/Interrupt resources for the "Unified
162 # PF" which many OS Drivers will use to manage most or all functions.
164 # Each Ingress Queue can use one MSI-X interrupt but some Ingress Queues can
165 # use Forwarded Interrupt Ingress Queues. For these latter, an Ingress Queue
166 # would be created and the Queue ID of a Forwarded Interrupt Ingress Queue
167 # will be specified as the "Ingress Queue Asynchronous Destination Index."
168 # Thus, the number of MSI-X Vectors assigned to the Unified PF will be less
169 # than or equal to the number of Ingress Queues ...
171 # NVI_NIC = 4 # NIC access to NPORTS
172 # NFLIQ_NIC = 32 # NIC Ingress Queues with Free Lists
173 # NETHCTRL_NIC = 32 # NIC Ethernet Control/TX Queues
174 # NEQ_NIC = 64 # NIC Egress Queues (FL, ETHCTRL/TX)
175 # NMPSTCAM_NIC = 16 # NIC MPS TCAM Entries (NPORTS*4)
176 # NMSIX_NIC = 32 # NIC MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
178 # NVI_OFLD = 0 # Offload uses NIC function to access ports
179 # NFLIQ_OFLD = 16 # Offload Ingress Queues with Free Lists
180 # NETHCTRL_OFLD = 0 # Offload Ethernet Control/TX Queues
181 # NEQ_OFLD = 16 # Offload Egress Queues (FL)
182 # NMPSTCAM_OFLD = 0 # Offload MPS TCAM Entries (uses NIC's)
183 # NMSIX_OFLD = 16 # Offload MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
185 # NVI_RDMA = 0 # RDMA uses NIC function to access ports
186 # NFLIQ_RDMA = 4 # RDMA Ingress Queues with Free Lists
187 # NETHCTRL_RDMA = 0 # RDMA Ethernet Control/TX Queues
188 # NEQ_RDMA = 4 # RDMA Egress Queues (FL)
189 # NMPSTCAM_RDMA = 0 # RDMA MPS TCAM Entries (uses NIC's)
190 # NMSIX_RDMA = 4 # RDMA MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
192 # NEQ_WD = 128 # Wire Direct TX Queues and FLs
193 # NETHCTRL_WD = 64 # Wire Direct TX Queues
194 # NFLIQ_WD = 64 ` # Wire Direct Ingress Queues with Free Lists
196 # NVI_ISCSI = 4 # ISCSI access to NPORTS
197 # NFLIQ_ISCSI = 4 # ISCSI Ingress Queues with Free Lists
198 # NETHCTRL_ISCSI = 0 # ISCSI Ethernet Control/TX Queues
199 # NEQ_ISCSI = 4 # ISCSI Egress Queues (FL)
200 # NMPSTCAM_ISCSI = 4 # ISCSI MPS TCAM Entries (NPORTS)
201 # NMSIX_ISCSI = 4 # ISCSI MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
203 # NVI_FCOE = 4 # FCOE access to NPORTS
204 # NFLIQ_FCOE = 34 # FCOE Ingress Queues with Free Lists
205 # NETHCTRL_FCOE = 32 # FCOE Ethernet Control/TX Queues
206 # NEQ_FCOE = 66 # FCOE Egress Queues (FL)
207 # NMPSTCAM_FCOE = 32 # FCOE MPS TCAM Entries (NPORTS)
208 # NMSIX_FCOE = 34 # FCOE MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
210 # Two extra Ingress Queues per function for Firmware Events and Forwarded
211 # Interrupts, and two extra interrupts per function for Firmware Events (or a
212 # Forwarded Interrupt Queue) and General Interrupts per function.
214 # NFLIQ_EXTRA = 6 # "extra" Ingress Queues 2*NFUNCS (Firmware and
215 # # Forwarded Interrupts
216 # NMSIX_EXTRA = 6 # extra interrupts 2*NFUNCS (Firmware and
217 # # General Interrupts
219 # Microsoft HyperV resources. The HyperV Virtual Ingress Queues will have
220 # their interrupts forwarded to another set of Forwarded Interrupt Queues.
222 # NVI_HYPERV = 16 # VMs we want to support
223 # NVIIQ_HYPERV = 2 # Virtual Ingress Queues with Free Lists per VM
224 # NFLIQ_HYPERV = 40 # VIQs + NCPUS Forwarded Interrupt Queues
225 # NEQ_HYPERV = 32 # VIQs Free Lists
226 # NMPSTCAM_HYPERV = 16 # MPS TCAM Entries (NVI_HYPERV)
227 # NMSIX_HYPERV = 8 # NCPUS Forwarded Interrupt Queues
229 # Adding all of the above Unified PF resource needs together: (NIC + OFLD +
230 # RDMA + ISCSI + FCOE + EXTRA + HYPERV)
233 # NFLIQ_UNIFIED = 106
234 # NETHCTRL_UNIFIED = 32
236 # NMPSTCAM_UNIFIED = 40
238 # The sum of all the MSI-X resources above is 74 MSI-X Vectors but we'll round
239 # that up to 128 to make sure the Unified PF doesn't run out of resources.
241 # NMSIX_UNIFIED = 128
243 # The Storage PFs could need up to NPORTS*NCPUS + NMSIX_EXTRA MSI-X Vectors
244 # which is 34 but they're probably safe with 32.
248 # Note: The UnifiedPF is PF4 which doesn't have any Virtual Functions
249 # associated with it. Thus, the MSI-X Vector allocations we give to the
250 # UnifiedPF aren't inherited by any Virtual Functions. As a result we can
251 # provision many more Virtual Functions than we can if the UnifiedPF were
255 # All of the below PCI-E parameters are actually stored in various *_init.txt
256 # files. We include them below essentially as comments.
258 # For PF0-3 we assign 8 vectors each for NIC Ingress Queues of the associated
261 # For PF4, the Unified PF, we give it an MSI-X Table Size as outlined above.
263 # For PF5-6 we assign enough MSI-X Vectors to support FCoE and iSCSI
264 # storage applications across all four possible ports.
266 # Additionally, since the UnifiedPF isn't one of the per-port Physical
267 # Functions, we give the UnifiedPF and the PF0-3 Physical Functions
268 # different PCI Device IDs which will allow Unified and Per-Port Drivers
269 # to directly select the type of Physical Function to which they wish to be
272 # Note that the actual values used for the PCI-E Intelectual Property will be
273 # 1 less than those below since that's the way it "counts" things. For
274 # readability, we use the number we actually mean ...
276 # PF0_INT = 8 # NCPUS
277 # PF1_INT = 8 # NCPUS
278 # PF2_INT = 8 # NCPUS
279 # PF3_INT = 8 # NCPUS
280 # PF0_3_INT = 32 # PF0_INT + PF1_INT + PF2_INT + PF3_INT
282 # PF4_INT = 128 # NMSIX_UNIFIED
283 # PF5_INT = 32 # NMSIX_STORAGE
284 # PF6_INT = 32 # NMSIX_STORAGE
285 # PF7_INT = 0 # Nothing Assigned
286 # PF4_7_INT = 192 # PF4_INT + PF5_INT + PF6_INT + PF7_INT
288 # PF0_7_INT = 224 # PF0_3_INT + PF4_7_INT
290 # With the above we can get 17 VFs/PF0-3 (limited by 336 MPS TCAM entries)
291 # but we'll lower that to 16 to make our total 64 and a nice power of 2 ...
295 # For those OSes which manage different ports on different PFs, we need
296 # only enough resources to support a single port's NIC application functions
297 # on PF0-3. The below assumes that we're only doing NIC with NCPUS "Queue
298 # Sets" for ports 0-3. The FCoE and iSCSI functions for such OSes will be
299 # managed on the "storage PFs" (see below).
302 nvf = 16 # NVF on this function
303 wx_caps = all # write/execute permissions for all commands
304 r_caps = all # read permissions for all commands
306 niqflint = 8 # NCPUS "Queue Sets"
307 nethctrl = 8 # NCPUS "Queue Sets"
308 neq = 16 # niqflint + nethctrl Egress Queues
309 nexactf = 8 # number of exact MPSTCAM MAC filters
310 cmask = all # access to all channels
311 pmask = 0x1 # access to only one port
314 nvf = 16 # NVF on this function
315 wx_caps = all # write/execute permissions for all commands
316 r_caps = all # read permissions for all commands
318 niqflint = 8 # NCPUS "Queue Sets"
319 nethctrl = 8 # NCPUS "Queue Sets"
320 neq = 16 # niqflint + nethctrl Egress Queues
321 nexactf = 8 # number of exact MPSTCAM MAC filters
322 cmask = all # access to all channels
323 pmask = 0x2 # access to only one port
326 nvf = 16 # NVF on this function
327 wx_caps = all # write/execute permissions for all commands
328 r_caps = all # read permissions for all commands
330 niqflint = 8 # NCPUS "Queue Sets"
331 nethctrl = 8 # NCPUS "Queue Sets"
332 neq = 16 # niqflint + nethctrl Egress Queues
333 nexactf = 8 # number of exact MPSTCAM MAC filters
334 cmask = all # access to all channels
335 pmask = 0x4 # access to only one port
338 nvf = 16 # NVF on this function
339 wx_caps = all # write/execute permissions for all commands
340 r_caps = all # read permissions for all commands
342 niqflint = 8 # NCPUS "Queue Sets"
343 nethctrl = 8 # NCPUS "Queue Sets"
344 neq = 16 # niqflint + nethctrl Egress Queues
345 nexactf = 8 # number of exact MPSTCAM MAC filters
346 cmask = all # access to all channels
347 pmask = 0x8 # access to only one port
349 # Some OS Drivers manage all application functions for all ports via PF4.
350 # Thus we need to provide a large number of resources here. For Egress
351 # Queues we need to account for both TX Queues as well as Free List Queues
352 # (because the host is responsible for producing Free List Buffers for the
353 # hardware to consume).
356 wx_caps = all # write/execute permissions for all commands
357 r_caps = all # read permissions for all commands
358 nvi = 28 # NVI_UNIFIED
359 niqflint = 170 # NFLIQ_UNIFIED + NLFIQ_WD
360 nethctrl = 100 # NETHCTRL_UNIFIED + NETHCTRL_WD
361 neq = 256 # NEQ_UNIFIED + NEQ_WD
362 nexactf = 40 # NMPSTCAM_UNIFIED
363 cmask = all # access to all channels
364 pmask = all # access to all four ports ...
365 nethofld = 1024 # number of user mode ethernet flow contexts
366 nroute = 32 # number of routing region entries
367 nclip = 32 # number of clip region entries
368 nfilter = 496 # number of filter region entries
369 nserver = 496 # number of server region entries
370 nhash = 12288 # number of hash region entries
371 protocol = nic_vm, ofld, rddp, rdmac, iscsi_initiator_pdu, iscsi_target_pdu
379 # We have FCoE and iSCSI storage functions on PF5 and PF6 each of which may
380 # need to have Virtual Interfaces on each of the four ports with up to NCPUS
384 wx_caps = all # write/execute permissions for all commands
385 r_caps = all # read permissions for all commands
387 niqflint = 34 # NPORTS*NCPUS + NMSIX_EXTRA
388 nethctrl = 32 # NPORTS*NCPUS
389 neq = 64 # NPORTS*NCPUS * 2 (FL, ETHCTRL/TX)
391 cmask = all # access to all channels
392 pmask = all # access to all four ports ...
396 protocol = iscsi_initiator_fofld
400 iscsi_nconn_per_session = 1
401 iscsi_ninitiator_instance = 64
404 wx_caps = all # write/execute permissions for all commands
405 r_caps = all # read permissions for all commands
407 niqflint = 34 # NPORTS*NCPUS + NMSIX_EXTRA
408 nethctrl = 32 # NPORTS*NCPUS
409 neq = 66 # NPORTS*NCPUS * 2 (FL, ETHCTRL/TX) + 2 (EXTRA)
410 nexactf = 32 # NPORTS + adding 28 exact entries for FCoE
411 # which is OK since < MIN(SUM PF0..3, PF4)
412 # and we never load PF0..3 and PF4 concurrently
413 cmask = all # access to all channels
414 pmask = all # access to all four ports ...
416 protocol = fcoe_initiator
422 # The following function, 1023, is not an actual PCIE function but is used to
423 # configure and reserve firmware internal resources that come from the global
427 wx_caps = all # write/execute permissions for all commands
428 r_caps = all # read permissions for all commands
429 nvi = 4 # NVI_UNIFIED
430 cmask = all # access to all channels
431 pmask = all # access to all four ports ...
432 nexactf = 8 # NPORTS + DCBX +
433 nfilter = 16 # number of filter region entries
435 # For Virtual functions, we only allow NIC functionality and we only allow
436 # access to one port (1 << PF). Note that because of limitations in the
437 # Scatter Gather Engine (SGE) hardware which checks writes to VF KDOORBELL
438 # and GTS registers, the number of Ingress and Egress Queues must be a power
441 [function "0/*"] # NVF
442 wx_caps = 0x82 # DMAQ | VF
443 r_caps = 0x86 # DMAQ | VF | PORT
445 niqflint = 4 # 2 "Queue Sets" + NXIQ
446 nethctrl = 2 # 2 "Queue Sets"
447 neq = 4 # 2 "Queue Sets" * 2
449 cmask = all # access to all channels
450 pmask = 0x1 # access to only one port ...
452 [function "1/*"] # NVF
453 wx_caps = 0x82 # DMAQ | VF
454 r_caps = 0x86 # DMAQ | VF | PORT
456 niqflint = 4 # 2 "Queue Sets" + NXIQ
457 nethctrl = 2 # 2 "Queue Sets"
458 neq = 4 # 2 "Queue Sets" * 2
460 cmask = all # access to all channels
461 pmask = 0x2 # access to only one port ...
463 [function "2/*"] # NVF
464 wx_caps = 0x82 # DMAQ | VF
465 r_caps = 0x86 # DMAQ | VF | PORT
467 niqflint = 4 # 2 "Queue Sets" + NXIQ
468 nethctrl = 2 # 2 "Queue Sets"
469 neq = 4 # 2 "Queue Sets" * 2
471 cmask = all # access to all channels
472 pmask = 0x4 # access to only one port ...
474 [function "3/*"] # NVF
475 wx_caps = 0x82 # DMAQ | VF
476 r_caps = 0x86 # DMAQ | VF | PORT
478 niqflint = 4 # 2 "Queue Sets" + NXIQ
479 nethctrl = 2 # 2 "Queue Sets"
480 neq = 4 # 2 "Queue Sets" * 2
482 cmask = all # access to all channels
483 pmask = 0x8 # access to only one port ...
485 # MPS features a 196608 bytes ingress buffer that is used for ingress buffering
486 # for packets from the wire as well as the loopback path of the L2 switch. The
487 # folling params control how the buffer memory is distributed and the L2 flow
490 # bg_mem: %-age of mem to use for port/buffer group
491 # lpbk_mem: %-age of port/bg mem to use for loopback
492 # hwm: high watermark; bytes available when starting to send pause
493 # frames (in units of 0.1 MTU)
494 # lwm: low watermark; bytes remaining when sending 'unpause' frame
495 # (in inuits of 0.1 MTU)
496 # dwm: minimum delta between high and low watermark (in units of 100
502 dcb = ppp, dcbx # configure for DCB PPP and enable DCBX offload
508 dcb_app_tlv[0] = 0x8906, ethertype, 3
509 dcb_app_tlv[1] = 0x8914, ethertype, 3
510 dcb_app_tlv[2] = 3260, socketnum, 5
519 dcb_app_tlv[0] = 0x8906, ethertype, 3
520 dcb_app_tlv[1] = 0x8914, ethertype, 3
521 dcb_app_tlv[2] = 3260, socketnum, 5
530 dcb_app_tlv[0] = 0x8906, ethertype, 3
531 dcb_app_tlv[1] = 0x8914, ethertype, 3
532 dcb_app_tlv[2] = 3260, socketnum, 5
541 dcb_app_tlv[0] = 0x8906, ethertype, 3
542 dcb_app_tlv[1] = 0x8914, ethertype, 3
543 dcb_app_tlv[2] = 3260, socketnum, 5
547 checksum = 0x22f592a9
549 # Total resources used by above allocations:
550 # Virtual Interfaces: 104
551 # Ingress Queues/w Free Lists and Interrupts: 526
553 # MPS TCAM Entries: 336
555 # Virtual Functions: 64