cachepc-linux

Fork of AMDESE/linux with modifications for CachePC side-channel attack
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overview.rst (15345B)


      1.. include:: <isonum.txt>
      2
      3=========================================================
      4DPAA2 (Data Path Acceleration Architecture Gen2) Overview
      5=========================================================
      6
      7:Copyright: |copy| 2015 Freescale Semiconductor Inc.
      8:Copyright: |copy| 2018 NXP
      9
     10This document provides an overview of the Freescale DPAA2 architecture
     11and how it is integrated into the Linux kernel.
     12
     13Introduction
     14============
     15
     16DPAA2 is a hardware architecture designed for high-speeed network
     17packet processing.  DPAA2 consists of sophisticated mechanisms for
     18processing Ethernet packets, queue management, buffer management,
     19autonomous L2 switching, virtual Ethernet bridging, and accelerator
     20(e.g. crypto) sharing.
     21
     22A DPAA2 hardware component called the Management Complex (or MC) manages the
     23DPAA2 hardware resources.  The MC provides an object-based abstraction for
     24software drivers to use the DPAA2 hardware.
     25The MC uses DPAA2 hardware resources such as queues, buffer pools, and
     26network ports to create functional objects/devices such as network
     27interfaces, an L2 switch, or accelerator instances.
     28The MC provides memory-mapped I/O command interfaces (MC portals)
     29which DPAA2 software drivers use to operate on DPAA2 objects.
     30
     31The diagram below shows an overview of the DPAA2 resource management
     32architecture::
     33
     34	+--------------------------------------+
     35	|                  OS                  |
     36	|                        DPAA2 drivers |
     37	|                             |        |
     38	+-----------------------------|--------+
     39	                              |
     40	                              | (create,discover,connect
     41	                              |  config,use,destroy)
     42	                              |
     43	                 DPAA2        |
     44	+------------------------| mc portal |-+
     45	|                             |        |
     46	|   +- - - - - - - - - - - - -V- - -+  |
     47	|   |                               |  |
     48	|   |   Management Complex (MC)     |  |
     49	|   |                               |  |
     50	|   +- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -+  |
     51	|                                      |
     52	| Hardware                  Hardware   |
     53	| Resources                 Objects    |
     54	| ---------                 -------    |
     55	| -queues                   -DPRC      |
     56	| -buffer pools             -DPMCP     |
     57	| -Eth MACs/ports           -DPIO      |
     58	| -network interface        -DPNI      |
     59	|  profiles                 -DPMAC     |
     60	| -queue portals            -DPBP      |
     61	| -MC portals                ...       |
     62	|  ...                                 |
     63	|                                      |
     64	+--------------------------------------+
     65
     66
     67The MC mediates operations such as create, discover,
     68connect, configuration, and destroy.  Fast-path operations
     69on data, such as packet transmit/receive, are not mediated by
     70the MC and are done directly using memory mapped regions in
     71DPIO objects.
     72
     73Overview of DPAA2 Objects
     74=========================
     75
     76The section provides a brief overview of some key DPAA2 objects.
     77A simple scenario is described illustrating the objects involved
     78in creating a network interfaces.
     79
     80DPRC (Datapath Resource Container)
     81----------------------------------
     82
     83A DPRC is a container object that holds all the other
     84types of DPAA2 objects.  In the example diagram below there
     85are 8 objects of 5 types (DPMCP, DPIO, DPBP, DPNI, and DPMAC)
     86in the container.
     87
     88::
     89
     90	+---------------------------------------------------------+
     91	| DPRC                                                    |
     92	|                                                         |
     93	|  +-------+  +-------+  +-------+  +-------+  +-------+  |
     94	|  | DPMCP |  | DPIO  |  | DPBP  |  | DPNI  |  | DPMAC |  |
     95	|  +-------+  +-------+  +-------+  +---+---+  +---+---+  |
     96	|  | DPMCP |  | DPIO  |                                   |
     97	|  +-------+  +-------+                                   |
     98	|  | DPMCP |                                              |
     99	|  +-------+                                              |
    100	|                                                         |
    101	+---------------------------------------------------------+
    102
    103From the point of view of an OS, a DPRC behaves similar to a plug and
    104play bus, like PCI.  DPRC commands can be used to enumerate the contents
    105of the DPRC, discover the hardware objects present (including mappable
    106regions and interrupts).
    107
    108::
    109
    110	DPRC.1 (bus)
    111	   |
    112	   +--+--------+-------+-------+-------+
    113	      |        |       |       |       |
    114	    DPMCP.1  DPIO.1  DPBP.1  DPNI.1  DPMAC.1
    115	    DPMCP.2  DPIO.2
    116	    DPMCP.3
    117
    118Hardware objects can be created and destroyed dynamically, providing
    119the ability to hot plug/unplug objects in and out of the DPRC.
    120
    121A DPRC has a mappable MMIO region (an MC portal) that can be used
    122to send MC commands.  It has an interrupt for status events (like
    123hotplug).
    124All objects in a container share the same hardware "isolation context".
    125This means that with respect to an IOMMU the isolation granularity
    126is at the DPRC (container) level, not at the individual object
    127level.
    128
    129DPRCs can be defined statically and populated with objects
    130via a config file passed to the MC when firmware starts it.
    131
    132DPAA2 Objects for an Ethernet Network Interface
    133-----------------------------------------------
    134
    135A typical Ethernet NIC is monolithic-- the NIC device contains TX/RX
    136queuing mechanisms, configuration mechanisms, buffer management,
    137physical ports, and interrupts.  DPAA2 uses a more granular approach
    138utilizing multiple hardware objects.  Each object provides specialized
    139functions. Groups of these objects are used by software to provide
    140Ethernet network interface functionality.  This approach provides
    141efficient use of finite hardware resources, flexibility, and
    142performance advantages.
    143
    144The diagram below shows the objects needed for a simple
    145network interface configuration on a system with 2 CPUs.
    146
    147::
    148
    149	+---+---+ +---+---+
    150	   CPU0     CPU1
    151	+---+---+ +---+---+
    152	    |         |
    153	+---+---+ +---+---+
    154	   DPIO     DPIO
    155	+---+---+ +---+---+
    156	    \     /
    157	     \   /
    158	      \ /
    159	   +---+---+
    160	      DPNI  --- DPBP,DPMCP
    161	   +---+---+
    162	       |
    163	       |
    164	   +---+---+
    165	     DPMAC
    166	   +---+---+
    167	       |
    168	   port/PHY
    169
    170Below the objects are described.  For each object a brief description
    171is provided along with a summary of the kinds of operations the object
    172supports and a summary of key resources of the object (MMIO regions
    173and IRQs).
    174
    175DPMAC (Datapath Ethernet MAC)
    176~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    177Represents an Ethernet MAC, a hardware device that connects to an Ethernet
    178PHY and allows physical transmission and reception of Ethernet frames.
    179
    180- MMIO regions: none
    181- IRQs: DPNI link change
    182- commands: set link up/down, link config, get stats,
    183  IRQ config, enable, reset
    184
    185DPNI (Datapath Network Interface)
    186~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    187Contains TX/RX queues, network interface configuration, and RX buffer pool
    188configuration mechanisms.  The TX/RX queues are in memory and are identified
    189by queue number.
    190
    191- MMIO regions: none
    192- IRQs: link state
    193- commands: port config, offload config, queue config,
    194  parse/classify config, IRQ config, enable, reset
    195
    196DPIO (Datapath I/O)
    197~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    198Provides interfaces to enqueue and dequeue
    199packets and do hardware buffer pool management operations.  The DPAA2
    200architecture separates the mechanism to access queues (the DPIO object)
    201from the queues themselves.  The DPIO provides an MMIO interface to
    202enqueue/dequeue packets.  To enqueue something a descriptor is written
    203to the DPIO MMIO region, which includes the target queue number.
    204There will typically be one DPIO assigned to each CPU.  This allows all
    205CPUs to simultaneously perform enqueue/dequeued operations.  DPIOs are
    206expected to be shared by different DPAA2 drivers.
    207
    208- MMIO regions: queue operations, buffer management
    209- IRQs: data availability, congestion notification, buffer
    210  pool depletion
    211- commands: IRQ config, enable, reset
    212
    213DPBP (Datapath Buffer Pool)
    214~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    215Represents a hardware buffer pool.
    216
    217- MMIO regions: none
    218- IRQs: none
    219- commands: enable, reset
    220
    221DPMCP (Datapath MC Portal)
    222~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    223Provides an MC command portal.
    224Used by drivers to send commands to the MC to manage
    225objects.
    226
    227- MMIO regions: MC command portal
    228- IRQs: command completion
    229- commands: IRQ config, enable, reset
    230
    231Object Connections
    232==================
    233Some objects have explicit relationships that must
    234be configured:
    235
    236- DPNI <--> DPMAC
    237- DPNI <--> DPNI
    238- DPNI <--> L2-switch-port
    239
    240    A DPNI must be connected to something such as a DPMAC,
    241    another DPNI, or L2 switch port.  The DPNI connection
    242    is made via a DPRC command.
    243
    244::
    245
    246              +-------+  +-------+
    247              | DPNI  |  | DPMAC |
    248              +---+---+  +---+---+
    249                  |          |
    250                  +==========+
    251
    252- DPNI <--> DPBP
    253
    254    A network interface requires a 'buffer pool' (DPBP
    255    object) which provides a list of pointers to memory
    256    where received Ethernet data is to be copied.  The
    257    Ethernet driver configures the DPBPs associated with
    258    the network interface.
    259
    260Interrupts
    261==========
    262All interrupts generated by DPAA2 objects are message
    263interrupts.  At the hardware level message interrupts
    264generated by devices will normally have 3 components--
    2651) a non-spoofable 'device-id' expressed on the hardware
    266bus, 2) an address, 3) a data value.
    267
    268In the case of DPAA2 devices/objects, all objects in the
    269same container/DPRC share the same 'device-id'.
    270For ARM-based SoC this is the same as the stream ID.
    271
    272
    273DPAA2 Linux Drivers Overview
    274============================
    275
    276This section provides an overview of the Linux kernel drivers for
    277DPAA2-- 1) the bus driver and associated "DPAA2 infrastructure"
    278drivers and 2) functional object drivers (such as Ethernet).
    279
    280As described previously, a DPRC is a container that holds the other
    281types of DPAA2 objects.  It is functionally similar to a plug-and-play
    282bus controller.
    283Each object in the DPRC is a Linux "device" and is bound to a driver.
    284The diagram below shows the Linux drivers involved in a networking
    285scenario and the objects bound to each driver.  A brief description
    286of each driver follows.
    287
    288::
    289
    290	                                     +------------+
    291	                                     | OS Network |
    292	                                     |   Stack    |
    293	         +------------+              +------------+
    294	         | Allocator  |. . . . . . . |  Ethernet  |
    295	         |(DPMCP,DPBP)|              |   (DPNI)   |
    296	         +-.----------+              +---+---+----+
    297	          .          .                   ^   |
    298	         .            .     <data avail, |   | <enqueue,
    299	        .              .     tx confirm> |   | dequeue>
    300	+-------------+         .                |   |
    301	| DPRC driver |          .           +---+---V----+     +---------+
    302	|   (DPRC)    |           . . . . . .| DPIO driver|     |   MAC   |
    303	+----------+--+                      |  (DPIO)    |     | (DPMAC) |
    304	           |                         +------+-----+     +-----+---+
    305	           |<dev add/remove>                |                 |
    306	           |                                |                 |
    307	  +--------+----------+                     |              +--+---+
    308	  |   MC-bus driver   |                     |              | PHY  |
    309	  |                   |                     |              |driver|
    310	  |   /bus/fsl-mc     |                     |              +--+---+
    311	  +-------------------+                     |                 |
    312	                                            |                 |
    313	========================= HARDWARE =========|=================|======
    314	                                          DPIO                |
    315	                                            |                 |
    316	                                          DPNI---DPBP         |
    317	                                            |                 |
    318	                                          DPMAC               |
    319	                                            |                 |
    320	                                           PHY ---------------+
    321	============================================|========================
    322
    323A brief description of each driver is provided below.
    324
    325MC-bus driver
    326-------------
    327The MC-bus driver is a platform driver and is probed from a
    328node in the device tree (compatible "fsl,qoriq-mc") passed in by boot
    329firmware.  It is responsible for bootstrapping the DPAA2 kernel
    330infrastructure.
    331Key functions include:
    332
    333- registering a new bus type named "fsl-mc" with the kernel,
    334  and implementing bus call-backs (e.g. match/uevent/dev_groups)
    335- implementing APIs for DPAA2 driver registration and for device
    336  add/remove
    337- creates an MSI IRQ domain
    338- doing a 'device add' to expose the 'root' DPRC, in turn triggering
    339  a bind of the root DPRC to the DPRC driver
    340
    341The binding for the MC-bus device-tree node can be consulted at
    342*Documentation/devicetree/bindings/misc/fsl,qoriq-mc.txt*.
    343The sysfs bind/unbind interfaces for the MC-bus can be consulted at
    344*Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-fsl-mc*.
    345
    346DPRC driver
    347-----------
    348The DPRC driver is bound to DPRC objects and does runtime management
    349of a bus instance.  It performs the initial bus scan of the DPRC
    350and handles interrupts for container events such as hot plug by
    351re-scanning the DPRC.
    352
    353Allocator
    354---------
    355Certain objects such as DPMCP and DPBP are generic and fungible,
    356and are intended to be used by other drivers.  For example,
    357the DPAA2 Ethernet driver needs:
    358
    359- DPMCPs to send MC commands, to configure network interfaces
    360- DPBPs for network buffer pools
    361
    362The allocator driver registers for these allocatable object types
    363and those objects are bound to the allocator when the bus is probed.
    364The allocator maintains a pool of objects that are available for
    365allocation by other DPAA2 drivers.
    366
    367DPIO driver
    368-----------
    369The DPIO driver is bound to DPIO objects and provides services that allow
    370other drivers such as the Ethernet driver to enqueue and dequeue data for
    371their respective objects.
    372Key services include:
    373
    374- data availability notifications
    375- hardware queuing operations (enqueue and dequeue of data)
    376- hardware buffer pool management
    377
    378To transmit a packet the Ethernet driver puts data on a queue and
    379invokes a DPIO API.  For receive, the Ethernet driver registers
    380a data availability notification callback.  To dequeue a packet
    381a DPIO API is used.
    382There is typically one DPIO object per physical CPU for optimum
    383performance, allowing different CPUs to simultaneously enqueue
    384and dequeue data.
    385
    386The DPIO driver operates on behalf of all DPAA2 drivers
    387active in the kernel--  Ethernet, crypto, compression,
    388etc.
    389
    390Ethernet driver
    391---------------
    392The Ethernet driver is bound to a DPNI and implements the kernel
    393interfaces needed to connect the DPAA2 network interface to
    394the network stack.
    395Each DPNI corresponds to a Linux network interface.
    396
    397MAC driver
    398----------
    399An Ethernet PHY is an off-chip, board specific component and is managed
    400by the appropriate PHY driver via an mdio bus.  The MAC driver
    401plays a role of being a proxy between the PHY driver and the
    402MC.  It does this proxy via the MC commands to a DPMAC object.
    403If the PHY driver signals a link change, the MAC driver notifies
    404the MC via a DPMAC command.  If a network interface is brought
    405up or down, the MC notifies the DPMAC driver via an interrupt and
    406the driver can take appropriate action.