David Daney | 80ff0fd | 2009-05-05 17:35:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | /***********************license start*************** |
| 2 | * Author: Cavium Networks |
| 3 | * |
| 4 | * Contact: support@caviumnetworks.com |
| 5 | * This file is part of the OCTEON SDK |
| 6 | * |
| 7 | * Copyright (c) 2003-2008 Cavium Networks |
| 8 | * |
| 9 | * This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| 10 | * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 2, as |
| 11 | * published by the Free Software Foundation. |
| 12 | * |
| 13 | * This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but |
| 14 | * AS-IS and WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty |
| 15 | * of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TITLE, or |
| 16 | * NONINFRINGEMENT. See the GNU General Public License for more |
| 17 | * details. |
| 18 | * |
| 19 | * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| 20 | * along with this file; if not, write to the Free Software |
| 21 | * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA |
| 22 | * or visit http://www.gnu.org/licenses/. |
| 23 | * |
| 24 | * This file may also be available under a different license from Cavium. |
| 25 | * Contact Cavium Networks for more information |
| 26 | ***********************license end**************************************/ |
| 27 | |
| 28 | /** |
| 29 | * |
| 30 | * This header file defines the work queue entry (wqe) data structure. |
| 31 | * Since this is a commonly used structure that depends on structures |
| 32 | * from several hardware blocks, those definitions have been placed |
| 33 | * in this file to create a single point of definition of the wqe |
| 34 | * format. |
| 35 | * Data structures are still named according to the block that they |
| 36 | * relate to. |
| 37 | * |
| 38 | */ |
| 39 | |
| 40 | #ifndef __CVMX_WQE_H__ |
| 41 | #define __CVMX_WQE_H__ |
| 42 | |
David Howells | a1ce392 | 2012-10-02 18:01:25 +0100 | [diff] [blame^] | 43 | #include <asm/octeon/cvmx-packet.h> |
David Daney | 80ff0fd | 2009-05-05 17:35:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 44 | |
| 45 | |
| 46 | #define OCT_TAG_TYPE_STRING(x) \ |
| 47 | (((x) == CVMX_POW_TAG_TYPE_ORDERED) ? "ORDERED" : \ |
| 48 | (((x) == CVMX_POW_TAG_TYPE_ATOMIC) ? "ATOMIC" : \ |
| 49 | (((x) == CVMX_POW_TAG_TYPE_NULL) ? "NULL" : \ |
| 50 | "NULL_NULL"))) |
| 51 | |
| 52 | /** |
| 53 | * HW decode / err_code in work queue entry |
| 54 | */ |
| 55 | typedef union { |
| 56 | uint64_t u64; |
| 57 | |
| 58 | /* Use this struct if the hardware determines that the packet is IP */ |
| 59 | struct { |
| 60 | /* HW sets this to the number of buffers used by this packet */ |
| 61 | uint64_t bufs:8; |
| 62 | /* HW sets to the number of L2 bytes prior to the IP */ |
| 63 | uint64_t ip_offset:8; |
| 64 | /* set to 1 if we found DSA/VLAN in the L2 */ |
| 65 | uint64_t vlan_valid:1; |
| 66 | /* Set to 1 if the DSA/VLAN tag is stacked */ |
| 67 | uint64_t vlan_stacked:1; |
| 68 | uint64_t unassigned:1; |
| 69 | /* HW sets to the DSA/VLAN CFI flag (valid when vlan_valid) */ |
| 70 | uint64_t vlan_cfi:1; |
| 71 | /* HW sets to the DSA/VLAN_ID field (valid when vlan_valid) */ |
| 72 | uint64_t vlan_id:12; |
| 73 | /* Ring Identifier (if PCIe). Requires PIP_GBL_CTL[RING_EN]=1 */ |
| 74 | uint64_t pr:4; |
| 75 | uint64_t unassigned2:8; |
| 76 | /* the packet needs to be decompressed */ |
| 77 | uint64_t dec_ipcomp:1; |
| 78 | /* the packet is either TCP or UDP */ |
| 79 | uint64_t tcp_or_udp:1; |
| 80 | /* the packet needs to be decrypted (ESP or AH) */ |
| 81 | uint64_t dec_ipsec:1; |
| 82 | /* the packet is IPv6 */ |
| 83 | uint64_t is_v6:1; |
| 84 | |
| 85 | /* |
| 86 | * (rcv_error, not_IP, IP_exc, is_frag, L4_error, |
| 87 | * software, etc.). |
| 88 | */ |
| 89 | |
| 90 | /* |
| 91 | * reserved for software use, hardware will clear on |
| 92 | * packet creation. |
| 93 | */ |
| 94 | uint64_t software:1; |
| 95 | /* exceptional conditions below */ |
| 96 | /* the receive interface hardware detected an L4 error |
| 97 | * (only applies if !is_frag) (only applies if |
| 98 | * !rcv_error && !not_IP && !IP_exc && !is_frag) |
| 99 | * failure indicated in err_code below, decode: |
| 100 | * |
| 101 | * - 1 = Malformed L4 |
| 102 | * - 2 = L4 Checksum Error: the L4 checksum value is |
| 103 | * - 3 = UDP Length Error: The UDP length field would |
| 104 | * make the UDP data longer than what remains in |
| 105 | * the IP packet (as defined by the IP header |
| 106 | * length field). |
| 107 | * - 4 = Bad L4 Port: either the source or destination |
| 108 | * TCP/UDP port is 0. |
| 109 | * - 8 = TCP FIN Only: the packet is TCP and only the |
| 110 | * FIN flag set. |
| 111 | * - 9 = TCP No Flags: the packet is TCP and no flags |
| 112 | * are set. |
| 113 | * - 10 = TCP FIN RST: the packet is TCP and both FIN |
| 114 | * and RST are set. |
| 115 | * - 11 = TCP SYN URG: the packet is TCP and both SYN |
| 116 | * and URG are set. |
| 117 | * - 12 = TCP SYN RST: the packet is TCP and both SYN |
| 118 | * and RST are set. |
| 119 | * - 13 = TCP SYN FIN: the packet is TCP and both SYN |
| 120 | * and FIN are set. |
| 121 | */ |
| 122 | uint64_t L4_error:1; |
| 123 | /* set if the packet is a fragment */ |
| 124 | uint64_t is_frag:1; |
| 125 | /* the receive interface hardware detected an IP error |
| 126 | * / exception (only applies if !rcv_error && !not_IP) |
| 127 | * failure indicated in err_code below, decode: |
| 128 | * |
| 129 | * - 1 = Not IP: the IP version field is neither 4 nor |
| 130 | * 6. |
| 131 | * - 2 = IPv4 Header Checksum Error: the IPv4 header |
| 132 | * has a checksum violation. |
| 133 | * - 3 = IP Malformed Header: the packet is not long |
| 134 | * enough to contain the IP header. |
| 135 | * - 4 = IP Malformed: the packet is not long enough |
| 136 | * to contain the bytes indicated by the IP |
| 137 | * header. Pad is allowed. |
| 138 | * - 5 = IP TTL Hop: the IPv4 TTL field or the IPv6 |
| 139 | * Hop Count field are zero. |
| 140 | * - 6 = IP Options |
| 141 | */ |
| 142 | uint64_t IP_exc:1; |
| 143 | /* |
| 144 | * Set if the hardware determined that the packet is a |
| 145 | * broadcast. |
| 146 | */ |
| 147 | uint64_t is_bcast:1; |
| 148 | /* |
| 149 | * St if the hardware determined that the packet is a |
| 150 | * multi-cast. |
| 151 | */ |
| 152 | uint64_t is_mcast:1; |
| 153 | /* |
| 154 | * Set if the packet may not be IP (must be zero in |
| 155 | * this case). |
| 156 | */ |
| 157 | uint64_t not_IP:1; |
| 158 | /* |
| 159 | * The receive interface hardware detected a receive |
| 160 | * error (must be zero in this case). |
| 161 | */ |
| 162 | uint64_t rcv_error:1; |
| 163 | /* lower err_code = first-level descriptor of the |
| 164 | * work */ |
| 165 | /* zero for packet submitted by hardware that isn't on |
| 166 | * the slow path */ |
| 167 | /* type is cvmx_pip_err_t */ |
| 168 | uint64_t err_code:8; |
| 169 | } s; |
| 170 | |
| 171 | /* use this to get at the 16 vlan bits */ |
| 172 | struct { |
| 173 | uint64_t unused1:16; |
| 174 | uint64_t vlan:16; |
| 175 | uint64_t unused2:32; |
| 176 | } svlan; |
| 177 | |
| 178 | /* |
| 179 | * use this struct if the hardware could not determine that |
| 180 | * the packet is ip. |
| 181 | */ |
| 182 | struct { |
| 183 | /* |
| 184 | * HW sets this to the number of buffers used by this |
| 185 | * packet. |
| 186 | */ |
| 187 | uint64_t bufs:8; |
| 188 | uint64_t unused:8; |
| 189 | /* set to 1 if we found DSA/VLAN in the L2 */ |
| 190 | uint64_t vlan_valid:1; |
| 191 | /* Set to 1 if the DSA/VLAN tag is stacked */ |
| 192 | uint64_t vlan_stacked:1; |
| 193 | uint64_t unassigned:1; |
| 194 | /* |
| 195 | * HW sets to the DSA/VLAN CFI flag (valid when |
| 196 | * vlan_valid) |
| 197 | */ |
| 198 | uint64_t vlan_cfi:1; |
| 199 | /* |
| 200 | * HW sets to the DSA/VLAN_ID field (valid when |
| 201 | * vlan_valid). |
| 202 | */ |
| 203 | uint64_t vlan_id:12; |
| 204 | /* |
| 205 | * Ring Identifier (if PCIe). Requires |
| 206 | * PIP_GBL_CTL[RING_EN]=1 |
| 207 | */ |
| 208 | uint64_t pr:4; |
| 209 | uint64_t unassigned2:12; |
| 210 | /* |
| 211 | * reserved for software use, hardware will clear on |
| 212 | * packet creation. |
| 213 | */ |
| 214 | uint64_t software:1; |
| 215 | uint64_t unassigned3:1; |
| 216 | /* |
| 217 | * set if the hardware determined that the packet is |
| 218 | * rarp. |
| 219 | */ |
| 220 | uint64_t is_rarp:1; |
| 221 | /* |
| 222 | * set if the hardware determined that the packet is |
| 223 | * arp |
| 224 | */ |
| 225 | uint64_t is_arp:1; |
| 226 | /* |
| 227 | * set if the hardware determined that the packet is a |
| 228 | * broadcast. |
| 229 | */ |
| 230 | uint64_t is_bcast:1; |
| 231 | /* |
| 232 | * set if the hardware determined that the packet is a |
| 233 | * multi-cast |
| 234 | */ |
| 235 | uint64_t is_mcast:1; |
| 236 | /* |
| 237 | * set if the packet may not be IP (must be one in |
| 238 | * this case) |
| 239 | */ |
| 240 | uint64_t not_IP:1; |
| 241 | /* The receive interface hardware detected a receive |
| 242 | * error. Failure indicated in err_code below, |
| 243 | * decode: |
| 244 | * |
| 245 | * - 1 = partial error: a packet was partially |
| 246 | * received, but internal buffering / bandwidth |
| 247 | * was not adequate to receive the entire |
| 248 | * packet. |
| 249 | * - 2 = jabber error: the RGMII packet was too large |
| 250 | * and is truncated. |
| 251 | * - 3 = overrun error: the RGMII packet is longer |
| 252 | * than allowed and had an FCS error. |
| 253 | * - 4 = oversize error: the RGMII packet is longer |
| 254 | * than allowed. |
| 255 | * - 5 = alignment error: the RGMII packet is not an |
| 256 | * integer number of bytes |
| 257 | * and had an FCS error (100M and 10M only). |
| 258 | * - 6 = fragment error: the RGMII packet is shorter |
| 259 | * than allowed and had an FCS error. |
| 260 | * - 7 = GMX FCS error: the RGMII packet had an FCS |
| 261 | * error. |
| 262 | * - 8 = undersize error: the RGMII packet is shorter |
| 263 | * than allowed. |
| 264 | * - 9 = extend error: the RGMII packet had an extend |
| 265 | * error. |
| 266 | * - 10 = length mismatch error: the RGMII packet had |
| 267 | * a length that did not match the length field |
| 268 | * in the L2 HDR. |
| 269 | * - 11 = RGMII RX error/SPI4 DIP4 Error: the RGMII |
| 270 | * packet had one or more data reception errors |
| 271 | * (RXERR) or the SPI4 packet had one or more |
| 272 | * DIP4 errors. |
| 273 | * - 12 = RGMII skip error/SPI4 Abort Error: the RGMII |
| 274 | * packet was not large enough to cover the |
| 275 | * skipped bytes or the SPI4 packet was |
| 276 | * terminated with an About EOPS. |
| 277 | * - 13 = RGMII nibble error/SPI4 Port NXA Error: the |
| 278 | * RGMII packet had a studder error (data not |
| 279 | * repeated - 10/100M only) or the SPI4 packet |
| 280 | * was sent to an NXA. |
| 281 | * - 16 = FCS error: a SPI4.2 packet had an FCS error. |
| 282 | * - 17 = Skip error: a packet was not large enough to |
| 283 | * cover the skipped bytes. |
| 284 | * - 18 = L2 header malformed: the packet is not long |
| 285 | * enough to contain the L2. |
| 286 | */ |
| 287 | |
| 288 | uint64_t rcv_error:1; |
| 289 | /* |
| 290 | * lower err_code = first-level descriptor of the |
| 291 | * work |
| 292 | */ |
| 293 | /* |
| 294 | * zero for packet submitted by hardware that isn't on |
| 295 | * the slow path |
| 296 | */ |
| 297 | /* type is cvmx_pip_err_t (union, so can't use directly */ |
| 298 | uint64_t err_code:8; |
| 299 | } snoip; |
| 300 | |
| 301 | } cvmx_pip_wqe_word2; |
| 302 | |
| 303 | /** |
| 304 | * Work queue entry format |
| 305 | * |
| 306 | * must be 8-byte aligned |
| 307 | */ |
| 308 | typedef struct { |
| 309 | |
| 310 | /***************************************************************** |
| 311 | * WORD 0 |
| 312 | * HW WRITE: the following 64 bits are filled by HW when a packet arrives |
| 313 | */ |
| 314 | |
| 315 | /** |
| 316 | * raw chksum result generated by the HW |
| 317 | */ |
| 318 | uint16_t hw_chksum; |
| 319 | /** |
| 320 | * Field unused by hardware - available for software |
| 321 | */ |
| 322 | uint8_t unused; |
| 323 | /** |
| 324 | * Next pointer used by hardware for list maintenance. |
| 325 | * May be written/read by HW before the work queue |
| 326 | * entry is scheduled to a PP |
| 327 | * (Only 36 bits used in Octeon 1) |
| 328 | */ |
| 329 | uint64_t next_ptr:40; |
| 330 | |
| 331 | /***************************************************************** |
| 332 | * WORD 1 |
| 333 | * HW WRITE: the following 64 bits are filled by HW when a packet arrives |
| 334 | */ |
| 335 | |
| 336 | /** |
| 337 | * HW sets to the total number of bytes in the packet |
| 338 | */ |
| 339 | uint64_t len:16; |
| 340 | /** |
| 341 | * HW sets this to input physical port |
| 342 | */ |
| 343 | uint64_t ipprt:6; |
| 344 | |
| 345 | /** |
| 346 | * HW sets this to what it thought the priority of the input packet was |
| 347 | */ |
| 348 | uint64_t qos:3; |
| 349 | |
| 350 | /** |
| 351 | * the group that the work queue entry will be scheduled to |
| 352 | */ |
| 353 | uint64_t grp:4; |
| 354 | /** |
| 355 | * the type of the tag (ORDERED, ATOMIC, NULL) |
| 356 | */ |
| 357 | uint64_t tag_type:3; |
| 358 | /** |
| 359 | * the synchronization/ordering tag |
| 360 | */ |
| 361 | uint64_t tag:32; |
| 362 | |
| 363 | /** |
| 364 | * WORD 2 HW WRITE: the following 64-bits are filled in by |
| 365 | * hardware when a packet arrives This indicates a variety of |
| 366 | * status and error conditions. |
| 367 | */ |
| 368 | cvmx_pip_wqe_word2 word2; |
| 369 | |
| 370 | /** |
| 371 | * Pointer to the first segment of the packet. |
| 372 | */ |
| 373 | union cvmx_buf_ptr packet_ptr; |
| 374 | |
| 375 | /** |
| 376 | * HW WRITE: octeon will fill in a programmable amount from the |
| 377 | * packet, up to (at most, but perhaps less) the amount |
| 378 | * needed to fill the work queue entry to 128 bytes |
| 379 | * |
| 380 | * If the packet is recognized to be IP, the hardware starts |
| 381 | * (except that the IPv4 header is padded for appropriate |
| 382 | * alignment) writing here where the IP header starts. If the |
| 383 | * packet is not recognized to be IP, the hardware starts |
| 384 | * writing the beginning of the packet here. |
| 385 | */ |
| 386 | uint8_t packet_data[96]; |
| 387 | |
| 388 | /** |
| 389 | * If desired, SW can make the work Q entry any length. For the |
| 390 | * purposes of discussion here, Assume 128B always, as this is all that |
| 391 | * the hardware deals with. |
| 392 | * |
| 393 | */ |
| 394 | |
| 395 | } CVMX_CACHE_LINE_ALIGNED cvmx_wqe_t; |
| 396 | |
| 397 | #endif /* __CVMX_WQE_H__ */ |