xref: /dpdk/doc/guides/prog_guide/ethdev/flow_offload.rst (revision 7917b0d38e92e8b9ec5a870415b791420e10f11a)
1..  SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
2    Copyright 2016 6WIND S.A.
3    Copyright 2016 Mellanox Technologies, Ltd
4
5Generic flow API
6================
7
8Overview
9--------
10
11This API provides a generic means to configure hardware to match specific
12traffic, alter its fate and query related counters according to any
13number of user-defined rules.
14
15It is named *rte_flow* after the prefix used for all its symbols, and is
16defined in ``rte_flow.h``.
17
18- Matching can be performed on packet data (protocol headers, payload) and
19  properties (e.g. associated physical port, virtual device function ID).
20
21- Possible operations include dropping traffic, diverting it to specific
22  queues, to virtual/physical device functions or ports, performing tunnel
23  offloads, adding marks and so on.
24
25Flow rule
26---------
27
28Description
29~~~~~~~~~~~
30
31A flow rule is the combination of attributes with a matching pattern and a
32list of actions. Flow rules form the basis of this API.
33
34Flow rules can have several distinct actions (such as counting,
35encapsulating, decapsulating before redirecting packets to a particular
36queue, etc.), instead of relying on several rules to achieve this and having
37applications deal with hardware implementation details regarding their
38order.
39
40Support for different priority levels on a rule basis is provided, for
41example in order to force a more specific rule to come before a more generic
42one for packets matched by both. However hardware support for more than a
43single priority level cannot be guaranteed. When supported, the number of
44available priority levels is usually low, which is why they can also be
45implemented in software by PMDs (e.g. missing priority levels may be
46emulated by reordering rules).
47
48In order to remain as hardware-agnostic as possible, by default all rules
49are considered to have the same priority, which means that the order between
50overlapping rules (when a packet is matched by several filters) is
51undefined.
52
53PMDs may refuse to create overlapping rules at a given priority level when
54they can be detected (e.g. if a pattern matches an existing filter).
55
56Thus predictable results for a given priority level can only be achieved
57with non-overlapping rules, using perfect matching on all protocol layers.
58
59Flow rules can also be grouped, the flow rule priority is specific to the
60group they belong to. All flow rules in a given group are thus processed within
61the context of that group. Groups are not linked by default, so the logical
62hierarchy of groups must be explicitly defined by flow rules themselves in each
63group using the JUMP action to define the next group to redirect to. Only flow
64rules defined in the default group 0 are guaranteed to be matched against. This
65makes group 0 the origin of any group hierarchy defined by an application.
66
67Support for multiple actions per rule may be implemented internally on top
68of non-default hardware priorities. As a result, both features may not be
69simultaneously available to applications.
70
71Considering that allowed pattern/actions combinations cannot be known in
72advance and would result in an impractically large number of capabilities to
73expose, a method is provided to validate a given rule from the current
74device configuration state.
75
76This enables applications to check if the rule types they need is supported
77at initialization time, before starting their data path. This method can be
78used anytime, its only requirement being that the resources needed by a rule
79should exist (e.g. a target RX queue should be configured first).
80
81Each defined rule is associated with an opaque handle managed by the PMD,
82applications are responsible for keeping it. These can be used for queries
83and rules management, such as retrieving counters or other data and
84destroying them.
85
86To avoid resource leaks on the PMD side, handles must be explicitly
87destroyed by the application before releasing associated resources such as
88queues and ports.
89
90.. warning::
91
92   The following description of rule persistence is an experimental behavior
93   that may change without a prior notice.
94
95When the device is stopped, its rules do not process the traffic.
96In particular, transfer rules created using some device
97stop affecting the traffic even if they refer to different ports.
98
99If ``RTE_ETH_DEV_CAPA_FLOW_RULE_KEEP`` is not advertised,
100rules cannot be created until the device is started for the first time
101and cannot be kept when the device is stopped.
102However, PMD also does not flush them automatically on stop,
103so the application must call ``rte_flow_flush()`` or ``rte_flow_destroy()``
104before stopping the device to ensure no rules remain.
105
106If ``RTE_ETH_DEV_CAPA_FLOW_RULE_KEEP`` is advertised, this means
107the PMD can keep at least some rules across the device stop and start.
108However, ``rte_eth_dev_configure()`` may fail if any rules remain,
109so the application must flush them before attempting a reconfiguration.
110Keeping may be unsupported for some types of rule items and actions,
111as well as depending on the value of flow attributes transfer bit.
112A combination of a single an item or action type
113and a value of the transfer bit is called a rule feature.
114For example: a COUNT action with the transfer bit set.
115To test if rules with a particular feature are kept, the application must try
116to create a valid rule using this feature when the device is not started
117(either before the first start or after a stop).
118If it fails with an error of type ``RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_STATE``,
119all rules using this feature must be flushed by the application
120before stopping the device.
121If it succeeds, such rules will be kept when the device is stopped,
122provided they do not use other features that are not supported.
123Rules that are created when the device is stopped, including the rules
124created for the test, will be kept after the device is started.
125
126The following sections cover:
127
128- **Attributes** (represented by ``struct rte_flow_attr``): properties of a
129  flow rule such as its direction (ingress or egress) and priority.
130
131- **Pattern item** (represented by ``struct rte_flow_item``): part of a
132  matching pattern that either matches specific packet data or traffic
133  properties. It can also describe properties of the pattern itself, such as
134  inverted matching.
135
136- **Matching pattern**: traffic properties to look for, a combination of any
137  number of items.
138
139- **Actions** (represented by ``struct rte_flow_action``): operations to
140  perform whenever a packet is matched by a pattern.
141
142Attributes
143~~~~~~~~~~
144
145Attribute: Group
146^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
147
148Flow rules can be grouped by assigning them a common group number. Groups
149allow a logical hierarchy of flow rule groups (tables) to be defined. These
150groups can be supported virtually in the PMD or in the physical device.
151Group 0 is the default group and is the only group that
152flows are guaranteed to be matched against.
153All subsequent groups can only be reached by using a JUMP action
154from a matched flow rule.
155
156Although optional, applications are encouraged to group similar rules as
157much as possible to fully take advantage of hardware capabilities
158(e.g. optimized matching) and work around limitations (e.g. a single pattern
159type possibly allowed in a given group), while being aware that the groups'
160hierarchies must be programmed explicitly.
161
162Note that support for more than a single group is not guaranteed.
163
164Attribute: Priority
165^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
166
167A priority level can be assigned to a flow rule, lower values
168denote higher priority, with 0 as the maximum.
169
170Priority levels are arbitrary and up to the application, they do
171not need to be contiguous nor start from 0, however the maximum number
172varies between devices and may be affected by existing flow rules.
173
174A flow which matches multiple rules in the same group will always be matched by
175the rule with the highest priority in that group.
176
177If a packet is matched by several rules of a given group for a given
178priority level, the outcome is undefined. It can take any path, may be
179duplicated or even cause unrecoverable errors.
180
181Note that support for more than a single priority level is not guaranteed.
182
183Attribute: Traffic direction
184^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
185
186Unless `Attribute: Transfer`_ is specified, flow rule patterns apply
187to inbound and / or outbound traffic. With this respect, ``ingress``
188and ``egress`` respectively stand for **inbound** and **outbound**
189based on the standpoint of the application creating a flow rule.
190
191Several pattern items and actions are valid and can be used in both
192directions. At least one direction must be specified.
193
194Specifying both directions at once for a given rule is not recommended but
195may be valid in a few cases.
196
197Attribute: Transfer
198^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
199
200Instead of simply matching the properties of traffic as it would appear on a
201given DPDK port ID, enabling this attribute transfers a flow rule to the
202lowest possible level of any device endpoints found in the pattern.
203
204When supported, this effectively enables an application to reroute traffic
205not necessarily intended for it (e.g. coming from or addressed to different
206physical ports, VFs or applications) at the device level.
207
208In "transfer" flows, the use of `Attribute: Traffic direction`_ in not allowed.
209One may use `Item: PORT_REPRESENTOR`_ and `Item: REPRESENTED_PORT`_ instead.
210
211Pattern item
212~~~~~~~~~~~~
213
214Pattern items fall in two categories:
215
216- Matching protocol headers and packet data, usually associated with a
217  specification structure. These must be stacked in the same order as the
218  protocol layers to match inside packets, starting from the lowest.
219
220- Matching meta-data or affecting pattern processing, often without a
221  specification structure. Since they do not match packet contents, their
222  position in the list is usually not relevant.
223
224Item specification structures are used to match specific values among
225protocol fields (or item properties). Documentation describes for each item
226whether they are associated with one and their type name if so.
227
228Up to three structures of the same type can be set for a given item:
229
230- ``spec``: values to match (e.g. a given IPv4 address).
231
232- ``last``: upper bound for an inclusive range with corresponding fields in
233  ``spec``.
234
235- ``mask``: bit-mask applied to both ``spec`` and ``last`` whose purpose is
236  to distinguish the values to take into account and/or partially mask them
237  out (e.g. in order to match an IPv4 address prefix).
238
239Usage restrictions and expected behavior:
240
241- Setting either ``mask`` or ``last`` without ``spec`` is an error.
242
243- Field values in ``last`` which are either 0 or equal to the corresponding
244  values in ``spec`` are ignored; they do not generate a range. Nonzero
245  values lower than those in ``spec`` are not supported.
246
247- Setting ``spec`` and optionally ``last`` without ``mask`` causes the PMD
248  to use the default mask defined for that item (defined as
249  ``rte_flow_item_{name}_mask`` constants).
250
251- Not setting any of them (assuming item type allows it) is equivalent to
252  providing an empty (zeroed) ``mask`` for broad (nonspecific) matching.
253
254- ``mask`` is a simple bit-mask applied before interpreting the contents of
255  ``spec`` and ``last``, which may yield unexpected results if not used
256  carefully. For example, if for an IPv4 address field, ``spec`` provides
257  *10.1.2.3*, ``last`` provides *10.3.4.5* and ``mask`` provides
258  *255.255.0.0*, the effective range becomes *10.1.0.0* to *10.3.255.255*.
259
260Example of an item specification matching an Ethernet header:
261
262.. _table_rte_flow_pattern_item_example:
263
264.. table:: Ethernet item
265
266   +----------+----------+-----------------------+
267   | Field    | Subfield | Value                 |
268   +==========+==========+=======================+
269   | ``spec`` | ``src``  | ``00:00:01:02:03:04`` |
270   |          +----------+-----------------------+
271   |          | ``dst``  | ``00:00:2a:66:00:01`` |
272   |          +----------+-----------------------+
273   |          | ``type`` | ``0x22aa``            |
274   +----------+----------+-----------------------+
275   | ``last`` | unspecified                      |
276   +----------+----------+-----------------------+
277   | ``mask`` | ``src``  | ``00:00:ff:ff:ff:00`` |
278   |          +----------+-----------------------+
279   |          | ``dst``  | ``00:00:00:00:00:ff`` |
280   |          +----------+-----------------------+
281   |          | ``type`` | ``0x0000``            |
282   +----------+----------+-----------------------+
283
284Non-masked bits stand for any value (shown as ``?`` below), Ethernet headers
285with the following properties are thus matched:
286
287- ``src``: ``??:??:01:02:03:??``
288- ``dst``: ``??:??:??:??:??:01``
289- ``type``: ``0x????``
290
291Matching pattern
292~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
293
294A pattern is formed by stacking items starting from the lowest protocol
295layer to match. This stacking restriction does not apply to meta items which
296can be placed anywhere in the stack without affecting the meaning of the
297resulting pattern.
298
299Patterns are terminated by END items.
300
301Examples:
302
303.. _table_rte_flow_tcpv4_as_l4:
304
305.. table:: TCPv4 as L4
306
307   +-------+----------+
308   | Index | Item     |
309   +=======+==========+
310   | 0     | Ethernet |
311   +-------+----------+
312   | 1     | IPv4     |
313   +-------+----------+
314   | 2     | TCP      |
315   +-------+----------+
316   | 3     | END      |
317   +-------+----------+
318
319|
320
321.. _table_rte_flow_tcpv6_in_vxlan:
322
323.. table:: TCPv6 in VXLAN
324
325   +-------+------------+
326   | Index | Item       |
327   +=======+============+
328   | 0     | Ethernet   |
329   +-------+------------+
330   | 1     | IPv4       |
331   +-------+------------+
332   | 2     | UDP        |
333   +-------+------------+
334   | 3     | VXLAN      |
335   +-------+------------+
336   | 4     | Ethernet   |
337   +-------+------------+
338   | 5     | IPv6       |
339   +-------+------------+
340   | 6     | TCP        |
341   +-------+------------+
342   | 7     | END        |
343   +-------+------------+
344
345|
346
347.. _table_rte_flow_tcpv4_as_l4_meta:
348
349.. table:: TCPv4 as L4 with meta items
350
351   +-------+----------+
352   | Index | Item     |
353   +=======+==========+
354   | 0     | VOID     |
355   +-------+----------+
356   | 1     | Ethernet |
357   +-------+----------+
358   | 2     | VOID     |
359   +-------+----------+
360   | 3     | IPv4     |
361   +-------+----------+
362   | 4     | TCP      |
363   +-------+----------+
364   | 5     | VOID     |
365   +-------+----------+
366   | 6     | VOID     |
367   +-------+----------+
368   | 7     | END      |
369   +-------+----------+
370
371The above example shows how meta items do not affect packet data matching
372items, as long as those remain stacked properly. The resulting matching
373pattern is identical to "TCPv4 as L4".
374
375.. _table_rte_flow_udpv6_anywhere:
376
377.. table:: UDPv6 anywhere
378
379   +-------+------+
380   | Index | Item |
381   +=======+======+
382   | 0     | IPv6 |
383   +-------+------+
384   | 1     | UDP  |
385   +-------+------+
386   | 2     | END  |
387   +-------+------+
388
389If supported by the PMD, omitting one or several protocol layers at the
390bottom of the stack as in the above example (missing an Ethernet
391specification) enables looking up anywhere in packets.
392
393It is unspecified whether the payload of supported encapsulations
394(e.g. VXLAN payload) is matched by such a pattern, which may apply to inner,
395outer or both packets.
396
397.. _table_rte_flow_invalid_l3:
398
399.. table:: Invalid, missing L3
400
401   +-------+----------+
402   | Index | Item     |
403   +=======+==========+
404   | 0     | Ethernet |
405   +-------+----------+
406   | 1     | UDP      |
407   +-------+----------+
408   | 2     | END      |
409   +-------+----------+
410
411The above pattern is invalid due to a missing L3 specification between L2
412(Ethernet) and L4 (UDP). Doing so is only allowed at the bottom and at the
413top of the stack.
414
415Meta item types
416~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
417
418They match meta-data or affect pattern processing instead of matching packet
419data directly, most of them do not need a specification structure. This
420particularity allows them to be specified anywhere in the stack without
421causing any side effect.
422
423Item: ``END``
424^^^^^^^^^^^^^
425
426End marker for item lists. Prevents further processing of items, thereby
427ending the pattern.
428
429- Its numeric value is 0 for convenience.
430- PMD support is mandatory.
431- ``spec``, ``last`` and ``mask`` are ignored.
432
433.. _table_rte_flow_item_end:
434
435.. table:: END
436
437   +----------+---------+
438   | Field    | Value   |
439   +==========+=========+
440   | ``spec`` | ignored |
441   +----------+---------+
442   | ``last`` | ignored |
443   +----------+---------+
444   | ``mask`` | ignored |
445   +----------+---------+
446
447Item: ``VOID``
448^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
449
450Used as a placeholder for convenience. It is ignored and simply discarded by
451PMDs.
452
453- PMD support is mandatory.
454- ``spec``, ``last`` and ``mask`` are ignored.
455
456.. _table_rte_flow_item_void:
457
458.. table:: VOID
459
460   +----------+---------+
461   | Field    | Value   |
462   +==========+=========+
463   | ``spec`` | ignored |
464   +----------+---------+
465   | ``last`` | ignored |
466   +----------+---------+
467   | ``mask`` | ignored |
468   +----------+---------+
469
470One usage example for this type is generating rules that share a common
471prefix quickly without reallocating memory, only by updating item types:
472
473.. _table_rte_flow_item_void_example:
474
475.. table:: TCP, UDP or ICMP as L4
476
477   +-------+--------------------+
478   | Index | Item               |
479   +=======+====================+
480   | 0     | Ethernet           |
481   +-------+--------------------+
482   | 1     | IPv4               |
483   +-------+------+------+------+
484   | 2     | UDP  | VOID | VOID |
485   +-------+------+------+------+
486   | 3     | VOID | TCP  | VOID |
487   +-------+------+------+------+
488   | 4     | VOID | VOID | ICMP |
489   +-------+------+------+------+
490   | 5     | END                |
491   +-------+--------------------+
492
493Item: ``INVERT``
494^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
495
496Inverted matching, i.e. process packets that do not match the pattern.
497
498- ``spec``, ``last`` and ``mask`` are ignored.
499
500.. _table_rte_flow_item_invert:
501
502.. table:: INVERT
503
504   +----------+---------+
505   | Field    | Value   |
506   +==========+=========+
507   | ``spec`` | ignored |
508   +----------+---------+
509   | ``last`` | ignored |
510   +----------+---------+
511   | ``mask`` | ignored |
512   +----------+---------+
513
514Usage example, matching non-TCPv4 packets only:
515
516.. _table_rte_flow_item_invert_example:
517
518.. table:: Anything but TCPv4
519
520   +-------+----------+
521   | Index | Item     |
522   +=======+==========+
523   | 0     | INVERT   |
524   +-------+----------+
525   | 1     | Ethernet |
526   +-------+----------+
527   | 2     | IPv4     |
528   +-------+----------+
529   | 3     | TCP      |
530   +-------+----------+
531   | 4     | END      |
532   +-------+----------+
533
534Item: ``PORT_ID``
535^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
536
537This item is deprecated. Consider:
538 - `Item: PORT_REPRESENTOR`_
539 - `Item: REPRESENTED_PORT`_
540
541Matches traffic originating from (ingress) or going to (egress) a given DPDK
542port ID.
543
544Normally only supported if the port ID in question is known by the
545underlying PMD and related to the device the flow rule is created against.
546
547- Default ``mask`` matches the specified DPDK port ID.
548
549.. _table_rte_flow_item_port_id:
550
551.. table:: PORT_ID
552
553   +----------+----------+-----------------------------+
554   | Field    | Subfield | Value                       |
555   +==========+==========+=============================+
556   | ``spec`` | ``id``   | DPDK port ID                |
557   +----------+----------+-----------------------------+
558   | ``last`` | ``id``   | upper range value           |
559   +----------+----------+-----------------------------+
560   | ``mask`` | ``id``   | zeroed to match any port ID |
561   +----------+----------+-----------------------------+
562
563Item: ``MARK``
564^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
565
566Matches an arbitrary integer value which was set using the ``MARK`` action in
567a previously matched rule.
568
569This item can only specified once as a match criteria as the ``MARK`` action can
570only be specified once in a flow action.
571
572Note the value of MARK field is arbitrary and application defined.
573
574Depending on the underlying implementation the MARK item may be supported on
575the physical device, with virtual groups in the PMD or not at all.
576
577- Default ``mask`` matches any integer value.
578
579.. _table_rte_flow_item_mark:
580
581.. table:: MARK
582
583   +----------+----------+---------------------------+
584   | Field    | Subfield | Value                     |
585   +==========+==========+===========================+
586   | ``spec`` | ``id``   | integer value             |
587   +----------+--------------------------------------+
588   | ``last`` | ``id``   | upper range value         |
589   +----------+----------+---------------------------+
590   | ``mask`` | ``id``   | zeroed to match any value |
591   +----------+----------+---------------------------+
592
593Item: ``TAG``
594^^^^^^^^^^^^^
595
596Matches tag item set by other flows. Multiple tags are supported by specifying
597``index``.
598
599- Default ``mask`` matches the specified tag value and index.
600
601.. _table_rte_flow_item_tag:
602
603.. table:: TAG
604
605   +----------+----------+----------------------------------------+
606   | Field    | Subfield  | Value                                 |
607   +==========+===========+=======================================+
608   | ``spec`` | ``data``  | 32 bit flow tag value                 |
609   |          +-----------+---------------------------------------+
610   |          | ``index`` | index of flow tag                     |
611   +----------+-----------+---------------------------------------+
612   | ``last`` | ``data``  | upper range value                     |
613   |          +-----------+---------------------------------------+
614   |          | ``index`` | field is ignored                      |
615   +----------+-----------+---------------------------------------+
616   | ``mask`` | ``data``  | bit-mask applies to "spec" and "last" |
617   |          +-----------+---------------------------------------+
618   |          | ``index`` | field is ignored                      |
619   +----------+-----------+---------------------------------------+
620
621Item: ``META``
622^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
623
624Matches 32 bit metadata item set.
625
626On egress, metadata can be set either by mbuf metadata field with
627RTE_MBUF_DYNFLAG_TX_METADATA flag or ``SET_META`` action. On ingress, ``SET_META``
628action sets metadata for a packet and the metadata will be reported via
629``metadata`` dynamic field of ``rte_mbuf`` with RTE_MBUF_DYNFLAG_RX_METADATA flag.
630
631- Default ``mask`` matches the specified Rx metadata value.
632
633.. _table_rte_flow_item_meta:
634
635.. table:: META
636
637   +----------+----------+---------------------------------------+
638   | Field    | Subfield | Value                                 |
639   +==========+==========+=======================================+
640   | ``spec`` | ``data`` | 32 bit metadata value                 |
641   +----------+----------+---------------------------------------+
642   | ``last`` | ``data`` | upper range value                     |
643   +----------+----------+---------------------------------------+
644   | ``mask`` | ``data`` | bit-mask applies to "spec" and "last" |
645   +----------+----------+---------------------------------------+
646
647Data matching item types
648~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
649
650Most of these are basically protocol header definitions with associated
651bit-masks. They must be specified (stacked) from lowest to highest protocol
652layer to form a matching pattern.
653
654Item: ``ANY``
655^^^^^^^^^^^^^
656
657Matches any protocol in place of the current layer, a single ANY may also
658stand for several protocol layers.
659
660This is usually specified as the first pattern item when looking for a
661protocol anywhere in a packet.
662
663- Default ``mask`` stands for any number of layers.
664
665.. _table_rte_flow_item_any:
666
667.. table:: ANY
668
669   +----------+----------+--------------------------------------+
670   | Field    | Subfield | Value                                |
671   +==========+==========+======================================+
672   | ``spec`` | ``num``  | number of layers covered             |
673   +----------+----------+--------------------------------------+
674   | ``last`` | ``num``  | upper range value                    |
675   +----------+----------+--------------------------------------+
676   | ``mask`` | ``num``  | zeroed to cover any number of layers |
677   +----------+----------+--------------------------------------+
678
679Example for VXLAN TCP payload matching regardless of outer L3 (IPv4 or IPv6)
680and L4 (UDP) both matched by the first ANY specification, and inner L3 (IPv4
681or IPv6) matched by the second ANY specification:
682
683.. _table_rte_flow_item_any_example:
684
685.. table:: TCP in VXLAN with wildcards
686
687   +-------+------+----------+----------+-------+
688   | Index | Item | Field    | Subfield | Value |
689   +=======+======+==========+==========+=======+
690   | 0     | Ethernet                           |
691   +-------+------+----------+----------+-------+
692   | 1     | ANY  | ``spec`` | ``num``  | 2     |
693   +-------+------+----------+----------+-------+
694   | 2     | VXLAN                              |
695   +-------+------------------------------------+
696   | 3     | Ethernet                           |
697   +-------+------+----------+----------+-------+
698   | 4     | ANY  | ``spec`` | ``num``  | 1     |
699   +-------+------+----------+----------+-------+
700   | 5     | TCP                                |
701   +-------+------------------------------------+
702   | 6     | END                                |
703   +-------+------------------------------------+
704
705Item: ``RAW``
706^^^^^^^^^^^^^
707
708Matches a byte string of a given length at a given offset.
709
710Offset is either absolute (using the start of the packet) or relative to the
711end of the previous matched item in the stack, in which case negative values
712are allowed.
713
714If search is enabled, offset is used as the starting point. The search area
715can be delimited by setting limit to a nonzero value, which is the maximum
716number of bytes after offset where the pattern may start.
717
718Matching a zero-length pattern is allowed, doing so resets the relative
719offset for subsequent items.
720
721- This type does not support ranges (``last`` field).
722- Default ``mask`` matches all fields exactly.
723
724.. _table_rte_flow_item_raw:
725
726.. table:: RAW
727
728   +----------+--------------+-------------------------------------------------+
729   | Field    | Subfield     | Value                                           |
730   +==========+==============+=================================================+
731   | ``spec`` | ``relative`` | look for pattern after the previous item        |
732   |          +--------------+-------------------------------------------------+
733   |          | ``search``   | search pattern from offset (see also ``limit``) |
734   |          +--------------+-------------------------------------------------+
735   |          | ``reserved`` | reserved, must be set to zero                   |
736   |          +--------------+-------------------------------------------------+
737   |          | ``offset``   | absolute or relative offset for ``pattern``     |
738   |          +--------------+-------------------------------------------------+
739   |          | ``limit``    | search area limit for start of ``pattern``      |
740   |          +--------------+-------------------------------------------------+
741   |          | ``length``   | ``pattern`` length                              |
742   |          +--------------+-------------------------------------------------+
743   |          | ``pattern``  | byte string to look for                         |
744   +----------+--------------+-------------------------------------------------+
745   | ``last`` | if specified, either all 0 or with the same values as ``spec`` |
746   +----------+----------------------------------------------------------------+
747   | ``mask`` | bit-mask applied to ``spec`` values with usual behavior        |
748   +----------+----------------------------------------------------------------+
749
750Example pattern looking for several strings at various offsets of a UDP
751payload, using combined RAW items:
752
753.. _table_rte_flow_item_raw_example:
754
755.. table:: UDP payload matching
756
757   +-------+------+----------+--------------+-------+
758   | Index | Item | Field    | Subfield     | Value |
759   +=======+======+==========+==============+=======+
760   | 0     | Ethernet                               |
761   +-------+----------------------------------------+
762   | 1     | IPv4                                   |
763   +-------+----------------------------------------+
764   | 2     | UDP                                    |
765   +-------+------+----------+--------------+-------+
766   | 3     | RAW  | ``spec`` | ``relative`` | 1     |
767   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
768   |       |      |          | ``search``   | 1     |
769   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
770   |       |      |          | ``offset``   | 10    |
771   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
772   |       |      |          | ``limit``    | 0     |
773   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
774   |       |      |          | ``length``   | 3     |
775   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
776   |       |      |          | ``pattern``  | "foo" |
777   +-------+------+----------+--------------+-------+
778   | 4     | RAW  | ``spec`` | ``relative`` | 1     |
779   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
780   |       |      |          | ``search``   | 0     |
781   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
782   |       |      |          | ``offset``   | 20    |
783   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
784   |       |      |          | ``limit``    | 0     |
785   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
786   |       |      |          | ``length``   | 3     |
787   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
788   |       |      |          | ``pattern``  | "bar" |
789   +-------+------+----------+--------------+-------+
790   | 5     | RAW  | ``spec`` | ``relative`` | 1     |
791   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
792   |       |      |          | ``search``   | 0     |
793   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
794   |       |      |          | ``offset``   | -29   |
795   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
796   |       |      |          | ``limit``    | 0     |
797   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
798   |       |      |          | ``length``   | 3     |
799   |       |      |          +--------------+-------+
800   |       |      |          | ``pattern``  | "baz" |
801   +-------+------+----------+--------------+-------+
802   | 6     | END                                    |
803   +-------+----------------------------------------+
804
805This translates to:
806
807- Locate "foo" at least 10 bytes deep inside UDP payload.
808- Locate "bar" after "foo" plus 20 bytes.
809- Locate "baz" after "bar" minus 29 bytes.
810
811Such a packet may be represented as follows (not to scale)::
812
813 0                     >= 10 B           == 20 B
814 |                  |<--------->|     |<--------->|
815 |                  |           |     |           |
816 |-----|------|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----------|-----|------|
817 | ETH | IPv4 | UDP | ... | baz | foo | ......... | bar | .... |
818 |-----|------|-----|-----|-----|-----|-----------|-----|------|
819                          |                             |
820                          |<--------------------------->|
821                                      == 29 B
822
823Note that matching subsequent pattern items would resume after "baz", not
824"bar" since matching is always performed after the previous item of the
825stack.
826
827Item: ``ETH``
828^^^^^^^^^^^^^
829
830Matches an Ethernet header.
831
832The ``type`` field either stands for "EtherType" or "TPID" when followed by
833so-called layer 2.5 pattern items such as ``RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_VLAN``. In
834the latter case, ``type`` refers to that of the outer header, with the inner
835EtherType/TPID provided by the subsequent pattern item. This is the same
836order as on the wire.
837If the ``type`` field contains a TPID value, then only tagged packets with the
838specified TPID will match the pattern.
839The field ``has_vlan`` can be used to match any type of tagged packets,
840instead of using the ``type`` field.
841If the ``type`` and ``has_vlan`` fields are not specified, then both tagged
842and untagged packets will match the pattern.
843
844- ``hdr``:  header definition (``rte_ether.h``).
845- ``has_vlan``: packet header contains at least one VLAN.
846- Default ``mask`` matches destination and source addresses only.
847
848Item: ``VLAN``
849^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
850
851Matches an 802.1Q/ad VLAN tag.
852
853The corresponding standard outer EtherType (TPID) values are
854``RTE_ETHER_TYPE_VLAN`` or ``RTE_ETHER_TYPE_QINQ``. It can be overridden by the
855preceding pattern item.
856If a ``VLAN`` item is present in the pattern, then only tagged packets will
857match the pattern.
858The field ``has_more_vlan`` can be used to match any type of tagged packets,
859instead of using the ``inner_type field``.
860If the ``inner_type`` and ``has_more_vlan`` fields are not specified,
861then any tagged packets will match the pattern.
862
863- ``hdr``:  header definition (``rte_ether.h``).
864- ``has_more_vlan``: packet header contains at least one more VLAN, after this VLAN.
865- Default ``mask`` matches the VID part of TCI only (lower 12 bits).
866
867Item: ``IPV4``
868^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
869
870Matches an IPv4 header.
871
872Note: IPv4 options are handled by dedicated pattern items.
873
874- ``hdr``: IPv4 header definition (``rte_ip.h``).
875- Default ``mask`` matches source and destination addresses only.
876
877Item: ``IPV6``
878^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
879
880Matches an IPv6 header.
881
882Dedicated flags indicate if header contains specific extension headers.
883To match on packets containing a specific extension header, an application
884should match on the dedicated flag set to 1.
885To match on packets not containing a specific extension header, an application
886should match on the dedicated flag clear to 0.
887In case application doesn't care about the existence of a specific extension
888header, it should not specify the dedicated flag for matching.
889
890- ``hdr``: IPv6 header definition (``rte_ip.h``).
891- ``has_hop_ext``: header contains Hop-by-Hop Options extension header.
892- ``has_route_ext``: header contains Routing extension header.
893- ``has_frag_ext``: header contains Fragment extension header.
894- ``has_auth_ext``: header contains Authentication extension header.
895- ``has_esp_ext``: header contains Encapsulation Security Payload extension header.
896- ``has_dest_ext``: header contains Destination Options extension header.
897- ``has_mobil_ext``: header contains Mobility extension header.
898- ``has_hip_ext``: header contains Host Identity Protocol extension header.
899- ``has_shim6_ext``: header contains Shim6 Protocol extension header.
900- Default ``mask`` matches ``hdr`` source and destination addresses only.
901
902Item: ``ICMP``
903^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
904
905Matches an ICMP header.
906
907- ``hdr``: ICMP header definition (``rte_icmp.h``).
908- Default ``mask`` matches ICMP type and code only.
909
910Item: ``UDP``
911^^^^^^^^^^^^^
912
913Matches a UDP header.
914
915- ``hdr``: UDP header definition (``rte_udp.h``).
916- Default ``mask`` matches source and destination ports only.
917
918Item: ``TCP``
919^^^^^^^^^^^^^
920
921Matches a TCP header.
922
923- ``hdr``: TCP header definition (``rte_tcp.h``).
924- Default ``mask`` matches source and destination ports only.
925
926Item: ``SCTP``
927^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
928
929Matches a SCTP header.
930
931- ``hdr``: SCTP header definition (``rte_sctp.h``).
932- Default ``mask`` matches source and destination ports only.
933
934Item: ``VXLAN``
935^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
936
937Matches a VXLAN header (RFC 7348).
938
939- ``hdr``:  header definition (``rte_vxlan.h``).
940- Default ``mask`` matches VNI only.
941
942Item: ``E_TAG``
943^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
944
945Matches an IEEE 802.1BR E-Tag header.
946
947The corresponding standard outer EtherType (TPID) value is
948``RTE_ETHER_TYPE_ETAG``. It can be overridden by the preceding pattern item.
949
950- ``epcp_edei_in_ecid_b``: E-Tag control information (E-TCI), E-PCP (3b),
951  E-DEI (1b), ingress E-CID base (12b).
952- ``rsvd_grp_ecid_b``: reserved (2b), GRP (2b), E-CID base (12b).
953- ``in_ecid_e``: ingress E-CID ext.
954- ``ecid_e``: E-CID ext.
955- ``inner_type``: inner EtherType or TPID.
956- Default ``mask`` simultaneously matches GRP and E-CID base.
957
958Item: ``NVGRE``
959^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
960
961Matches a NVGRE header (RFC 7637).
962
963- ``c_k_s_rsvd0_ver``: checksum (1b), undefined (1b), key bit (1b),
964  sequence number (1b), reserved 0 (9b), version (3b). This field must have
965  value 0x2000 according to RFC 7637.
966- ``protocol``: protocol type (0x6558).
967- ``tni``: virtual subnet ID.
968- ``flow_id``: flow ID.
969- Default ``mask`` matches TNI only.
970
971Item: ``MPLS``
972^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
973
974Matches a MPLS header.
975
976- ``label_tc_s_ttl``: label, TC, Bottom of Stack and TTL.
977- Default ``mask`` matches label only.
978
979Item: ``GRE``
980^^^^^^^^^^^^^
981
982Matches a GRE header.
983
984- ``c_rsvd0_ver``: checksum, reserved 0 and version.
985- ``protocol``: protocol type.
986- Default ``mask`` matches protocol only.
987
988Item: ``GRE_KEY``
989^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
990This action is deprecated. Consider `Item: GRE_OPTION`.
991
992Matches a GRE key field.
993This should be preceded by item ``GRE``.
994
995- Value to be matched is a big-endian 32 bit integer.
996- When this item present it implicitly match K bit in default mask as "1"
997
998Item: ``GRE_OPTION``
999^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1000
1001Matches a GRE optional fields (checksum/key/sequence).
1002This should be preceded by item ``GRE``.
1003
1004- ``checksum``: checksum.
1005- ``key``: key.
1006- ``sequence``: sequence.
1007- The items in GRE_OPTION do not change bit flags(c_bit/k_bit/s_bit) in GRE
1008  item. The bit flags need be set with GRE item by application. When the items
1009  present, the corresponding bits in GRE spec and mask should be set "1" by
1010  application, it means to match specified value of the fields. When the items
1011  no present, but the corresponding bits in GRE spec and mask is "1", it means
1012  to match any value of the fields.
1013
1014Item: ``FUZZY``
1015^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1016
1017Fuzzy pattern match, expect faster than default.
1018
1019This is for device that support fuzzy match option. Usually a fuzzy match is
1020fast but the cost is accuracy. i.e. Signature Match only match pattern's hash
1021value, but it is possible two different patterns have the same hash value.
1022
1023Matching accuracy level can be configured by threshold. Driver can divide the
1024range of threshold and map to different accuracy levels that device support.
1025
1026Threshold 0 means perfect match (no fuzziness), while threshold 0xffffffff
1027means fuzziest match.
1028
1029.. _table_rte_flow_item_fuzzy:
1030
1031.. table:: FUZZY
1032
1033   +----------+---------------+--------------------------------------------------+
1034   | Field    |   Subfield    | Value                                            |
1035   +==========+===============+==================================================+
1036   | ``spec`` | ``threshold`` | 0 as perfect match, 0xffffffff as fuzziest match |
1037   +----------+---------------+--------------------------------------------------+
1038   | ``last`` | ``threshold`` | upper range value                                |
1039   +----------+---------------+--------------------------------------------------+
1040   | ``mask`` | ``threshold`` | bit-mask apply to "spec" and "last"              |
1041   +----------+---------------+--------------------------------------------------+
1042
1043Usage example, fuzzy match a TCPv4 packets:
1044
1045.. _table_rte_flow_item_fuzzy_example:
1046
1047.. table:: Fuzzy matching
1048
1049   +-------+----------+
1050   | Index | Item     |
1051   +=======+==========+
1052   | 0     | FUZZY    |
1053   +-------+----------+
1054   | 1     | Ethernet |
1055   +-------+----------+
1056   | 2     | IPv4     |
1057   +-------+----------+
1058   | 3     | TCP      |
1059   +-------+----------+
1060   | 4     | END      |
1061   +-------+----------+
1062
1063Item: ``GTP``, ``GTPC``, ``GTPU``
1064^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1065
1066Matches a GTPv1 header.
1067
1068Note: GTP, GTPC and GTPU use the same structure. GTPC and GTPU item
1069are defined for a user-friendly API when creating GTP-C and GTP-U
1070flow rules.
1071
1072- ``hdr``:  header definition (``rte_gtp.h``).
1073- Default ``mask`` matches teid only.
1074
1075Item: ``ESP``
1076^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1077
1078Matches an ESP header.
1079
1080- ``hdr``: ESP header definition (``rte_esp.h``).
1081- Default ``mask`` matches SPI only.
1082
1083Item: ``GENEVE``
1084^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1085
1086Matches a GENEVE header.
1087
1088- ``ver_opt_len_o_c_rsvd0``: version (2b), length of the options fields (6b),
1089  OAM packet (1b), critical options present (1b), reserved 0 (6b).
1090- ``protocol``: protocol type.
1091- ``vni``: virtual network identifier.
1092- ``rsvd1``: reserved, normally 0x00.
1093- Default ``mask`` matches VNI only.
1094
1095Item: ``VXLAN-GPE``
1096^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1097
1098Matches a VXLAN-GPE header (draft-ietf-nvo3-vxlan-gpe-05).
1099
1100- ``hdr``:  header definition (``rte_vxlan.h``).
1101- Default ``mask`` matches VNI only.
1102
1103Item: ``ARP_ETH_IPV4``
1104^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1105
1106Matches an ARP header for Ethernet/IPv4.
1107
1108- ``hdr``:  header definition (``rte_arp.h``).
1109- Default ``mask`` matches SHA, SPA, THA and TPA.
1110
1111Item: ``IPV6_EXT``
1112^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1113
1114Matches the presence of any IPv6 extension header.
1115
1116- ``next_hdr``: next header.
1117- Default ``mask`` matches ``next_hdr``.
1118
1119Normally preceded by any of:
1120
1121- `Item: IPV6`_
1122- `Item: IPV6_EXT`_
1123
1124Item: ``IPV6_FRAG_EXT``
1125^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1126
1127Matches the presence of IPv6 fragment extension header.
1128
1129- ``hdr``: IPv6 fragment extension header definition (``rte_ip.h``).
1130
1131Normally preceded by any of:
1132
1133- `Item: IPV6`_
1134- `Item: IPV6_EXT`_
1135
1136Item: ``IPV6_ROUTING_EXT``
1137^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1138
1139Matches IPv6 routing extension header.
1140
1141- ``next_hdr``: Next layer header type.
1142- ``type``: IPv6 routing extension header type.
1143- ``segments_left``: How many IPv6 destination addresses carries on.
1144
1145Item: ``ICMP6``
1146^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1147
1148Matches any ICMPv6 header.
1149
1150- ``type``: ICMPv6 type.
1151- ``code``: ICMPv6 code.
1152- ``checksum``: ICMPv6 checksum.
1153- Default ``mask`` matches ``type`` and ``code``.
1154
1155Item: ``ICMP6_ECHO_REQUEST``
1156^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1157
1158Matches an ICMPv6 echo request.
1159
1160- ``hdr``: ICMP6 echo header definition (``rte_icmp.h``).
1161
1162Item: ``ICMP6_ECHO_REPLY``
1163^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1164
1165Matches an ICMPv6 echo reply.
1166
1167- ``hdr``: ICMP6 echo header definition (``rte_icmp.h``).
1168
1169Item: ``ICMP6_ND_NS``
1170^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1171
1172Matches an ICMPv6 neighbor discovery solicitation.
1173
1174- ``type``: ICMPv6 type, normally 135.
1175- ``code``: ICMPv6 code, normally 0.
1176- ``checksum``: ICMPv6 checksum.
1177- ``reserved``: reserved, normally 0.
1178- ``target_addr``: target address.
1179- Default ``mask`` matches target address only.
1180
1181Item: ``ICMP6_ND_NA``
1182^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1183
1184Matches an ICMPv6 neighbor discovery advertisement.
1185
1186- ``type``: ICMPv6 type, normally 136.
1187- ``code``: ICMPv6 code, normally 0.
1188- ``checksum``: ICMPv6 checksum.
1189- ``rso_reserved``: route flag (1b), solicited flag (1b), override flag
1190  (1b), reserved (29b).
1191- ``target_addr``: target address.
1192- Default ``mask`` matches target address only.
1193
1194Item: ``ICMP6_ND_OPT``
1195^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1196
1197Matches the presence of any ICMPv6 neighbor discovery option.
1198
1199- ``type``: ND option type.
1200- ``length``: ND option length.
1201- Default ``mask`` matches type only.
1202
1203Normally preceded by any of:
1204
1205- `Item: ICMP6_ND_NA`_
1206- `Item: ICMP6_ND_NS`_
1207- `Item: ICMP6_ND_OPT`_
1208
1209Item: ``ICMP6_ND_OPT_SLA_ETH``
1210^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1211
1212Matches an ICMPv6 neighbor discovery source Ethernet link-layer address
1213option.
1214
1215- ``type``: ND option type, normally 1.
1216- ``length``: ND option length, normally 1.
1217- ``sla``: source Ethernet LLA.
1218- Default ``mask`` matches source link-layer address only.
1219
1220Normally preceded by any of:
1221
1222- `Item: ICMP6_ND_NA`_
1223- `Item: ICMP6_ND_OPT`_
1224
1225Item: ``ICMP6_ND_OPT_TLA_ETH``
1226^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1227
1228Matches an ICMPv6 neighbor discovery target Ethernet link-layer address
1229option.
1230
1231- ``type``: ND option type, normally 2.
1232- ``length``: ND option length, normally 1.
1233- ``tla``: target Ethernet LLA.
1234- Default ``mask`` matches target link-layer address only.
1235
1236Normally preceded by any of:
1237
1238- `Item: ICMP6_ND_NS`_
1239- `Item: ICMP6_ND_OPT`_
1240
1241Item: ``META``
1242^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1243
1244Matches an application specific 32 bit metadata item.
1245
1246- Default ``mask`` matches the specified metadata value.
1247
1248Item: ``GTP_PSC``
1249^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1250
1251Matches a GTP PDU extension header with type 0x85.
1252
1253- ``hdr``:  header definition (``rte_gtp.h``).
1254- Default ``mask`` matches QFI only.
1255
1256Item: ``PPPOES``, ``PPPOED``
1257^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1258
1259Matches a PPPoE header.
1260
1261- ``version_type``: version (4b), type (4b).
1262- ``code``: message type.
1263- ``session_id``: session identifier.
1264- ``length``: payload length.
1265
1266Item: ``PPPOE_PROTO_ID``
1267^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1268
1269Matches a PPPoE session protocol identifier.
1270
1271- ``proto_id``: PPP protocol identifier.
1272- Default ``mask`` matches proto_id only.
1273
1274Item: ``NSH``
1275^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1276
1277Matches a network service header (RFC 8300).
1278
1279- ``version``: normally 0x0 (2 bits).
1280- ``oam_pkt``: indicate oam packet (1 bit).
1281- ``reserved``: reserved bit (1 bit).
1282- ``ttl``: maximum SFF hopes (6 bits).
1283- ``length``: total length in 4 bytes words (6 bits).
1284- ``reserved1``: reserved1 bits (4 bits).
1285- ``mdtype``: indicates format of NSH header (4 bits).
1286- ``next_proto``: indicates protocol type of encap data (8 bits).
1287- ``spi``: service path identifier (3 bytes).
1288- ``sindex``: service index (1 byte).
1289- Default ``mask`` matches mdtype, next_proto, spi, sindex.
1290
1291
1292Item: ``IGMP``
1293^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1294
1295Matches a Internet Group Management Protocol (RFC 2236).
1296
1297- ``type``: IGMP message type (Query/Report).
1298- ``max_resp_time``: max time allowed before sending report.
1299- ``checksum``: checksum, 1s complement of whole IGMP message.
1300- ``group_addr``: group address, for Query value will be 0.
1301- Default ``mask`` matches group_addr.
1302
1303
1304Item: ``AH``
1305^^^^^^^^^^^^
1306
1307Matches a IP Authentication Header (RFC 4302).
1308
1309- ``next_hdr``: next payload after AH.
1310- ``payload_len``: total length of AH in 4B words.
1311- ``reserved``: reserved bits.
1312- ``spi``: security parameters index.
1313- ``seq_num``: counter value increased by 1 on each packet sent.
1314- Default ``mask`` matches spi.
1315
1316Item: ``HIGIG2``
1317^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1318
1319Matches a HIGIG2 header field. It is layer 2.5 protocol and used in
1320Broadcom switches.
1321
1322- Default ``mask`` matches classification and vlan.
1323
1324Item: ``L2TPV3OIP``
1325^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1326
1327Matches a L2TPv3 over IP header.
1328
1329- ``session_id``: L2TPv3 over IP session identifier.
1330- Default ``mask`` matches session_id only.
1331
1332Item: ``PFCP``
1333^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1334
1335Matches a PFCP Header.
1336
1337- ``s_field``: S field.
1338- ``msg_type``: message type.
1339- ``msg_len``: message length.
1340- ``seid``: session endpoint identifier.
1341- Default ``mask`` matches s_field and seid.
1342
1343Item: ``ECPRI``
1344^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1345
1346Matches a eCPRI header.
1347
1348- ``hdr``: eCPRI header definition (``rte_ecpri.h``).
1349- Default ``mask`` matches nothing, for all eCPRI messages.
1350
1351Item: ``PACKET_INTEGRITY_CHECKS``
1352^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1353
1354Matches packet integrity.
1355For some devices application needs to enable integration checks in HW
1356before using this item.
1357
1358- ``level``: the encapsulation level that should be checked:
1359   - ``level == 0`` means the default PMD mode (can be inner most / outermost).
1360   - ``level == 1`` means outermost header.
1361   - ``level > 1``  means inner header. See also RSS level.
1362- ``packet_ok``: All HW packet integrity checks have passed based on the
1363  topmost network layer. For example, for ICMP packet the topmost network
1364  layer is L3 and for TCP or UDP packet the topmost network layer is L4.
1365- ``l2_ok``: all layer 2 HW integrity checks passed.
1366- ``l3_ok``: all layer 3 HW integrity checks passed.
1367- ``l4_ok``: all layer 4 HW integrity checks passed.
1368- ``l2_crc_ok``: layer 2 CRC check passed.
1369- ``ipv4_csum_ok``: IPv4 checksum check passed.
1370- ``l4_csum_ok``: layer 4 checksum check passed.
1371- ``l3_len_ok``: the layer 3 length is smaller than the frame length.
1372
1373Item: ``CONNTRACK``
1374^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1375
1376Matches a conntrack state after conntrack action.
1377
1378- ``flags``: conntrack packet state flags.
1379- Default ``mask`` matches all state bits.
1380
1381Item: ``PORT_REPRESENTOR``
1382^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1383
1384Matches traffic entering the embedded switch from the given ethdev.
1385
1386Term **ethdev** and the concept of **port representor** are synonymous.
1387The **represented port** is an *entity* plugged to the embedded switch
1388at the opposite end of the "wire" leading to the ethdev.
1389
1390::
1391
1392    .--------------------.
1393    |  PORT_REPRESENTOR  |  Ethdev (Application Port Referred to by its ID)
1394    '--------------------'
1395              ||
1396              \/
1397      .----------------.
1398      |  Logical Port  |
1399      '----------------'
1400              ||
1401              ||
1402              ||
1403              \/
1404         .----------.
1405         |  Switch  |
1406         '----------'
1407              :
1408               :
1409              :
1410               :
1411      .----------------.
1412      |  Logical Port  |
1413      '----------------'
1414              :
1415               :
1416    .--------------------.
1417    |  REPRESENTED_PORT  |  Net / Guest / Another Ethdev (Same Application)
1418    '--------------------'
1419
1420
1421- Incompatible with `Attribute: Traffic direction`_.
1422- Requires `Attribute: Transfer`_.
1423
1424.. _table_rte_flow_item_ethdev:
1425
1426.. table:: ``struct rte_flow_item_ethdev``
1427
1428   +----------+-------------+---------------------------+
1429   | Field    | Subfield    | Value                     |
1430   +==========+=============+===========================+
1431   | ``spec`` | ``port_id`` | ethdev port ID            |
1432   +----------+-------------+---------------------------+
1433   | ``last`` | ``port_id`` | upper range value         |
1434   +----------+-------------+---------------------------+
1435   | ``mask`` | ``port_id`` | zeroed for wildcard match |
1436   +----------+-------------+---------------------------+
1437
1438- Default ``mask`` provides exact match behaviour.
1439
1440See also `Action: PORT_REPRESENTOR`_.
1441
1442Item: ``REPRESENTED_PORT``
1443^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1444
1445Matches traffic entering the embedded switch from
1446the entity represented by the given ethdev.
1447
1448Term **ethdev** and the concept of **port representor** are synonymous.
1449The **represented port** is an *entity* plugged to the embedded switch
1450at the opposite end of the "wire" leading to the ethdev.
1451
1452::
1453
1454    .--------------------.
1455    |  PORT_REPRESENTOR  |  Ethdev (Application Port Referred to by its ID)
1456    '--------------------'
1457              :
1458               :
1459      .----------------.
1460      |  Logical Port  |
1461      '----------------'
1462              :
1463               :
1464              :
1465               :
1466         .----------.
1467         |  Switch  |
1468         '----------'
1469              /\
1470              ||
1471              ||
1472              ||
1473      .----------------.
1474      |  Logical Port  |
1475      '----------------'
1476              /\
1477              ||
1478    .--------------------.
1479    |  REPRESENTED_PORT  |  Net / Guest / Another Ethdev (Same Application)
1480    '--------------------'
1481
1482
1483- Incompatible with `Attribute: Traffic direction`_.
1484- Requires `Attribute: Transfer`_.
1485
1486This item is meant to use the same structure as `Item: PORT_REPRESENTOR`_.
1487
1488See also `Action: REPRESENTED_PORT`_.
1489
1490Item: ``TX_QUEUE``
1491^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1492
1493Matches on the Tx queue of sent packet.
1494
1495- ``tx_queue``: Tx queue.
1496
1497Item: ``AGGR_AFFINITY``
1498^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1499
1500Matches on the aggregated port of the received packet.
1501In case of multiple aggregated ports, the affinity numbering starts from 1.
1502
1503- ``affinity``: Aggregated affinity.
1504
1505Item: ``FLEX``
1506^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1507
1508Matches with the custom network protocol header that was created
1509using rte_flow_flex_item_create() API. The application describes
1510the desired header structure, defines the header fields attributes
1511and header relations with preceding and following protocols and
1512configures the ethernet devices accordingly via
1513rte_flow_flex_item_create() routine.
1514
1515- ``handle``: the flex item handle returned by the PMD on successful
1516  rte_flow_flex_item_create() call, mask for this field is ignored.
1517- ``length``: match pattern length in bytes. If the length does not cover
1518  all fields defined in item configuration, the pattern spec and mask are
1519  considered by the driver as padded with trailing zeroes till the full
1520  configured item pattern length.
1521- ``pattern``: pattern to match. The pattern is concatenation of bit fields
1522  configured at item creation. At configuration the fields are presented
1523  by sample_data array. The order of the bitfields is defined by the order
1524  of sample_data elements. The width of each bitfield is defined by the width
1525  specified in the corresponding sample_data element as well. If pattern
1526  length is smaller than configured fields overall length it is considered
1527  as padded with trailing zeroes up to full configured length, both for
1528  value and mask.
1529
1530Item: ``L2TPV2``
1531^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1532
1533Matches a L2TPv2 header.
1534
1535- ``hdr``:  header definition (``rte_l2tpv2.h``).
1536- Default ``mask`` matches flags_version only.
1537
1538Item: ``PPP``
1539^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1540
1541Matches a PPP header.
1542
1543- ``addr``: PPP address.
1544- ``ctrl``: PPP control.
1545- ``proto_id``: PPP protocol identifier.
1546- Default ``mask`` matches addr, ctrl, proto_id.
1547
1548Item: ``METER_COLOR``
1549^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1550
1551Matches Color Marker set by a Meter.
1552
1553- ``color``: Metering color marker.
1554
1555Item: ``QUOTA``
1556^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1557
1558Matches flow quota state set by quota action.
1559
1560- ``state``: Flow quota state
1561
1562Item: ``IB_BTH``
1563^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1564
1565Matches an InfiniBand base transport header in RoCE packet.
1566
1567- ``hdr``: InfiniBand base transport header definition (``rte_ib.h``).
1568
1569Item: ``PTYPE``
1570^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1571
1572Matches the packet type as defined in rte_mbuf_ptype.
1573
1574- ``packet_type``: L2/L3/L4 and tunnel information.
1575
1576Item: ``RANDOM``
1577^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1578
1579Matches a random value.
1580
1581A random unsigned integer (at most 32-bit) is generated for each packet
1582during flow rule processing, by either HW, SW or some external source.
1583Application can match on either exact value or range of values.
1584This value is not based on the packet data/headers.
1585The application shouldn't assume that this value is kept
1586during the lifetime of the packet.
1587
1588- ``value``: Specific value to match.
1589
1590Item: ``COMPARE``
1591^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1592
1593Matches the comparison result between packet fields or value.
1594
1595- ``compare``: Comparison information.
1596
1597Actions
1598~~~~~~~
1599
1600Each possible action is represented by a type.
1601An action can have an associated configuration object.
1602Several actions combined in a list can be assigned
1603to a flow rule and are performed in order.
1604
1605They fall in three categories:
1606
1607- Actions that modify the fate of matching traffic, for instance by dropping
1608  or assigning it a specific destination.
1609
1610- Actions that modify matching traffic contents or its properties. This
1611  includes adding/removing encapsulation, encryption, compression and marks.
1612
1613- Actions related to the flow rule itself, such as updating counters or
1614  making it non-terminating.
1615
1616Flow rules being terminating by default, not specifying any action of the
1617fate kind results in undefined behavior. This applies to both ingress and
1618egress.
1619
1620PASSTHRU, when supported, makes a flow rule non-terminating.
1621
1622Like matching patterns, action lists are terminated by END items.
1623
1624Example of action that redirects packets to queue index 10:
1625
1626.. _table_rte_flow_action_example:
1627
1628.. table:: Queue action
1629
1630   +-----------+-------+
1631   | Field     | Value |
1632   +===========+=======+
1633   | ``index`` | 10    |
1634   +-----------+-------+
1635
1636Actions are performed in list order:
1637
1638.. _table_rte_flow_count_then_drop:
1639
1640.. table:: Count then drop
1641
1642   +-------+--------+
1643   | Index | Action |
1644   +=======+========+
1645   | 0     | COUNT  |
1646   +-------+--------+
1647   | 1     | DROP   |
1648   +-------+--------+
1649   | 2     | END    |
1650   +-------+--------+
1651
1652|
1653
1654.. _table_rte_flow_mark_count_redirect:
1655
1656.. table:: Mark, count then redirect
1657
1658   +-------+--------+------------+-------+
1659   | Index | Action | Field      | Value |
1660   +=======+========+============+=======+
1661   | 0     | MARK   | ``mark``   | 0x2a  |
1662   +-------+--------+------------+-------+
1663   | 1     | COUNT  | ``id``     | 0     |
1664   +-------+--------+------------+-------+
1665   | 2     | QUEUE  | ``queue``  | 10    |
1666   +-------+--------+------------+-------+
1667   | 3     | END                         |
1668   +-------+-----------------------------+
1669
1670|
1671
1672.. _table_rte_flow_redirect_queue_5:
1673
1674.. table:: Redirect to queue 5
1675
1676   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1677   | Index | Action | Field     | Value |
1678   +=======+========+===========+=======+
1679   | 0     | DROP                       |
1680   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1681   | 1     | QUEUE  | ``queue`` | 5     |
1682   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1683   | 2     | END                        |
1684   +-------+----------------------------+
1685
1686In the above example, while DROP and QUEUE must be performed in order, both
1687have to happen before reaching END. Only QUEUE has a visible effect.
1688
1689Note that such a list may be thought as ambiguous and rejected on that
1690basis.
1691
1692.. _table_rte_flow_redirect_queue_5_3:
1693
1694.. table:: Redirect to queues 5 and 3
1695
1696   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1697   | Index | Action | Field     | Value |
1698   +=======+========+===========+=======+
1699   | 0     | QUEUE  | ``queue`` | 5     |
1700   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1701   | 1     | VOID                       |
1702   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1703   | 2     | QUEUE  | ``queue`` | 3     |
1704   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1705   | 3     | END                        |
1706   +-------+----------------------------+
1707
1708As previously described, all actions must be taken into account. This
1709effectively duplicates traffic to both queues. The above example also shows
1710that VOID is ignored.
1711
1712Action types
1713~~~~~~~~~~~~
1714
1715Common action types are described in this section.
1716
1717Action: ``END``
1718^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1719
1720End marker for action lists. Prevents further processing of actions, thereby
1721ending the list.
1722
1723- Its numeric value is 0 for convenience.
1724- PMD support is mandatory.
1725- No configurable properties.
1726
1727.. _table_rte_flow_action_end:
1728
1729.. table:: END
1730
1731   +---------------+
1732   | Field         |
1733   +===============+
1734   | no properties |
1735   +---------------+
1736
1737Action: ``VOID``
1738^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1739
1740Used as a placeholder for convenience. It is ignored and simply discarded by
1741PMDs.
1742
1743- PMD support is mandatory.
1744- No configurable properties.
1745
1746.. _table_rte_flow_action_void:
1747
1748.. table:: VOID
1749
1750   +---------------+
1751   | Field         |
1752   +===============+
1753   | no properties |
1754   +---------------+
1755
1756Action: ``PASSTHRU``
1757^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1758
1759Leaves traffic up for additional processing by subsequent flow rules; makes
1760a flow rule non-terminating.
1761
1762- No configurable properties.
1763
1764.. _table_rte_flow_action_passthru:
1765
1766.. table:: PASSTHRU
1767
1768   +---------------+
1769   | Field         |
1770   +===============+
1771   | no properties |
1772   +---------------+
1773
1774Example to copy a packet to a queue and continue processing by subsequent
1775flow rules:
1776
1777.. _table_rte_flow_action_passthru_example:
1778
1779.. table:: Copy to queue 8
1780
1781   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1782   | Index | Action | Field     | Value |
1783   +=======+========+===========+=======+
1784   | 0     | PASSTHRU                   |
1785   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1786   | 1     | QUEUE  | ``queue`` | 8     |
1787   +-------+--------+-----------+-------+
1788   | 2     | END                        |
1789   +-------+----------------------------+
1790
1791Action: ``JUMP``
1792^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1793
1794Redirects packets to a group on the current device.
1795
1796In a hierarchy of groups, which can be used to represent physical or logical
1797flow group/tables on the device, this action redirects the matched flow to
1798the specified group on that device.
1799
1800If a matched flow is redirected to a table which doesn't contain a matching
1801rule for that flow, then the behavior is undefined and the resulting behavior
1802is up to the specific device. Best practice when using groups would be to define
1803a default flow rule for each group which a defines the default actions in that
1804group so a consistent behavior is defined.
1805
1806Defining an action for a matched flow in a group to jump to a group which is
1807higher in the group hierarchy may not be supported by physical devices,
1808depending on how groups are mapped to the physical devices. In the
1809definitions of jump actions, applications should be aware that it may be
1810possible to define flow rules which trigger an undefined behavior causing
1811flows to loop between groups.
1812
1813.. _table_rte_flow_action_jump:
1814
1815.. table:: JUMP
1816
1817   +-----------+------------------------------+
1818   | Field     | Value                        |
1819   +===========+==============================+
1820   | ``group`` | Group to redirect packets to |
1821   +-----------+------------------------------+
1822
1823Action: ``MARK``
1824^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1825
1826Attaches an integer value to packets and sets ``RTE_MBUF_F_RX_FDIR`` and
1827``RTE_MBUF_F_RX_FDIR_ID`` mbuf flags.
1828
1829This value is arbitrary and application-defined. Maximum allowed value
1830depends on the underlying implementation. It is returned in the
1831``hash.fdir.hi`` mbuf field.
1832
1833.. _table_rte_flow_action_mark:
1834
1835.. table:: MARK
1836
1837   +--------+--------------------------------------+
1838   | Field  | Value                                |
1839   +========+======================================+
1840   | ``id`` | integer value to return with packets |
1841   +--------+--------------------------------------+
1842
1843Action: ``FLAG``
1844^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1845
1846Flags packets. Similar to `Action: MARK`_ without a specific value; only
1847sets the ``RTE_MBUF_F_RX_FDIR`` mbuf flag.
1848
1849- No configurable properties.
1850
1851.. _table_rte_flow_action_flag:
1852
1853.. table:: FLAG
1854
1855   +---------------+
1856   | Field         |
1857   +===============+
1858   | no properties |
1859   +---------------+
1860
1861Action: ``QUEUE``
1862^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1863
1864Assigns packets to a given queue index.
1865
1866.. _table_rte_flow_action_queue:
1867
1868.. table:: QUEUE
1869
1870   +-----------+--------------------+
1871   | Field     | Value              |
1872   +===========+====================+
1873   | ``index`` | queue index to use |
1874   +-----------+--------------------+
1875
1876Action: ``DROP``
1877^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1878
1879Drop packets.
1880
1881- No configurable properties.
1882
1883.. _table_rte_flow_action_drop:
1884
1885.. table:: DROP
1886
1887   +---------------+
1888   | Field         |
1889   +===============+
1890   | no properties |
1891   +---------------+
1892
1893
1894Action: ``SKIP_CMAN``
1895^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1896
1897Skip congestion management on received packets.
1898
1899- Using ``rte_eth_cman_config_set()``,
1900  an application can configure ethdev Rx queue's congestion mechanism.
1901  Once applied, packets congestion configuration is bypassed
1902  on that particular ethdev Rx queue for all packets directed to that queue.
1903
1904.. _table_rte_flow_action_skip_cman:
1905
1906.. table:: SKIP_CMAN
1907
1908   +---------------+
1909   | Field         |
1910   +===============+
1911   | no properties |
1912   +---------------+
1913
1914
1915Action: ``COUNT``
1916^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1917
1918Adds a counter action to a matched flow.
1919
1920If more than one count action is specified in a single flow rule, then each
1921action must specify a unique id.
1922
1923Counters can be retrieved and reset through ``rte_flow_query()``, see
1924``struct rte_flow_query_count``.
1925
1926For ports within the same switch domain then the counter id namespace extends
1927to all ports within that switch domain.
1928
1929.. _table_rte_flow_action_count:
1930
1931.. table:: COUNT
1932
1933   +------------+---------------------------------+
1934   | Field      | Value                           |
1935   +============+=================================+
1936   | ``id``     | counter id                      |
1937   +------------+---------------------------------+
1938
1939Query structure to retrieve and reset flow rule counters:
1940
1941.. _table_rte_flow_query_count:
1942
1943.. table:: COUNT query
1944
1945   +---------------+-----+-----------------------------------+
1946   | Field         | I/O | Value                             |
1947   +===============+=====+===================================+
1948   | ``reset``     | in  | reset counter after query         |
1949   +---------------+-----+-----------------------------------+
1950   | ``hits_set``  | out | ``hits`` field is set             |
1951   +---------------+-----+-----------------------------------+
1952   | ``bytes_set`` | out | ``bytes`` field is set            |
1953   +---------------+-----+-----------------------------------+
1954   | ``hits``      | out | number of hits for this rule      |
1955   +---------------+-----+-----------------------------------+
1956   | ``bytes``     | out | number of bytes through this rule |
1957   +---------------+-----+-----------------------------------+
1958
1959Action: ``RSS``
1960^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1961
1962Similar to QUEUE, except RSS is additionally performed on packets to spread
1963them among several queues according to the provided parameters.
1964
1965Unlike global RSS settings used by other DPDK APIs, unsetting the ``types``
1966field does not disable RSS in a flow rule. Doing so instead requests safe
1967unspecified "best-effort" settings from the underlying PMD, which depending
1968on the flow rule, may result in anything ranging from empty (single queue)
1969to all-inclusive RSS.
1970
1971If non-applicable for matching packets RSS types are requested,
1972these RSS types are simply ignored. For example, it happens if:
1973
1974- Hashing of both TCP and UDP ports is requested
1975  (only one can be present in a packet).
1976
1977- Requested RSS types contradict to flow rule pattern
1978  (e.g. pattern has UDP item, but RSS types contain TCP).
1979
1980If requested RSS hash types are not supported by the Ethernet device at all
1981(not reported in ``dev_info.flow_type_rss_offloads``),
1982the flow creation will fail.
1983
1984Note: RSS hash result is stored in the ``hash.rss`` mbuf field which
1985overlaps ``hash.fdir.lo``. Since `Action: MARK`_ sets the ``hash.fdir.hi``
1986field only, both can be requested simultaneously.
1987
1988Also, regarding packet encapsulation ``level``:
1989
1990- ``0`` requests the default behavior. Depending on the packet type, it can
1991  mean outermost, innermost, anything in between or even no RSS.
1992
1993  It basically stands for the innermost encapsulation level RSS can be
1994  performed on according to PMD and device capabilities.
1995
1996- ``1`` requests RSS to be performed on the outermost packet encapsulation
1997  level.
1998
1999- ``2`` and subsequent values request RSS to be performed on the specified
2000  inner packet encapsulation level, from outermost to innermost (lower to
2001  higher values).
2002
2003Values other than ``0`` are not necessarily supported.
2004
2005Requesting a specific RSS level on unrecognized traffic results in undefined
2006behavior. For predictable results, it is recommended to make the flow rule
2007pattern match packet headers up to the requested encapsulation level so that
2008only matching traffic goes through.
2009
2010.. _table_rte_flow_action_rss:
2011
2012.. table:: RSS
2013
2014   +---------------+-------------------------------------------------+
2015   | Field         | Value                                           |
2016   +===============+=================================================+
2017   | ``func``      | RSS hash function to apply                      |
2018   +---------------+-------------------------------------------------+
2019   | ``level``     | encapsulation level for ``types``               |
2020   +---------------+-------------------------------------------------+
2021   | ``types``     | specific RSS hash types (see ``RTE_ETH_RSS_*``) |
2022   +---------------+-------------------------------------------------+
2023   | ``key_len``   | hash key length in bytes                        |
2024   +---------------+-------------------------------------------------+
2025   | ``queue_num`` | number of entries in ``queue``                  |
2026   +---------------+-------------------------------------------------+
2027   | ``key``       | hash key                                        |
2028   +---------------+-------------------------------------------------+
2029   | ``queue``     | queue indices to use                            |
2030   +---------------+-------------------------------------------------+
2031
2032Action: ``PF``
2033^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2034
2035This action is deprecated. Consider:
2036 - `Action: PORT_REPRESENTOR`_
2037 - `Action: REPRESENTED_PORT`_
2038
2039Directs matching traffic to the physical function (PF) of the current
2040device.
2041
2042- No configurable properties.
2043
2044.. _table_rte_flow_action_pf:
2045
2046.. table:: PF
2047
2048   +---------------+
2049   | Field         |
2050   +===============+
2051   | no properties |
2052   +---------------+
2053
2054Action: ``VF``
2055^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2056
2057This action is deprecated. Consider:
2058 - `Action: PORT_REPRESENTOR`_
2059 - `Action: REPRESENTED_PORT`_
2060
2061Directs matching traffic to a given virtual function of the current device.
2062
2063Packets can be redirected to the VF they originate from,
2064instead of the specified one. This parameter may not be available and is
2065not guaranteed to work properly if the VF part is matched by a prior flow
2066rule or if packets are not addressed to a VF in the first place.
2067
2068.. _table_rte_flow_action_vf:
2069
2070.. table:: VF
2071
2072   +--------------+--------------------------------+
2073   | Field        | Value                          |
2074   +==============+================================+
2075   | ``original`` | use original VF ID if possible |
2076   +--------------+--------------------------------+
2077   | ``id``       | VF ID                          |
2078   +--------------+--------------------------------+
2079
2080Action: ``PORT_ID``
2081^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2082This action is deprecated. Consider:
2083 - `Action: PORT_REPRESENTOR`_
2084 - `Action: REPRESENTED_PORT`_
2085
2086Directs matching traffic to a given DPDK port ID.
2087
2088See `Item: PORT_ID`_.
2089
2090.. _table_rte_flow_action_port_id:
2091
2092.. table:: PORT_ID
2093
2094   +--------------+---------------------------------------+
2095   | Field        | Value                                 |
2096   +==============+=======================================+
2097   | ``original`` | use original DPDK port ID if possible |
2098   +--------------+---------------------------------------+
2099   | ``id``       | DPDK port ID                          |
2100   +--------------+---------------------------------------+
2101
2102Action: ``METER``
2103^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2104
2105Applies a stage of metering and policing.
2106
2107The metering and policing (MTR) object has to be first created using the
2108rte_mtr_create() API function. The ID of the MTR object is specified as
2109action parameter. More than one flow can use the same MTR object through
2110the meter action. The MTR object can be further updated or queried using
2111the rte_mtr* API.
2112
2113.. _table_rte_flow_action_meter:
2114
2115.. table:: METER
2116
2117   +--------------+---------------+
2118   | Field        | Value         |
2119   +==============+===============+
2120   | ``mtr_id``   | MTR object ID |
2121   +--------------+---------------+
2122
2123Action: ``SECURITY``
2124^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2125
2126Perform the security action on flows matched by the pattern items
2127according to the configuration of the security session.
2128
2129This action modifies the payload of matched flows. For INLINE_CRYPTO, the
2130security protocol headers and IV are fully provided by the application as
2131specified in the flow pattern. The payload of matching packets is
2132encrypted on egress, and decrypted and authenticated on ingress.
2133For INLINE_PROTOCOL, the security protocol is fully offloaded to HW,
2134providing full encapsulation and decapsulation of packets in security
2135protocols. The flow pattern specifies both the outer security header fields
2136and the inner packet fields. The security session specified in the action
2137must match the pattern parameters.
2138
2139The security session specified in the action must be created on the same
2140port as the flow action that is being specified.
2141
2142The ingress/egress flow attribute should match that specified in the
2143security session if the security session supports the definition of the
2144direction.
2145
2146Multiple flows can be configured to use the same security session.
2147
2148.. _table_rte_flow_action_security:
2149
2150.. table:: SECURITY
2151
2152   +----------------------+--------------------------------------+
2153   | Field                | Value                                |
2154   +======================+======================================+
2155   | ``security_session`` | security session to apply            |
2156   +----------------------+--------------------------------------+
2157
2158The following is an example of configuring IPsec inline using the
2159INLINE_CRYPTO security session:
2160
2161The encryption algorithm, keys and salt are part of the opaque
2162``rte_security_session``. The SA is identified according to the IP and ESP
2163fields in the pattern items.
2164
2165.. _table_rte_flow_item_esp_inline_example:
2166
2167.. table:: IPsec inline crypto flow pattern items.
2168
2169   +-------+----------+
2170   | Index | Item     |
2171   +=======+==========+
2172   | 0     | Ethernet |
2173   +-------+----------+
2174   | 1     | IPv4     |
2175   +-------+----------+
2176   | 2     | ESP      |
2177   +-------+----------+
2178   | 3     | END      |
2179   +-------+----------+
2180
2181.. _table_rte_flow_action_esp_inline_example:
2182
2183.. table:: IPsec inline flow actions.
2184
2185   +-------+----------+
2186   | Index | Action   |
2187   +=======+==========+
2188   | 0     | SECURITY |
2189   +-------+----------+
2190   | 1     | END      |
2191   +-------+----------+
2192
2193Action: ``OF_DEC_NW_TTL``
2194^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2195This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2196
2197Implements ``OFPAT_DEC_NW_TTL`` ("decrement IP TTL") as defined by the
2198`OpenFlow Switch Specification`_.
2199
2200.. _table_rte_flow_action_of_dec_nw_ttl:
2201
2202.. table:: OF_DEC_NW_TTL
2203
2204   +---------------+
2205   | Field         |
2206   +===============+
2207   | no properties |
2208   +---------------+
2209
2210Action: ``OF_POP_VLAN``
2211^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2212
2213Implements ``OFPAT_POP_VLAN`` ("pop the outer VLAN tag") as defined
2214by the `OpenFlow Switch Specification`_.
2215
2216.. _table_rte_flow_action_of_pop_vlan:
2217
2218.. table:: OF_POP_VLAN
2219
2220   +---------------+
2221   | Field         |
2222   +===============+
2223   | no properties |
2224   +---------------+
2225
2226Action: ``OF_PUSH_VLAN``
2227^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2228
2229Implements ``OFPAT_PUSH_VLAN`` ("push a new VLAN tag") as defined by the
2230`OpenFlow Switch Specification`_.
2231
2232.. _table_rte_flow_action_of_push_vlan:
2233
2234.. table:: OF_PUSH_VLAN
2235
2236   +---------------+-----------+
2237   | Field         | Value     |
2238   +===============+===========+
2239   | ``ethertype`` | EtherType |
2240   +---------------+-----------+
2241
2242Action: ``OF_SET_VLAN_VID``
2243^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2244
2245Implements ``OFPAT_SET_VLAN_VID`` ("set the 802.1q VLAN id") as defined by
2246the `OpenFlow Switch Specification`_.
2247
2248.. _table_rte_flow_action_of_set_vlan_vid:
2249
2250.. table:: OF_SET_VLAN_VID
2251
2252   +--------------+---------+
2253   | Field        | Value   |
2254   +==============+=========+
2255   | ``vlan_vid`` | VLAN id |
2256   +--------------+---------+
2257
2258Action: ``OF_SET_VLAN_PCP``
2259^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2260
2261Implements ``OFPAT_SET_LAN_PCP`` ("set the 802.1q priority") as defined by
2262the `OpenFlow Switch Specification`_.
2263
2264.. _table_rte_flow_action_of_set_vlan_pcp:
2265
2266.. table:: OF_SET_VLAN_PCP
2267
2268   +--------------+---------------+
2269   | Field        | Value         |
2270   +==============+===============+
2271   | ``vlan_pcp`` | VLAN priority |
2272   +--------------+---------------+
2273
2274Action: ``OF_POP_MPLS``
2275^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2276
2277Implements ``OFPAT_POP_MPLS`` ("pop the outer MPLS tag") as defined by the
2278`OpenFlow Switch Specification`_.
2279
2280.. _table_rte_flow_action_of_pop_mpls:
2281
2282.. table:: OF_POP_MPLS
2283
2284   +---------------+-----------+
2285   | Field         | Value     |
2286   +===============+===========+
2287   | ``ethertype`` | EtherType |
2288   +---------------+-----------+
2289
2290Action: ``OF_PUSH_MPLS``
2291^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2292
2293Implements ``OFPAT_PUSH_MPLS`` ("push a new MPLS tag") as defined by the
2294`OpenFlow Switch Specification`_.
2295
2296.. _table_rte_flow_action_of_push_mpls:
2297
2298.. table:: OF_PUSH_MPLS
2299
2300   +---------------+-----------+
2301   | Field         | Value     |
2302   +===============+===========+
2303   | ``ethertype`` | EtherType |
2304   +---------------+-----------+
2305
2306Action: ``VXLAN_ENCAP``
2307^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2308
2309Performs a VXLAN encapsulation action by encapsulating the matched flow in the
2310VXLAN tunnel as defined in the``rte_flow_action_vxlan_encap`` flow items
2311definition.
2312
2313This action modifies the payload of matched flows. The flow definition specified
2314in the ``rte_flow_action_tunnel_encap`` action structure must define a valid
2315VLXAN network overlay which conforms with RFC 7348 (Virtual eXtensible Local
2316Area Network (VXLAN): A Framework for Overlaying Virtualized Layer 2 Networks
2317over Layer 3 Networks). The pattern must be terminated with the
2318RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_END item type.
2319
2320.. _table_rte_flow_action_vxlan_encap:
2321
2322.. table:: VXLAN_ENCAP
2323
2324   +----------------+-------------------------------------+
2325   | Field          | Value                               |
2326   +================+=====================================+
2327   | ``definition`` | Tunnel end-point overlay definition |
2328   +----------------+-------------------------------------+
2329
2330.. _table_rte_flow_action_vxlan_encap_example:
2331
2332.. table:: IPv4 VxLAN flow pattern example.
2333
2334   +-------+----------+
2335   | Index | Item     |
2336   +=======+==========+
2337   | 0     | Ethernet |
2338   +-------+----------+
2339   | 1     | IPv4     |
2340   +-------+----------+
2341   | 2     | UDP      |
2342   +-------+----------+
2343   | 3     | VXLAN    |
2344   +-------+----------+
2345   | 4     | END      |
2346   +-------+----------+
2347
2348Action: ``VXLAN_DECAP``
2349^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2350
2351Performs a decapsulation action by stripping all headers of the VXLAN tunnel
2352network overlay from the matched flow.
2353
2354The flow items pattern defined for the flow rule with which a ``VXLAN_DECAP``
2355action is specified, must define a valid VXLAN tunnel as per RFC7348. If the
2356flow pattern does not specify a valid VXLAN tunnel then a
2357RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error should be returned.
2358
2359This action modifies the payload of matched flows.
2360
2361Action: ``NVGRE_ENCAP``
2362^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2363
2364Performs a NVGRE encapsulation action by encapsulating the matched flow in the
2365NVGRE tunnel as defined in the``rte_flow_action_tunnel_encap`` flow item
2366definition.
2367
2368This action modifies the payload of matched flows. The flow definition specified
2369in the ``rte_flow_action_tunnel_encap`` action structure must defined a valid
2370NVGRE network overlay which conforms with RFC 7637 (NVGRE: Network
2371Virtualization Using Generic Routing Encapsulation). The pattern must be
2372terminated with the RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_END item type.
2373
2374.. _table_rte_flow_action_nvgre_encap:
2375
2376.. table:: NVGRE_ENCAP
2377
2378   +----------------+-------------------------------------+
2379   | Field          | Value                               |
2380   +================+=====================================+
2381   | ``definition`` | NVGRE end-point overlay definition  |
2382   +----------------+-------------------------------------+
2383
2384.. _table_rte_flow_action_nvgre_encap_example:
2385
2386.. table:: IPv4 NVGRE flow pattern example.
2387
2388   +-------+----------+
2389   | Index | Item     |
2390   +=======+==========+
2391   | 0     | Ethernet |
2392   +-------+----------+
2393   | 1     | IPv4     |
2394   +-------+----------+
2395   | 2     | NVGRE    |
2396   +-------+----------+
2397   | 3     | END      |
2398   +-------+----------+
2399
2400Action: ``NVGRE_DECAP``
2401^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2402
2403Performs a decapsulation action by stripping all headers of the NVGRE tunnel
2404network overlay from the matched flow.
2405
2406The flow items pattern defined for the flow rule with which a ``NVGRE_DECAP``
2407action is specified, must define a valid NVGRE tunnel as per RFC7637. If the
2408flow pattern does not specify a valid NVGRE tunnel then a
2409RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error should be returned.
2410
2411This action modifies the payload of matched flows.
2412
2413Action: ``RAW_ENCAP``
2414^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2415
2416Adds outer header whose template is provided in its data buffer,
2417as defined in the ``rte_flow_action_raw_encap`` definition.
2418
2419This action modifies the payload of matched flows. The data supplied must
2420be a valid header, either holding layer 2 data in case of adding layer 2 after
2421decap layer 3 tunnel (for example MPLSoGRE) or complete tunnel definition
2422starting from layer 2 and moving to the tunnel item itself. When applied to
2423the original packet the resulting packet must be a valid packet.
2424
2425.. _table_rte_flow_action_raw_encap:
2426
2427.. table:: RAW_ENCAP
2428
2429   +----------------+----------------------------------------+
2430   | Field          | Value                                  |
2431   +================+========================================+
2432   | ``data``       | Encapsulation data                     |
2433   +----------------+----------------------------------------+
2434   | ``preserve``   | Bit-mask of data to preserve on output |
2435   +----------------+----------------------------------------+
2436   | ``size``       | Size of data and preserve              |
2437   +----------------+----------------------------------------+
2438
2439Action: ``RAW_DECAP``
2440^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2441
2442Remove outer header whose template is provided in its data buffer,
2443as defined in the ``rte_flow_action_raw_decap``
2444
2445This action modifies the payload of matched flows. The data supplied must
2446be a valid header, either holding layer 2 data in case of removing layer 2
2447before encapsulation of layer 3 tunnel (for example MPLSoGRE) or complete
2448tunnel definition starting from layer 2 and moving to the tunnel item itself.
2449When applied to the original packet the resulting packet must be a
2450valid packet.
2451
2452.. _table_rte_flow_action_raw_decap:
2453
2454.. table:: RAW_DECAP
2455
2456   +----------------+----------------------------------------+
2457   | Field          | Value                                  |
2458   +================+========================================+
2459   | ``data``       | Decapsulation data                     |
2460   +----------------+----------------------------------------+
2461   | ``size``       | Size of data                           |
2462   +----------------+----------------------------------------+
2463
2464Action: ``SET_IPV4_SRC``
2465^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2466This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2467
2468Set a new IPv4 source address in the outermost IPv4 header.
2469
2470It must be used with a valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV4 flow pattern item.
2471Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2472
2473.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_ipv4_src:
2474
2475.. table:: SET_IPV4_SRC
2476
2477   +-----------------------------------------+
2478   | Field         | Value                   |
2479   +===============+=========================+
2480   | ``ipv4_addr`` | new IPv4 source address |
2481   +---------------+-------------------------+
2482
2483Action: ``SET_IPV4_DST``
2484^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2485This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2486
2487Set a new IPv4 destination address in the outermost IPv4 header.
2488
2489It must be used with a valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV4 flow pattern item.
2490Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2491
2492.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_ipv4_dst:
2493
2494.. table:: SET_IPV4_DST
2495
2496   +---------------+------------------------------+
2497   | Field         | Value                        |
2498   +===============+==============================+
2499   | ``ipv4_addr`` | new IPv4 destination address |
2500   +---------------+------------------------------+
2501
2502Action: ``SET_IPV6_SRC``
2503^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2504This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2505
2506Set a new IPv6 source address in the outermost IPv6 header.
2507
2508It must be used with a valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV6 flow pattern item.
2509Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2510
2511.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_ipv6_src:
2512
2513.. table:: SET_IPV6_SRC
2514
2515   +---------------+-------------------------+
2516   | Field         | Value                   |
2517   +===============+=========================+
2518   | ``ipv6_addr`` | new IPv6 source address |
2519   +---------------+-------------------------+
2520
2521Action: ``SET_IPV6_DST``
2522^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2523This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2524
2525Set a new IPv6 destination address in the outermost IPv6 header.
2526
2527It must be used with a valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV6 flow pattern item.
2528Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2529
2530.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_ipv6_dst:
2531
2532.. table:: SET_IPV6_DST
2533
2534   +---------------+------------------------------+
2535   | Field         | Value                        |
2536   +===============+==============================+
2537   | ``ipv6_addr`` | new IPv6 destination address |
2538   +---------------+------------------------------+
2539
2540Action: ``IPV6_EXT_PUSH``
2541^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2542
2543Add an IPv6 extension into IPv6 header.
2544Its template is provided in its data buffer
2545with the specific type as defined in ``rte_flow_action_ipv6_ext_push``.
2546
2547This action modifies the payload of matched flows.
2548The data supplied must be a valid extension in the specified type,
2549it should be added the last one if preceding extension existed.
2550When applied to the original packet,
2551the resulting packet must be a valid packet.
2552
2553Action: ``IPV6_EXT_REMOVE``
2554^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2555
2556Remove an IPv6 extension whose type is provided in
2557``rte_flow_action_ipv6_ext_remove``.
2558
2559This action modifies the payload of matched flow
2560and the packet should be valid after removing.
2561
2562Action: ``SET_TP_SRC``
2563^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2564This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2565
2566Set a new source port number in the outermost TCP/UDP header.
2567
2568It must be used with a valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_TCP or RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_UDP
2569flow pattern item. Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2570
2571.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_tp_src:
2572
2573.. table:: SET_TP_SRC
2574
2575   +----------+-------------------------+
2576   | Field    | Value                   |
2577   +==========+=========================+
2578   | ``port`` | new TCP/UDP source port |
2579   +---------------+--------------------+
2580
2581Action: ``SET_TP_DST``
2582^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2583This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2584
2585Set a new destination port number in the outermost TCP/UDP header.
2586
2587It must be used with a valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_TCP or RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_UDP
2588flow pattern item. Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2589
2590.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_tp_dst:
2591
2592.. table:: SET_TP_DST
2593
2594   +----------+------------------------------+
2595   | Field    | Value                        |
2596   +==========+==============================+
2597   | ``port`` | new TCP/UDP destination port |
2598   +---------------+-------------------------+
2599
2600Action: ``MAC_SWAP``
2601^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2602
2603Swap the source and destination MAC addresses in the outermost Ethernet
2604header.
2605
2606It must be used with a valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_ETH flow pattern item.
2607Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2608
2609.. _table_rte_flow_action_mac_swap:
2610
2611.. table:: MAC_SWAP
2612
2613   +---------------+
2614   | Field         |
2615   +===============+
2616   | no properties |
2617   +---------------+
2618
2619Action: ``DEC_TTL``
2620^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2621This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2622
2623Decrease TTL value.
2624
2625If there is no valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV4 or RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV6
2626in pattern, Some PMDs will reject rule because behavior will be undefined.
2627
2628.. _table_rte_flow_action_dec_ttl:
2629
2630.. table:: DEC_TTL
2631
2632   +---------------+
2633   | Field         |
2634   +===============+
2635   | no properties |
2636   +---------------+
2637
2638Action: ``SET_TTL``
2639^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2640This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2641
2642Assigns a new TTL value.
2643
2644If there is no valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV4 or RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV6
2645in pattern, Some PMDs will reject rule because behavior will be undefined.
2646
2647.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_ttl:
2648
2649.. table:: SET_TTL
2650
2651   +---------------+--------------------+
2652   | Field         | Value              |
2653   +===============+====================+
2654   | ``ttl_value`` | new TTL value      |
2655   +---------------+--------------------+
2656
2657Action: ``SET_MAC_SRC``
2658^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2659This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2660
2661Set source MAC address.
2662
2663It must be used with a valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_ETH flow pattern item.
2664Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2665
2666.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_mac_src:
2667
2668.. table:: SET_MAC_SRC
2669
2670   +--------------+---------------+
2671   | Field        | Value         |
2672   +==============+===============+
2673   | ``mac_addr`` | MAC address   |
2674   +--------------+---------------+
2675
2676Action: ``SET_MAC_DST``
2677^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2678This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2679
2680Set destination MAC address.
2681
2682It must be used with a valid RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_ETH flow pattern item.
2683Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2684
2685.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_mac_dst:
2686
2687.. table:: SET_MAC_DST
2688
2689   +--------------+---------------+
2690   | Field        | Value         |
2691   +==============+===============+
2692   | ``mac_addr`` | MAC address   |
2693   +--------------+---------------+
2694
2695Action: ``INC_TCP_SEQ``
2696^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2697This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2698
2699Increase sequence number in the outermost TCP header.
2700Value to increase TCP sequence number by is a big-endian 32 bit integer.
2701
2702Using this action on non-matching traffic will result in undefined behavior.
2703
2704Action: ``DEC_TCP_SEQ``
2705^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2706This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2707
2708Decrease sequence number in the outermost TCP header.
2709Value to decrease TCP sequence number by is a big-endian 32 bit integer.
2710
2711Using this action on non-matching traffic will result in undefined behavior.
2712
2713Action: ``INC_TCP_ACK``
2714^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2715This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2716
2717Increase acknowledgment number in the outermost TCP header.
2718Value to increase TCP acknowledgment number by is a big-endian 32 bit integer.
2719
2720Using this action on non-matching traffic will result in undefined behavior.
2721
2722Action: ``DEC_TCP_ACK``
2723^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2724This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2725
2726Decrease acknowledgment number in the outermost TCP header.
2727Value to decrease TCP acknowledgment number by is a big-endian 32 bit integer.
2728
2729Using this action on non-matching traffic will result in undefined behavior.
2730
2731Action: ``SET_TAG``
2732^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2733This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2734
2735Set Tag.
2736
2737Tag is a transient data used during flow matching. This is not delivered to
2738application. Multiple tags are supported by specifying index.
2739
2740.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_tag:
2741
2742.. table:: SET_TAG
2743
2744   +-----------+----------------------------+
2745   | Field     | Value                      |
2746   +===========+============================+
2747   | ``data``  | 32 bit tag value           |
2748   +-----------+----------------------------+
2749   | ``mask``  | bit-mask applies to "data" |
2750   +-----------+----------------------------+
2751   | ``index`` | index of tag to set        |
2752   +-----------+----------------------------+
2753
2754Action: ``SET_META``
2755^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2756This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2757
2758Set metadata. Item ``META`` matches metadata.
2759
2760Metadata set by mbuf metadata field with RTE_MBUF_DYNFLAG_TX_METADATA flag on egress
2761will be overridden by this action. On ingress, the metadata will be carried by
2762``metadata`` dynamic field of ``rte_mbuf`` which can be accessed by
2763``RTE_FLOW_DYNF_METADATA()``. RTE_MBUF_DYNFLAG_RX_METADATA flag will be set along
2764with the data.
2765
2766The mbuf dynamic field must be registered by calling
2767``rte_flow_dynf_metadata_register()`` prior to use ``SET_META`` action.
2768
2769Altering partial bits is supported with ``mask``. For bits which have never been
2770set, unpredictable value will be seen depending on driver implementation. For
2771loopback/hairpin packet, metadata set on Rx/Tx may or may not be propagated to
2772the other path depending on HW capability.
2773
2774In hairpin case with Tx explicit flow mode, metadata could (not mandatory) be
2775used to connect the Rx and Tx flows if it can be propagated from Rx to Tx path.
2776
2777.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_meta:
2778
2779.. table:: SET_META
2780
2781   +----------+----------------------------+
2782   | Field    | Value                      |
2783   +==========+============================+
2784   | ``data`` | 32 bit metadata value      |
2785   +----------+----------------------------+
2786   | ``mask`` | bit-mask applies to "data" |
2787   +----------+----------------------------+
2788
2789Action: ``SET_IPV4_DSCP``
2790^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2791This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2792
2793Set IPv4 DSCP.
2794
2795Modify DSCP in IPv4 header.
2796
2797It must be used with RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV4 in pattern.
2798Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2799
2800.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_ipv4_dscp:
2801
2802.. table:: SET_IPV4_DSCP
2803
2804   +-----------+---------------------------------+
2805   | Field     | Value                           |
2806   +===========+=================================+
2807   | ``dscp``  | DSCP in low 6 bits, rest ignore |
2808   +-----------+---------------------------------+
2809
2810Action: ``SET_IPV6_DSCP``
2811^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2812This is a legacy action. Consider `Action: MODIFY_FIELD`_ as alternative.
2813
2814Set IPv6 DSCP.
2815
2816Modify DSCP in IPv6 header.
2817
2818It must be used with RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_IPV6 in pattern.
2819Otherwise, RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION error will be returned.
2820
2821.. _table_rte_flow_action_set_ipv6_dscp:
2822
2823.. table:: SET_IPV6_DSCP
2824
2825   +-----------+---------------------------------+
2826   | Field     | Value                           |
2827   +===========+=================================+
2828   | ``dscp``  | DSCP in low 6 bits, rest ignore |
2829   +-----------+---------------------------------+
2830
2831Action: ``NAT64``
2832^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2833
2834This action does header translation between IPv4 and IPv6.
2835Besides converting the IP addresses,
2836other fields in the IP header are handled as well.
2837The ``type`` field should be provided
2838as defined in ``rte_flow_action_nat64`` when creating the action.
2839
2840Action: ``AGE``
2841^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2842
2843Set ageing timeout configuration to a flow.
2844
2845Event RTE_ETH_EVENT_FLOW_AGED will be reported if
2846timeout passed without any matching on the flow.
2847
2848.. _table_rte_flow_action_age:
2849
2850.. table:: AGE
2851
2852   +--------------+---------------------------------+
2853   | Field        | Value                           |
2854   +==============+=================================+
2855   | ``timeout``  | 24 bits timeout value           |
2856   +--------------+---------------------------------+
2857   | ``reserved`` | 8 bits reserved, must be zero   |
2858   +--------------+---------------------------------+
2859   | ``context``  | user input flow context         |
2860   +--------------+---------------------------------+
2861
2862Query structure to retrieve ageing status information of a
2863shared AGE action, or a flow rule using the AGE action:
2864
2865.. _table_rte_flow_query_age:
2866
2867.. table:: AGE query
2868
2869   +------------------------------+-----+----------------------------------------+
2870   | Field                        | I/O | Value                                  |
2871   +==============================+=====+========================================+
2872   | ``aged``                     | out | Aging timeout expired                  |
2873   +------------------------------+-----+----------------------------------------+
2874   | ``sec_since_last_hit_valid`` | out | ``sec_since_last_hit`` value is valid  |
2875   +------------------------------+-----+----------------------------------------+
2876   | ``sec_since_last_hit``       | out | Seconds since last traffic hit         |
2877   +------------------------------+-----+----------------------------------------+
2878
2879Update structure to modify the parameters of an indirect AGE action.
2880The update structure is used by ``rte_flow_action_handle_update()`` function.
2881
2882.. _table_rte_flow_update_age:
2883
2884.. table:: AGE update
2885
2886   +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+
2887   | Field             | Value                                                        |
2888   +===================+==============================================================+
2889   | ``reserved``      | 6 bits reserved, must be zero                                |
2890   +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+
2891   | ``timeout_valid`` | 1 bit, timeout value is valid                                |
2892   +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+
2893   | ``timeout``       | 24 bits timeout value                                        |
2894   +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+
2895   | ``touch``         | 1 bit, touch the AGE action to set ``sec_since_last_hit`` 0  |
2896   +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+
2897
2898Action: ``SAMPLE``
2899^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2900
2901Adds a sample action to a matched flow.
2902
2903The matching packets will be duplicated with the specified ``ratio`` and
2904applied with own set of actions with a fate action, the packets sampled
2905equals is '1/ratio'. All the packets continue to the target destination.
2906
2907When the ``ratio`` is set to 1 then the packets will be 100% mirrored.
2908``actions`` represent the different set of actions for the sampled or mirrored
2909packets, and must have a fate action.
2910
2911.. _table_rte_flow_action_sample:
2912
2913.. table:: SAMPLE
2914
2915   +--------------+---------------------------------+
2916   | Field        | Value                           |
2917   +==============+=================================+
2918   | ``ratio``    | 32 bits sample ratio value      |
2919   +--------------+---------------------------------+
2920   | ``actions``  | sub-action list for sampling    |
2921   +--------------+---------------------------------+
2922
2923Action: ``INDIRECT``
2924^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2925
2926Flow utilize indirect action by handle as returned from
2927``rte_flow_action_handle_create()``.
2928
2929The behaviour of the indirect action defined by ``action`` argument of type
2930``struct rte_flow_action`` passed to ``rte_flow_action_handle_create()``.
2931
2932The indirect action can be used by a single flow or shared among multiple flows.
2933The indirect action can be in-place updated by ``rte_flow_action_handle_update()``
2934without destroying flow and creating flow again. The fields that could be
2935updated depend on the type of the ``action`` and different for every type.
2936
2937The indirect action specified data (e.g. counter) can be queried by
2938``rte_flow_action_handle_query()``.
2939
2940.. warning::
2941
2942   The following description of indirect action persistence
2943   is an experimental behavior that may change without a prior notice.
2944
2945If ``RTE_ETH_DEV_CAPA_FLOW_SHARED_OBJECT_KEEP`` is not advertised,
2946indirect actions cannot be created until the device is started for the first time
2947and cannot be kept when the device is stopped.
2948However, PMD also does not flush them automatically on stop,
2949so the application must call ``rte_flow_action_handle_destroy()``
2950before stopping the device to ensure no indirect actions remain.
2951
2952If ``RTE_ETH_DEV_CAPA_FLOW_SHARED_OBJECT_KEEP`` is advertised,
2953this means that the PMD can keep at least some indirect actions
2954across device stop and start.
2955However, ``rte_eth_dev_configure()`` may fail if any indirect actions remain,
2956so the application must destroy them before attempting a reconfiguration.
2957Keeping may be only supported for certain kinds of indirect actions.
2958A kind is a combination of an action type and a value of its transfer bit.
2959For example: an indirect counter with the transfer bit reset.
2960To test if a particular kind of indirect actions is kept,
2961the application must try to create a valid indirect action of that kind
2962when the device is not started (either before the first start of after a stop).
2963If it fails with an error of type ``RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_STATE``,
2964application must destroy all indirect actions of this kind
2965before stopping the device.
2966If it succeeds, all indirect actions of the same kind are kept
2967when the device is stopped.
2968Indirect actions of a kept kind that are created when the device is stopped,
2969including the ones created for the test, will be kept after the device start.
2970
2971.. _table_rte_flow_action_handle:
2972
2973.. table:: INDIRECT
2974
2975   +---------------+
2976   | Field         |
2977   +===============+
2978   | no properties |
2979   +---------------+
2980
2981Action: ``INDIRECT_LIST``
2982^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2983
2984Indirect API creates a shared flow action with unique action handle.
2985Flow rules can access the shared flow action and resources related to
2986that action through the indirect action handle.
2987In addition, the API allows to update existing shared flow action configuration.
2988After the update completes, new action configuration
2989is available to all flows that reference that shared action.
2990
2991Indirect actions list expands the indirect action API:
2992
2993- Indirect action list creates a handle for one or several
2994  flow actions, while legacy indirect action handle references
2995  single action only.
2996  Input flow actions arranged in END terminated list.
2997
2998- Flow rule can provide rule specific configuration parameters to
2999  existing shared handle.
3000  Updates of flow rule specific configuration will not change the base
3001  action configuration.
3002  Base action configuration was set during the action creation.
3003
3004Indirect action list handle defines 2 types of resources:
3005
3006- Mutable handle resource can be changed during handle lifespan.
3007
3008- Immutable handle resource value is set during handle creation
3009  and cannot be changed.
3010
3011There are 2 types of mutable indirect handle contexts:
3012
3013- Action mutable context is always shared between all flows
3014  that referenced indirect actions list handle.
3015  Action mutable context can be changed by explicit invocation
3016  of indirect handle update function.
3017
3018- Flow mutable context is private to a flow.
3019  Flow mutable context can be updated by indirect list handle
3020  flow rule configuration.
3021
3022Indirect action types - immutable, action / flow mutable, are mutually
3023exclusive and depend on the action definition.
3024
3025If indirect list handle was created from a list of actions A1 / A2 ... An / END
3026indirect list flow action can update Ai flow mutable context in the
3027action configuration parameter.
3028Indirect list action configuration is and array [C1, C2,  .., Cn]
3029where Ci corresponds to Ai in the action handle source.
3030Ci configuration element points Ai flow mutable update, or it's NULL
3031if Ai has no flow mutable update.
3032Indirect list action configuration is NULL if the action has no flow mutable updates.
3033Otherwise it points to an array of n flow mutable configuration pointers.
3034
3035**Template API:**
3036
3037*Action template format:*
3038
3039``template .. indirect_list handle Htmpl conf Ctmpl ..``
3040
3041``mask     .. indirect_list handle Hmask conf Cmask ..``
3042
3043- If Htmpl was masked (Hmask != 0), it will be fixed in that template.
3044  Otherwise, indirect action value is set in a flow rule.
3045
3046- If Htmpl and Ctmpl[i] were masked (Hmask !=0 and Cmask[i] != 0),
3047  Htmpl's Ai action flow mutable context fill be updated to
3048  Ctmpl[i] values and will be fixed in that template.
3049
3050*Flow rule format:*
3051
3052``actions .. indirect_list handle Hflow conf Cflow ..``
3053
3054- If Htmpl was not masked in actions template, Hflow references an
3055  action of the same type as Htmpl.
3056
3057- Cflow[i] updates handle's Ai flow mutable configuration if
3058  the Ci was not masked in action template.
3059
3060.. _table_rte_flow_action_indirect_list:
3061
3062.. table:: INDIRECT_LIST
3063
3064   +------------------+----------------------------------+
3065   | Field            | Value                            |
3066   +==================+==================================+
3067   | ``handle``       | Indirect action list handle      |
3068   +------------------+----------------------------------+
3069   | ``conf``         | Flow mutable configuration array |
3070   +------------------+----------------------------------+
3071
3072.. code-block:: text
3073
3074   flow 1:
3075    / indirect handle H conf C1 /
3076                      |       |
3077                      |       |
3078                      |       |         flow 2:
3079                      |       |         / indirect handle H conf C2 /
3080                      |       |                           |      |
3081                      |       |                           |      |
3082                      |       |                           |      |
3083              =========================================================
3084              ^       |       |                           |      |
3085              |       |       V                           |      V
3086              |    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3087              |     flow mutable                        flow mutable
3088              |     context 1                           context 2
3089              |    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3090    indirect  |       |                                   |
3091    action    |       |                                   |
3092    context   |       V                                   V
3093              |   -----------------------------------------------------
3094              |                 action mutable context
3095              |   -----------------------------------------------------
3096              v                action immutable context
3097              =========================================================
3098
3099Action: ``MODIFY_FIELD``
3100^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3101
3102Modify ``dst`` field according to ``op`` selected (set, addition,
3103subtraction) with ``width`` bits of data from ``src`` field.
3104
3105Any arbitrary header field (as well as mark, metadata or tag values)
3106can be used as both source and destination fields as set by ``field``.
3107The immediate value ``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_VALUE`` (or a pointer to it
3108``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_POINTER``) is allowed as a source only.
3109``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_START`` is used to point to the beginning of a packet.
3110See ``enum rte_flow_field_id`` for the list of supported fields.
3111
3112``op`` selects the operation to perform on a destination field:
3113
3114- ``set`` copies the data from ``src`` field to ``dst`` field.
3115- ``add`` adds together ``dst`` and ``src`` and stores the result into ``dst``.
3116- ``sub`` subtracts ``src`` from ``dst`` and stores the result into ``dst``.
3117
3118``width`` defines a number of bits to use from ``src`` field.
3119
3120``level`` is used to access any packet field on any encapsulation level:
3121
3122- ``0`` means the default behaviour. Depending on the packet type,
3123  it can mean outermost, innermost or anything in between.
3124- ``1`` requests access to the outermost packet encapsulation level.
3125- ``2`` and subsequent values requests access to the specified packet
3126  encapsulation level, from outermost to innermost (lower to higher values).
3127
3128``tag_index`` is the index of the header inside encapsulation level.
3129It is used to modify either ``VLAN`` or ``MPLS`` or ``TAG`` headers
3130which multiple of them might be supported in the same encapsulation level.
3131
3132.. note::
3133
3134   For ``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_TAG`` type, the tag array was provided in ``level``
3135   field and it is still supported for backwards compatibility.
3136   When ``tag_index`` is zero, the tag array is taken from ``level`` field.
3137
3138``type`` is used to specify (along with ``class_id``) the Geneve option
3139which is being modified.
3140This field is relevant only for ``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_GENEVE_OPT_XXXX`` type.
3141
3142``class_id`` is used to specify (along with ``type``) the Geneve option
3143which is being modified.
3144This field is relevant only for ``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_GENEVE_OPT_XXXX`` type.
3145
3146``flex_handle`` is used to specify the flex item pointer which is being
3147modified. ``flex_handle`` and ``level`` are mutually exclusive.
3148
3149``offset`` specifies the number of bits to skip from a field's start.
3150That allows performing a partial copy of the needed part or to divide a big
3151packet field into multiple smaller fields. Alternatively, ``offset`` allows
3152going past the specified packet field boundary to copy a field to an
3153arbitrary place in a packet, essentially providing a way to copy any part of
3154a packet to any other part of it.
3155
3156``value`` sets an immediate value to be used as a source or points to a
3157location of the value in memory. It is used instead of ``level`` and ``offset``
3158for ``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_VALUE`` and ``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_POINTER`` respectively.
3159The data in memory should be presented exactly in the same byte order and
3160length as in the relevant flow item, i.e. data for field with type
3161``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_MAC_DST`` should follow the conventions of ``dst`` field
3162in ``rte_flow_item_eth`` structure, with type ``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_IPV6_SRC`` -
3163``rte_flow_item_ipv6`` conventions, and so on. If the field size is larger than
316416 bytes the pattern can be provided as pointer only.
3165
3166The bitfield extracted from the memory being applied as second operation
3167parameter is defined by action width and by the destination field offset.
3168Application should provide the data in immediate value memory (either as
3169buffer or by pointer) exactly as item field without any applied explicit offset,
3170and destination packet field (with specified width and bit offset) will be
3171replaced by immediate source bits from the same bit offset. For example,
3172to replace the third byte of MAC address with value 0x85, application should
3173specify destination width as 8, destination offset as 16, and provide immediate
3174value as sequence of bytes {xxx, xxx, 0x85, xxx, xxx, xxx}.
3175
3176The ``RTE_FLOW_FIELD_GENEVE_OPT_DATA`` type supports modifying only one DW in
3177single action and align to 32 bits.
3178For example, for modifying 16 bits start from offset 24,
31792 different actions should be prepared.
3180The first one includes ``offset=24`` and ``width=8``,
3181and the second one includes ``offset=32`` and ``width=8``.
3182Application should provide the data in immediate value memory only
3183for the single DW even though the offset is related to start of first DW.
3184For example, to replace the third byte of second DW in Geneve option data
3185with value ``0x85``, the application should specify destination width as ``8``,
3186destination offset as ``48``, and provide immediate value ``0xXXXX85XX``.
3187
3188.. _table_rte_flow_action_modify_field:
3189
3190.. table:: MODIFY_FIELD
3191
3192   +---------------+-------------------------+
3193   | Field         | Value                   |
3194   +===============+=========================+
3195   | ``op``        | operation to perform    |
3196   +---------------+-------------------------+
3197   | ``dst``       | destination field       |
3198   +---------------+-------------------------+
3199   | ``src``       | source field            |
3200   +---------------+-------------------------+
3201   | ``width``     | number of bits to use   |
3202   +---------------+-------------------------+
3203
3204.. _table_rte_flow_field_data:
3205
3206.. table:: destination/source field definition
3207
3208   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3209   | Field           | Value                                                    |
3210   +=================+==========================================================+
3211   | ``field``       | ID: packet field, mark, meta, tag, immediate, pointer    |
3212   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3213   | ``level``       | encapsulation level of a packet field                    |
3214   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3215   | ``tag_index``   | tag index inside encapsulation level                     |
3216   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3217   | ``type``        | Geneve option type                                       |
3218   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3219   | ``class_id``    | Geneve option class ID                                   |
3220   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3221   | ``flex_handle`` | flex item handle of a packet field                       |
3222   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3223   | ``offset``      | number of bits to skip at the beginning                  |
3224   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3225   | ``value``       | immediate value buffer (source field only, not           |
3226   |                 | applicable to destination) for RTE_FLOW_FIELD_VALUE      |
3227   |                 | field type                                               |
3228   |                 | This field is only 16 bytes, maybe not big enough for    |
3229   |                 | all NICs' flex item                                      |
3230   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3231   | ``pvalue``      | pointer to immediate value data (source field only, not  |
3232   |                 | applicable to destination) for RTE_FLOW_FIELD_POINTER    |
3233   |                 | field type                                               |
3234   +-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
3235
3236Action: ``CONNTRACK``
3237^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3238
3239Create a conntrack (connection tracking) context with the provided information.
3240
3241In stateful session like TCP, the conntrack action provides the ability to
3242examine every packet of this connection and associate the state to every
3243packet. It will help to realize the stateful offload of connections with little
3244software participation. For example, the packets with invalid state may be
3245handled by the software. The control packets could be handled in the hardware.
3246The software just need to query the state of a connection when needed, and then
3247decide how to handle the flow rules and conntrack context.
3248
3249A conntrack context should be created via ``rte_flow_action_handle_create()``
3250before using. Then the handle with ``INDIRECT`` type is used for a flow rule
3251creation. If a flow rule with an opposite direction needs to be created, the
3252``rte_flow_action_handle_update()`` should be used to modify the direction.
3253
3254Not all the fields of the ``struct rte_flow_action_conntrack`` will be used
3255for a conntrack context creating, depending on the HW, and they should be
3256in host byte order. PMD should convert them into network byte order when
3257needed by the HW.
3258
3259The ``struct rte_flow_modify_conntrack`` should be used for an updating.
3260
3261The current conntrack context information could be queried via the
3262``rte_flow_action_handle_query()`` interface.
3263
3264.. _table_rte_flow_action_conntrack:
3265
3266.. table:: CONNTRACK
3267
3268   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3269   | Field                    | Value                                                       |
3270   +==========================+=============================================================+
3271   | ``peer_port``            | peer port number                                            |
3272   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3273   | ``is_original_dir``      | direction of this connection for creating flow rule         |
3274   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3275   | ``enable``               | enable the conntrack context                                |
3276   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3277   | ``live_connection``      | one ack was seen for this connection                        |
3278   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3279   | ``selective_ack``        | SACK enabled                                                |
3280   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3281   | ``challenge_ack_passed`` | a challenge ack has passed                                  |
3282   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3283   | ``last_direction``       | direction of the last passed packet                         |
3284   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3285   | ``liberal_mode``         | only report state change                                    |
3286   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3287   | ``state``                | current state                                               |
3288   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3289   | ``max_ack_window``       | maximal window scaling factor                               |
3290   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3291   | ``retransmission_limit`` | maximal retransmission times                                |
3292   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3293   | ``original_dir``         | TCP parameters of the original direction                    |
3294   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3295   | ``reply_dir``            | TCP parameters of the reply direction                       |
3296   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3297   | ``last_window``          | window size of the last passed packet                       |
3298   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3299   | ``last_seq``             | sequence number of the last passed packet                   |
3300   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3301   | ``last_ack``             | acknowledgment number the last passed packet                |
3302   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3303   | ``last_end``             | sum of ack number and length of the last passed packet      |
3304   +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
3305
3306.. _table_rte_flow_tcp_dir_param:
3307
3308.. table:: configuration parameters for each direction
3309
3310   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+
3311   | Field               | Value                                                   |
3312   +=====================+=========================================================+
3313   | ``scale``           | TCP window scaling factor                               |
3314   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+
3315   | ``close_initiated`` | FIN sent from this direction                            |
3316   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+
3317   | ``last_ack_seen``   | an ACK packet received                                  |
3318   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+
3319   | ``data_unacked``    | unacknowledged data for packets from this direction     |
3320   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+
3321   | ``sent_end``        | max{seq + len} seen in sent packets                     |
3322   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+
3323   | ``reply_end``       | max{sack + max{win, 1}} seen in reply packets           |
3324   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+
3325   | ``max_win``         | max{max{win, 1}} + {sack - ack} seen in sent packets    |
3326   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+
3327   | ``max_ack``         | max{ack} + seen in sent packets                         |
3328   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------------------+
3329
3330.. _table_rte_flow_modify_conntrack:
3331
3332.. table:: update a conntrack context
3333
3334   +----------------+-------------------------------------------------+
3335   | Field          | Value                                           |
3336   +================+=================================================+
3337   | ``new_ct``     | new conntrack information                       |
3338   +----------------+-------------------------------------------------+
3339   | ``direction``  | direction will be updated                       |
3340   +----------------+-------------------------------------------------+
3341   | ``state``      | other fields except direction will be updated   |
3342   +----------------+-------------------------------------------------+
3343   | ``reserved``   | reserved bits                                   |
3344   +----------------+-------------------------------------------------+
3345
3346Action: ``METER_COLOR``
3347^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3348
3349Color the packet to reflect the meter color result.
3350
3351The meter action must be configured before meter color action.
3352Meter color action is set to a color to reflect the meter color result.
3353Set the meter color in the mbuf to the selected color.
3354The meter color action output color is the output color of the packet,
3355which is set in the packet meta-data (i.e. struct ``rte_mbuf::sched::color``)
3356
3357.. _table_rte_flow_action_meter_color:
3358
3359.. table:: METER_COLOR
3360
3361   +-----------------+--------------+
3362   | Field           | Value        |
3363   +=================+==============+
3364   | ``meter_color`` | Packet color |
3365   +-----------------+--------------+
3366
3367Action: ``PORT_REPRESENTOR``
3368^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3369
3370At embedded switch level, send matching traffic to the given ethdev.
3371
3372Term **ethdev** and the concept of **port representor** are synonymous.
3373The **represented port** is an *entity* plugged to the embedded switch
3374at the opposite end of the "wire" leading to the ethdev.
3375
3376::
3377
3378    .--------------------.
3379    |  PORT_REPRESENTOR  |  Ethdev (Application Port Referred to by its ID)
3380    '--------------------'
3381              /\
3382              ||
3383      .----------------.
3384      |  Logical Port  |
3385      '----------------'
3386              /\
3387              ||
3388              ||
3389              ||
3390         .----------.       .--------------------.
3391         |  Switch  |  <==  |  Matching Traffic  |
3392         '----------'       '--------------------'
3393              :
3394               :
3395              :
3396               :
3397      .----------------.
3398      |  Logical Port  |
3399      '----------------'
3400              :
3401               :
3402    .--------------------.
3403    |  REPRESENTED_PORT  |  Net / Guest / Another Ethdev (Same Application)
3404    '--------------------'
3405
3406
3407- Requires `Attribute: Transfer`_.
3408
3409.. _table_rte_flow_action_ethdev:
3410
3411.. table:: ``struct rte_flow_action_ethdev``
3412
3413   +-------------+----------------+
3414   | Field       | Value          |
3415   +=============+================+
3416   | ``port_id`` | ethdev port ID |
3417   +-------------+----------------+
3418
3419See also `Item: PORT_REPRESENTOR`_.
3420
3421Action: ``REPRESENTED_PORT``
3422^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3423
3424At embedded switch level, send matching traffic to
3425the entity represented by the given ethdev.
3426
3427Term **ethdev** and the concept of **port representor** are synonymous.
3428The **represented port** is an *entity* plugged to the embedded switch
3429at the opposite end of the "wire" leading to the ethdev.
3430
3431::
3432
3433    .--------------------.
3434    |  PORT_REPRESENTOR  |  Ethdev (Application Port Referred to by its ID)
3435    '--------------------'
3436              :
3437               :
3438      .----------------.
3439      |  Logical Port  |
3440      '----------------'
3441              :
3442               :
3443              :
3444               :
3445         .----------.       .--------------------.
3446         |  Switch  |  <==  |  Matching Traffic  |
3447         '----------'       '--------------------'
3448              ||
3449              ||
3450              ||
3451              \/
3452      .----------------.
3453      |  Logical Port  |
3454      '----------------'
3455              ||
3456              \/
3457    .--------------------.
3458    |  REPRESENTED_PORT  |  Net / Guest / Another Ethdev (Same Application)
3459    '--------------------'
3460
3461
3462- Requires `Attribute: Transfer`_.
3463
3464This action is meant to use the same structure as `Action: PORT_REPRESENTOR`_.
3465
3466See also `Item: REPRESENTED_PORT`_.
3467
3468Action: ``METER_MARK``
3469^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3470
3471Meters a packet stream and marks its packets with colors.
3472
3473Unlike the ``METER`` action, policing is optional and may be
3474performed later with the help of the ``METER_COLOR`` item.
3475The profile and/or policy objects have to be created
3476using the rte_mtr_profile_add()/rte_mtr_policy_add() API.
3477Pointers to these objects are used as action parameters
3478and need to be retrieved using the rte_mtr_profile_get() API
3479and rte_mtr_policy_get() API respectively.
3480
3481.. _table_rte_flow_action_meter_mark:
3482
3483.. table:: METER_MARK
3484
3485   +------------------+----------------------+
3486   | Field            | Value                |
3487   +==================+======================+
3488   | ``profile``      | Meter profile object |
3489   +------------------+----------------------+
3490   | ``policy``       | Meter policy object  |
3491   +------------------+----------------------+
3492
3493Action: ``QUOTA``
3494^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3495
3496Update ``quota`` value and set packet quota state.
3497
3498If the ``quota`` value after update is non-negative,
3499the packet quota state is set to ``RTE_FLOW_QUOTA_STATE_PASS``.
3500Otherwise, the packet quota state is set to ``RTE_FLOW_QUOTA_STATE_BLOCK``.
3501
3502The ``quota`` value is reduced according to ``mode`` setting.
3503
3504.. _table_rte_flow_action_quota:
3505
3506.. table:: QUOTA
3507
3508   +------------------+------------------------+
3509   | Field            | Value                  |
3510   +==================+========================+
3511   | ``mode``         | Quota operational mode |
3512   +------------------+------------------------+
3513   | ``quota``        | Quota value            |
3514   +------------------+------------------------+
3515
3516.. _rte_flow_quota_mode:
3517
3518.. table:: Quota update modes
3519
3520   +---------------------------------+-------------------------------------+
3521   | Value                           | Description                         |
3522   +=================================+=====================================+
3523   | ``RTE_FLOW_QUOTA_MODE_PACKET``  | Count packets                       |
3524   +---------------------------------+-------------------------------------+
3525   | ``RTE_FLOW_QUOTA_MODE_L2``      | Count packet bytes starting from L2 |
3526   +------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
3527   | ``RTE_FLOW_QUOTA_MODE_L3``      | Count packet bytes starting from L3 |
3528   +------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
3529
3530Action: ``SEND_TO_KERNEL``
3531^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3532
3533Send packets to the kernel, without going to userspace at all.
3534
3535The packets will be received by the kernel driver sharing the same device
3536as the DPDK port on which this action is configured.
3537
3538Negative types
3539~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3540
3541All specified pattern items (``enum rte_flow_item_type``) and actions
3542(``enum rte_flow_action_type``) use positive identifiers.
3543
3544The negative space is reserved for dynamic types generated by PMDs during
3545run-time. PMDs may encounter them as a result but must not accept negative
3546identifiers they are not aware of.
3547
3548A method to generate them remains to be defined.
3549
3550Application may use PMD dynamic items or actions in flow rules. In that case
3551size of configuration object in dynamic element must be a pointer size.
3552
3553Rules management
3554----------------
3555
3556A rather simple API with few functions is provided to fully manage flow
3557rules.
3558
3559Each created flow rule is associated with an opaque, PMD-specific handle
3560pointer. The application is responsible for keeping it until the rule is
3561destroyed.
3562
3563Flows rules are represented by ``struct rte_flow`` objects.
3564
3565Validation
3566~~~~~~~~~~
3567
3568Given that expressing a definite set of device capabilities is not
3569practical, a dedicated function is provided to check if a flow rule is
3570supported and can be created.
3571
3572.. code-block:: c
3573
3574   int
3575   rte_flow_validate(uint16_t port_id,
3576                     const struct rte_flow_attr *attr,
3577                     const struct rte_flow_item pattern[],
3578                     const struct rte_flow_action actions[],
3579                     struct rte_flow_error *error);
3580
3581The flow rule is validated for correctness and whether it could be accepted
3582by the device given sufficient resources. The rule is checked against the
3583current device mode and queue configuration. The flow rule may also
3584optionally be validated against existing flow rules and device resources.
3585This function has no effect on the target device.
3586
3587The returned value is guaranteed to remain valid only as long as no
3588successful calls to ``rte_flow_create()`` or ``rte_flow_destroy()`` are made
3589in the meantime and no device parameter affecting flow rules in any way are
3590modified, due to possible collisions or resource limitations (although in
3591such cases ``EINVAL`` should not be returned).
3592
3593Arguments:
3594
3595- ``port_id``: port identifier of Ethernet device.
3596- ``attr``: flow rule attributes.
3597- ``pattern``: pattern specification (list terminated by the END pattern
3598  item).
3599- ``actions``: associated actions (list terminated by the END action).
3600- ``error``: perform verbose error reporting if not NULL. PMDs initialize
3601  this structure in case of error only.
3602
3603Return values:
3604
3605- 0 if flow rule is valid and can be created. A negative errno value
3606  otherwise (``rte_errno`` is also set), the following errors are defined.
3607- ``-ENOSYS``: underlying device does not support this functionality.
3608- ``-EINVAL``: unknown or invalid rule specification.
3609- ``-ENOTSUP``: valid but unsupported rule specification (e.g. partial
3610  bit-masks are unsupported).
3611- ``EEXIST``: collision with an existing rule. Only returned if device
3612  supports flow rule collision checking and there was a flow rule
3613  collision. Not receiving this return code is no guarantee that creating
3614  the rule will not fail due to a collision.
3615- ``ENOMEM``: not enough memory to execute the function, or if the device
3616  supports resource validation, resource limitation on the device.
3617- ``-EBUSY``: action cannot be performed due to busy device resources, may
3618  succeed if the affected queues or even the entire port are in a stopped
3619  state (see ``rte_eth_dev_rx_queue_stop()`` and ``rte_eth_dev_stop()``).
3620
3621Creation
3622~~~~~~~~
3623
3624Creating a flow rule is similar to validating one, except the rule is
3625actually created and a handle returned.
3626
3627.. code-block:: c
3628
3629   struct rte_flow *
3630   rte_flow_create(uint16_t port_id,
3631                   const struct rte_flow_attr *attr,
3632                   const struct rte_flow_item pattern[],
3633                   const struct rte_flow_action *actions[],
3634                   struct rte_flow_error *error);
3635
3636Arguments:
3637
3638- ``port_id``: port identifier of Ethernet device.
3639- ``attr``: flow rule attributes.
3640- ``pattern``: pattern specification (list terminated by the END pattern
3641  item).
3642- ``actions``: associated actions (list terminated by the END action).
3643- ``error``: perform verbose error reporting if not NULL. PMDs initialize
3644  this structure in case of error only.
3645
3646Return values:
3647
3648A valid handle in case of success, NULL otherwise and ``rte_errno`` is set
3649to the positive version of one of the error codes defined for
3650``rte_flow_validate()``.
3651
3652Destruction
3653~~~~~~~~~~~
3654
3655Flow rules destruction is not automatic, and a queue or a port should not be
3656released if any are still attached to them. Applications must take care of
3657performing this step before releasing resources.
3658
3659.. code-block:: c
3660
3661   int
3662   rte_flow_destroy(uint16_t port_id,
3663                    struct rte_flow *flow,
3664                    struct rte_flow_error *error);
3665
3666
3667Failure to destroy a flow rule handle may occur when other flow rules depend
3668on it, and destroying it would result in an inconsistent state.
3669
3670This function is only guaranteed to succeed if handles are destroyed in
3671reverse order of their creation.
3672
3673Arguments:
3674
3675- ``port_id``: port identifier of Ethernet device.
3676- ``flow``: flow rule handle to destroy.
3677- ``error``: perform verbose error reporting if not NULL. PMDs initialize
3678  this structure in case of error only.
3679
3680Return values:
3681
3682- 0 on success, a negative errno value otherwise and ``rte_errno`` is set.
3683
3684Update
3685~~~~~~
3686
3687Update an existing flow rule with a new set of actions.
3688
3689.. code-block:: c
3690
3691   struct rte_flow *
3692   rte_flow_actions_update(uint16_t port_id,
3693                           struct rte_flow *flow,
3694                           const struct rte_flow_action *actions[],
3695                           struct rte_flow_error *error);
3696
3697Arguments:
3698
3699- ``port_id``: port identifier of Ethernet device.
3700- ``flow``: flow rule handle to update.
3701- ``actions``: associated actions (list terminated by the END action).
3702- ``error``: perform verbose error reporting if not NULL. PMDs initialize
3703  this structure in case of error only.
3704
3705Return values:
3706
3707- 0 on success, a negative errno value otherwise and ``rte_errno`` is set.
3708
3709Flush
3710~~~~~
3711
3712Convenience function to destroy all flow rule handles associated with a
3713port. They are released as with successive calls to ``rte_flow_destroy()``.
3714
3715.. code-block:: c
3716
3717   int
3718   rte_flow_flush(uint16_t port_id,
3719                  struct rte_flow_error *error);
3720
3721In the unlikely event of failure, handles are still considered destroyed and
3722no longer valid but the port must be assumed to be in an inconsistent state.
3723
3724Arguments:
3725
3726- ``port_id``: port identifier of Ethernet device.
3727- ``error``: perform verbose error reporting if not NULL. PMDs initialize
3728  this structure in case of error only.
3729
3730Return values:
3731
3732- 0 on success, a negative errno value otherwise and ``rte_errno`` is set.
3733
3734Query
3735~~~~~
3736
3737Query an existing flow rule.
3738
3739This function allows retrieving flow-specific data such as counters. Data
3740is gathered by special actions which must be present in the flow rule
3741definition.
3742
3743.. code-block:: c
3744
3745   int
3746   rte_flow_query(uint16_t port_id,
3747                  struct rte_flow *flow,
3748                  const struct rte_flow_action *action,
3749                  void *data,
3750                  struct rte_flow_error *error);
3751
3752Arguments:
3753
3754- ``port_id``: port identifier of Ethernet device.
3755- ``flow``: flow rule handle to query.
3756- ``action``: action to query, this must match prototype from flow rule.
3757- ``data``: pointer to storage for the associated query data type.
3758- ``error``: perform verbose error reporting if not NULL. PMDs initialize
3759  this structure in case of error only.
3760
3761Return values:
3762
3763- 0 on success, a negative errno value otherwise and ``rte_errno`` is set.
3764
3765Flow engine configuration
3766-------------------------
3767
3768Configure flow API management.
3769
3770An application may provide some parameters at the initialization phase about
3771rules engine configuration and/or expected flow rules characteristics.
3772These parameters may be used by PMD to preallocate resources and configure NIC.
3773
3774Configuration
3775~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3776
3777This function performs the flow API engine configuration and allocates
3778requested resources beforehand to avoid costly allocations later.
3779Expected number of resources in an application allows PMD to prepare
3780and optimize NIC hardware configuration and memory layout in advance.
3781``rte_flow_configure()`` must be called before any flow rule is created,
3782but after an Ethernet device is configured.
3783It also creates flow queues for asynchronous flow rules operations via
3784queue-based API, see `Asynchronous operations`_ section.
3785
3786.. code-block:: c
3787
3788   int
3789   rte_flow_configure(uint16_t port_id,
3790                      const struct rte_flow_port_attr *port_attr,
3791                      uint16_t nb_queue,
3792                      const struct rte_flow_queue_attr *queue_attr[],
3793                      struct rte_flow_error *error);
3794
3795Information about the number of available resources can be retrieved via
3796``rte_flow_info_get()`` API.
3797
3798.. code-block:: c
3799
3800   int
3801   rte_flow_info_get(uint16_t port_id,
3802                     struct rte_flow_port_info *port_info,
3803                     struct rte_flow_queue_info *queue_info,
3804                     struct rte_flow_error *error);
3805
3806Group Miss Actions
3807~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3808
3809In an application, many flow rules share common group attributes, meaning they can be grouped and
3810classified together. A user can explicitly specify a set of actions performed on a packet when it
3811did not match any flows rules in a group using the following API:
3812
3813.. code-block:: c
3814
3815      int
3816      rte_flow_group_set_miss_actions(uint16_t port_id,
3817                                      uint32_t group_id,
3818                                      const struct rte_flow_group_attr *attr,
3819                                      const struct rte_flow_action actions[],
3820                                      struct rte_flow_error *error);
3821
3822For example, to configure a RTE_FLOW_TYPE_JUMP action as a miss action for ingress group 1:
3823
3824.. code-block:: c
3825
3826      struct rte_flow_group_attr attr = {.ingress = 1};
3827      struct rte_flow_action act[] = {
3828      /* Setting miss actions to jump to group 3 */
3829          [0] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_JUMP,
3830                 .conf = &(struct rte_flow_action_jump){.group = 3}},
3831          [1] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_END},
3832      };
3833      struct rte_flow_error err;
3834      rte_flow_group_set_miss_actions(port, 1, &attr, act, &err);
3835
3836Flow templates
3837~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3838
3839Oftentimes in an application, many flow rules share a common structure
3840(the same pattern and/or action list) so they can be grouped and classified
3841together. This knowledge may be used as a source of optimization by a PMD/HW.
3842The flow rule creation is done by selecting a table, a pattern template
3843and an actions template (which are bound to the table), and setting unique
3844values for the items and actions. This API is not thread-safe.
3845
3846Pattern templates
3847^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3848
3849The pattern template defines a common pattern (the item mask) without values.
3850The mask value is used to select a field to match on, spec/last are ignored.
3851The pattern template may be used by multiple tables and must not be destroyed
3852until all these tables are destroyed first.
3853
3854.. code-block:: c
3855
3856   struct rte_flow_pattern_template *
3857   rte_flow_pattern_template_create(uint16_t port_id,
3858       const struct rte_flow_pattern_template_attr *template_attr,
3859       const struct rte_flow_item pattern[],
3860       struct rte_flow_error *error);
3861
3862For example, to create a pattern template to match on the destination MAC:
3863
3864.. code-block:: c
3865
3866   const struct rte_flow_pattern_template_attr attr = {.ingress = 1};
3867   struct rte_flow_item_eth eth_m = {
3868       .dst.addr_bytes = { 0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff };
3869   };
3870   struct rte_flow_item pattern[] = {
3871       [0] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_ETH,
3872              .mask = &eth_m},
3873       [1] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_END,},
3874   };
3875   struct rte_flow_error err;
3876
3877   struct rte_flow_pattern_template *pattern_template =
3878           rte_flow_pattern_template_create(port, &attr, &pattern, &err);
3879
3880The concrete value to match on will be provided at the rule creation.
3881
3882Actions templates
3883^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3884
3885The actions template holds a list of action types to be used in flow rules.
3886The mask parameter allows specifying a shared constant value for every rule.
3887The actions template may be used by multiple tables and must not be destroyed
3888until all these tables are destroyed first.
3889
3890.. code-block:: c
3891
3892   struct rte_flow_actions_template *
3893   rte_flow_actions_template_create(uint16_t port_id,
3894       const struct rte_flow_actions_template_attr *template_attr,
3895       const struct rte_flow_action actions[],
3896       const struct rte_flow_action masks[],
3897       struct rte_flow_error *error);
3898
3899For example, to create an actions template with the same Mark ID
3900but different Queue Index for every rule:
3901
3902.. code-block:: c
3903
3904   rte_flow_actions_template_attr attr = {.ingress = 1};
3905   struct rte_flow_action act[] = {
3906   /* Mark ID is 4 for every rule, Queue Index is unique */
3907       [0] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_MARK,
3908              .conf = &(struct rte_flow_action_mark){.id = 4}},
3909       [1] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_QUEUE},
3910       [2] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_END,},
3911   };
3912   struct rte_flow_action msk[] = {
3913   /* Assign to MARK mask any non-zero value to make it constant */
3914       [0] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_MARK,
3915              .conf = &(struct rte_flow_action_mark){.id = 1}},
3916       [1] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_QUEUE},
3917       [2] = {.type = RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_END,},
3918   };
3919   struct rte_flow_error err;
3920
3921   struct rte_flow_actions_template *actions_template =
3922           rte_flow_actions_template_create(port, &attr, &act, &msk, &err);
3923
3924The concrete value for Queue Index will be provided at the rule creation.
3925
3926Template table
3927^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3928
3929A template table combines a number of pattern and actions templates along with
3930shared flow rule attributes (group ID, priority and traffic direction).
3931This way a PMD/HW can prepare all the resources needed for efficient flow rules
3932creation in the datapath. To avoid any hiccups due to memory reallocation,
3933the maximum number of flow rules is defined at table creation time.
3934Any flow rule creation beyond the maximum table size is rejected.
3935Application may create another table to accommodate more rules in this case.
3936
3937.. code-block:: c
3938
3939   struct rte_flow_template_table *
3940   rte_flow_template_table_create(uint16_t port_id,
3941       const struct rte_flow_template_table_attr *table_attr,
3942       struct rte_flow_pattern_template *pattern_templates[],
3943       uint8_t nb_pattern_templates,
3944       struct rte_flow_actions_template *actions_templates[],
3945       uint8_t nb_actions_templates,
3946       struct rte_flow_error *error);
3947
3948A table can be created only after the Flow Rules management is configured
3949and pattern and actions templates are created.
3950
3951.. code-block:: c
3952
3953   rte_flow_template_table_attr table_attr = {
3954       .flow_attr.ingress = 1,
3955       .nb_flows = 10000;
3956   };
3957   uint8_t nb_pattern_templ = 1;
3958   struct rte_flow_pattern_template *pattern_templates[nb_pattern_templ];
3959   pattern_templates[0] = pattern_template;
3960   uint8_t nb_actions_templ = 1;
3961   struct rte_flow_actions_template *actions_templates[nb_actions_templ];
3962   actions_templates[0] = actions_template;
3963   struct rte_flow_error error;
3964
3965   struct rte_flow_template_table *table =
3966           rte_flow_template_table_create(port, &table_attr,
3967                   &pattern_templates, nb_pattern_templ,
3968                   &actions_templates, nb_actions_templ,
3969                   &error);
3970
3971Table Attribute: Specialize
3972^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3973
3974Application can help optimizing underlayer resources and insertion rate
3975by specializing template table.
3976Specialization is done by providing hints
3977in the template table attribute ``specialize``.
3978
3979This attribute is not mandatory for driver to implement.
3980If a hint is not supported, it will be silently ignored,
3981and no special optimization is done.
3982
3983If a table is specialized, the application should make sure the rules
3984comply with the table attribute.
3985The application functionality must not rely on the hints,
3986they are not replacing the matching criteria of flow rules.
3987
3988Template table resize
3989^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3990
3991The resizable template table API enables applications to dynamically adjust
3992capacity of template tables without disrupting the existing flow rules operation.
3993The resizable template table API allows applications to optimize
3994the memory usage and performance of template tables
3995according to the traffic conditions and requirements.
3996
3997A typical use case for the resizable template table API:
3998
3999  #. Create a resizable table with the initial capacity.
4000  #. Change the table flow rules capacity.
4001  #. Update table flow objects.
4002  #. Complete the table resize.
4003
4004A resizable table can be either in normal or resizable state.
4005When application begins to resize the table, its state is changed to resizable.
4006The table stays in resizable state until the application finishes resize procedure.
4007The application can resize a table in the normal state only.
4008
4009The application needs to set the ``RTE_FLOW_TABLE_SPECIALIZE_RESIZABLE`` bit in
4010the table attributes when creating a template table that can be resized,
4011and the bit cannot be set or cleared later.
4012
4013The application triggers the table resize by calling
4014the ``rte_flow_template_table_resize()`` function.
4015The resize process updates the table configuration to fit the new flow rules capacity.
4016Table resize does not change existing flow objects configuration.
4017The application can create new flow rules and modify or delete
4018existing flow rules while the table is resizing,
4019but the table performance might be slower than usual.
4020
4021Flow rules that existed before table resize are fully functional after table resize.
4022However, the application must update flow objects to match the new table configuration.
4023The application calls ``rte_flow_async_update_resized()`` to update flow object
4024for the new table configuration.
4025It should be called for flow rules created before table resize.
4026If called for flow rules created after table resize, the call should return success.
4027The application is free to call this API for all table flow rules.
4028
4029The application calls ``rte_flow_template_table_resize_complete()``
4030to return a table to normal state after it completed flow objects update.
4031
4032Testpmd commands (wrapped for clarity)::
4033
4034    # 1. Create resizable template table for 1 flow.
4035    testpmd> flow pattern_template 0 create ingress pattern_template_id 3
4036                  template eth / ipv4 / udp src mask 0xffff / end
4037    testpmd> flow actions_template 0 create ingress actions_template_id 7
4038                  template count  / rss / end
4039    testpmd> flow template_table 0 create table_id 101 resizable ingress
4040                  group 1 priority 0 rules_number 1
4041                  pattern_template 3 actions_template 7
4042
4043    # 2. Queue a flow rule.
4044    testpmd> flow queue 0 create 0 template_table 101
4045                  pattern_template 0 actions_template 0 postpone no
4046                  pattern eth / ipv4 / udp src spec 1 / end actions count / rss / end
4047
4048    # 3. Resize the template table
4049    #    The new table capacity is 32 rules
4050    testpmd> flow template_table 0 resize table_resize_id 101
4051                  table_resize_rules_num 32
4052
4053    # 4. Queue more flow rules.
4054    testpmd> flow queue 0 create 0 template_table 101
4055                  pattern_template 0 actions_template 0 postpone no
4056                  pattern eth / ipv4 / udp src spec 2 / end actions count / rss / end
4057    testpmd> flow queue 0 create 0 template_table 101
4058                  pattern_template 0 actions_template 0 postpone no
4059                  pattern eth / ipv4 / udp src spec 3 / end actions count / rss / end
4060    testpmd> flow queue 0 create 0 template_table 101
4061                  pattern_template 0 actions_template 0 postpone no
4062                  pattern eth / ipv4 / udp src spec 4 / end actions count / rss / end
4063
4064    # 5. Queue flow rules updates.
4065    # Rule 0 was created before table resize - must be updated.
4066    testpmd> flow queue 0 update_resized 0 rule 0
4067    # Rule 1 was created after table resize - flow pull returns success.
4068    testpmd> flow queue 0 update_resized 0 rule 1
4069
4070    # 6. Complete the table resize.
4071    testpmd> flow template_table 0 resize_complete table 101
4072
4073Asynchronous operations
4074-----------------------
4075
4076Flow rules management can be done via special lockless flow management queues.
4077
4078- Queue operations are asynchronous and not thread-safe.
4079
4080- Operations can thus be invoked by the app's datapath,
4081  packet processing can continue while queue operations are processed by NIC.
4082
4083- Number of flow queues is configured at initialization stage.
4084
4085- Available operation types: rule creation, rule destruction,
4086  indirect rule creation, indirect rule destruction, indirect rule update.
4087
4088- Operations may be reordered within a queue.
4089
4090- Operations can be postponed and pushed to NIC in batches.
4091
4092- Results pulling must be done on time to avoid queue overflows.
4093
4094- User data is returned as part of the result to identify an operation.
4095
4096- Flow handle is valid once the creation operation is enqueued and must be
4097  destroyed even if the operation is not successful and the rule is not inserted.
4098
4099- Application must wait for the creation operation result before enqueueing
4100  the deletion operation to make sure the creation is processed by NIC.
4101
4102The asynchronous flow rule insertion logic can be broken into two phases.
4103
4104#. Initialization stage as shown here:
4105
4106   .. _figure_rte_flow_async_init:
4107
4108   .. figure:: ../img/rte_flow_async_init.*
4109
4110#. Main loop as presented on a datapath application example:
4111
4112   .. _figure_rte_flow_async_usage:
4113
4114   .. figure:: ../img/rte_flow_async_usage.*
4115
4116Enqueue creation operation
4117~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4118
4119Enqueueing a flow rule creation operation is similar to simple creation.
4120
4121.. code-block:: c
4122
4123   struct rte_flow *
4124   rte_flow_async_create(uint16_t port_id,
4125                         uint32_t queue_id,
4126                         const struct rte_flow_op_attr *op_attr,
4127                         struct rte_flow_template_table *template_table,
4128                         const struct rte_flow_item pattern[],
4129                         uint8_t pattern_template_index,
4130                         const struct rte_flow_action actions[],
4131                         uint8_t actions_template_index,
4132                         void *user_data,
4133                         struct rte_flow_error *error);
4134
4135A valid handle in case of success is returned. It must be destroyed later
4136by calling ``rte_flow_async_destroy()`` even if the rule is rejected by HW.
4137
4138Enqueue creation by index operation
4139~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4140
4141Enqueueing a flow rule creation operation to insert a rule at a table index.
4142
4143.. code-block:: c
4144
4145   struct rte_flow *
4146   rte_flow_async_create_by_index(uint16_t port_id,
4147                                  uint32_t queue_id,
4148                                  const struct rte_flow_op_attr *op_attr,
4149                                  struct rte_flow_template_table *template_table,
4150                                  uint32_t rule_index,
4151                                  const struct rte_flow_action actions[],
4152                                  uint8_t actions_template_index,
4153                                  void *user_data,
4154                                  struct rte_flow_error *error);
4155
4156A valid handle in case of success is returned. It must be destroyed later
4157by calling ``rte_flow_async_destroy()`` even if the rule is rejected by HW.
4158
4159Enqueue creation by index with pattern
4160~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4161
4162Enqueueing a flow rule creation operation to insert a rule at a table index with pattern.
4163
4164.. code-block:: c
4165
4166   struct rte_flow *
4167   rte_flow_async_create_by_index_with_pattern(uint16_t port_id,
4168                                               uint32_t queue_id,
4169                                               const struct rte_flow_op_attr *op_attr,
4170                                               struct rte_flow_template_table *template_table,
4171                                               uint32_t rule_index,
4172                                               const struct rte_flow_item pattern[],
4173                                               uint8_t pattern_template_index,
4174                                               const struct rte_flow_action actions[],
4175                                               uint8_t actions_template_index,
4176                                               void *user_data,
4177                                               struct rte_flow_error *error);
4178
4179Enqueue destruction operation
4180~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4181
4182Enqueueing a flow rule destruction operation is similar to simple destruction.
4183
4184.. code-block:: c
4185
4186   int
4187   rte_flow_async_destroy(uint16_t port_id,
4188                          uint32_t queue_id,
4189                          const struct rte_flow_op_attr *op_attr,
4190                          struct rte_flow *flow,
4191                          void *user_data,
4192                          struct rte_flow_error *error);
4193
4194Enqueue update operation
4195~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4196
4197Enqueueing a flow rule update operation to replace actions in the existing rule.
4198
4199.. code-block:: c
4200
4201   int
4202   rte_flow_async_actions_update(uint16_t port_id,
4203                                 uint32_t queue_id,
4204                                 const struct rte_flow_op_attr *op_attr,
4205                                 struct rte_flow *flow,
4206                                 const struct rte_flow_action actions[],
4207                                 uint8_t actions_template_index,
4208                                 void *user_data,
4209                                 struct rte_flow_error *error);
4210
4211Enqueue indirect action creation operation
4212~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4213
4214Asynchronous version of indirect action creation API.
4215
4216.. code-block:: c
4217
4218   struct rte_flow_action_handle *
4219   rte_flow_async_action_handle_create(uint16_t port_id,
4220           uint32_t queue_id,
4221           const struct rte_flow_op_attr *q_ops_attr,
4222           const struct rte_flow_indir_action_conf *indir_action_conf,
4223           const struct rte_flow_action *action,
4224           void *user_data,
4225           struct rte_flow_error *error);
4226
4227A valid handle in case of success is returned. It must be destroyed later by
4228``rte_flow_async_action_handle_destroy()`` even if the rule was rejected.
4229
4230Enqueue indirect action destruction operation
4231~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4232
4233Asynchronous version of indirect action destruction API.
4234
4235.. code-block:: c
4236
4237   int
4238   rte_flow_async_action_handle_destroy(uint16_t port_id,
4239           uint32_t queue_id,
4240           const struct rte_flow_op_attr *q_ops_attr,
4241           struct rte_flow_action_handle *action_handle,
4242           void *user_data,
4243           struct rte_flow_error *error);
4244
4245Enqueue indirect action update operation
4246~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4247
4248Asynchronous version of indirect action update API.
4249
4250.. code-block:: c
4251
4252   int
4253   rte_flow_async_action_handle_update(uint16_t port_id,
4254           uint32_t queue_id,
4255           const struct rte_flow_op_attr *q_ops_attr,
4256           struct rte_flow_action_handle *action_handle,
4257           const void *update,
4258           void *user_data,
4259           struct rte_flow_error *error);
4260
4261Enqueue indirect action query operation
4262~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4263
4264Asynchronous version of indirect action query API.
4265
4266.. code-block:: c
4267
4268   int
4269   rte_flow_async_action_handle_query(uint16_t port_id,
4270           uint32_t queue_id,
4271           const struct rte_flow_op_attr *q_ops_attr,
4272           struct rte_flow_action_handle *action_handle,
4273           void *data,
4274           void *user_data,
4275           struct rte_flow_error *error);
4276
4277Push enqueued operations
4278~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4279
4280Pushing all internally stored rules from a queue to the NIC.
4281
4282.. code-block:: c
4283
4284   int
4285   rte_flow_push(uint16_t port_id,
4286                 uint32_t queue_id,
4287                 struct rte_flow_error *error);
4288
4289There is the postpone attribute in the queue operation attributes.
4290When it is set, multiple operations can be bulked together and not sent to HW
4291right away to save SW/HW interactions and prioritize throughput over latency.
4292The application must invoke this function to actually push all outstanding
4293operations to HW in this case.
4294
4295Pull enqueued operations
4296~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4297
4298Pulling asynchronous operations results.
4299
4300The application must invoke this function in order to complete asynchronous
4301flow rule operations and to receive flow rule operations statuses.
4302
4303.. code-block:: c
4304
4305   int
4306   rte_flow_pull(uint16_t port_id,
4307                 uint32_t queue_id,
4308                 struct rte_flow_op_result res[],
4309                 uint16_t n_res,
4310                 struct rte_flow_error *error);
4311
4312Multiple outstanding operation results can be pulled simultaneously.
4313User data may be provided during a flow creation/destruction in order
4314to distinguish between multiple operations. User data is returned as part
4315of the result to provide a method to detect which operation is completed.
4316
4317Calculate hash
4318~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4319
4320Calculating hash of a packet in SW as it would be calculated in HW.
4321
4322The application can use this function to calculate the hash of a given packet
4323as it would be calculated in the HW.
4324
4325.. code-block:: c
4326
4327   int
4328   rte_flow_calc_table_hash(uint16_t port_id,
4329                            const struct rte_flow_template_table *table,
4330			                   const struct rte_flow_item pattern[],
4331                            uint8_t pattern_template_index,
4332			                   uint32_t *hash, struct rte_flow_error *error);
4333
4334Calculate encapsulation hash
4335~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4336
4337Calculating hash of a packet as it would be calculated by the HW, when encapsulating
4338a packet.
4339
4340When the HW execute an encapsulation action, for example VXLAN tunnel,
4341it may calculate an hash of the packet to be encapsulated.
4342This hash is stored in the outer header of the tunnel.
4343This allow better spreading of traffic.
4344
4345This function can be used for packets of a flow that are not offloaded and
4346pass through the SW instead of the HW, for example, SYN/FIN packets.
4347
4348.. _flow_isolated_mode:
4349
4350Flow isolated mode
4351------------------
4352
4353The general expectation for ingress traffic is that flow rules process it
4354first; the remaining unmatched or pass-through traffic usually ends up in a
4355queue (with or without RSS, locally or in some sub-device instance)
4356depending on the global configuration settings of a port.
4357
4358While fine from a compatibility standpoint, this approach makes drivers more
4359complex as they have to check for possible side effects outside of this API
4360when creating or destroying flow rules. It results in a more limited set of
4361available rule types due to the way device resources are assigned (e.g. no
4362support for the RSS action even on capable hardware).
4363
4364Given that nonspecific traffic can be handled by flow rules as well,
4365isolated mode is a means for applications to tell a driver that ingress on
4366the underlying port must be injected from the defined flow rules only; that
4367no default traffic is expected outside those rules.
4368
4369This has the following benefits:
4370
4371- Applications get finer-grained control over the kind of traffic they want
4372  to receive (no traffic by default).
4373
4374- More importantly they control at what point nonspecific traffic is handled
4375  relative to other flow rules, by adjusting priority levels.
4376
4377- Drivers can assign more hardware resources to flow rules and expand the
4378  set of supported rule types.
4379
4380Because toggling isolated mode may cause profound changes to the ingress
4381processing path of a driver, it may not be possible to leave it once
4382entered. Likewise, existing flow rules or global configuration settings may
4383prevent a driver from entering isolated mode.
4384
4385Applications relying on this mode are therefore encouraged to toggle it as
4386soon as possible after device initialization, ideally before the first call
4387to ``rte_eth_dev_configure()`` to avoid possible failures due to conflicting
4388settings.
4389
4390Once effective, the following functionality has no effect on the underlying
4391port and may return errors such as ``ENOTSUP`` ("not supported"):
4392
4393- Toggling promiscuous mode.
4394- Toggling allmulticast mode.
4395- Configuring MAC addresses.
4396- Configuring multicast addresses.
4397- Configuring VLAN filters.
4398- Configuring global RSS settings.
4399
4400.. code-block:: c
4401
4402   int
4403   rte_flow_isolate(uint16_t port_id, int set, struct rte_flow_error *error);
4404
4405Arguments:
4406
4407- ``port_id``: port identifier of Ethernet device.
4408- ``set``: nonzero to enter isolated mode, attempt to leave it otherwise.
4409- ``error``: perform verbose error reporting if not NULL. PMDs initialize
4410  this structure in case of error only.
4411
4412Return values:
4413
4414- 0 on success, a negative errno value otherwise and ``rte_errno`` is set.
4415
4416Verbose error reporting
4417-----------------------
4418
4419The defined *errno* values may not be accurate enough for users or
4420application developers who want to investigate issues related to flow rules
4421management. A dedicated error object is defined for this purpose:
4422
4423.. code-block:: c
4424
4425   enum rte_flow_error_type {
4426       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_NONE, /**< No error. */
4427       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_UNSPECIFIED, /**< Cause unspecified. */
4428       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_HANDLE, /**< Flow rule (handle). */
4429       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ATTR_GROUP, /**< Group field. */
4430       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ATTR_PRIORITY, /**< Priority field. */
4431       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ATTR_INGRESS, /**< Ingress field. */
4432       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ATTR_EGRESS, /**< Egress field. */
4433       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ATTR, /**< Attributes structure. */
4434       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ITEM_NUM, /**< Pattern length. */
4435       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ITEM, /**< Specific pattern item. */
4436       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION_NUM, /**< Number of actions. */
4437       RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_ACTION, /**< Specific action. */
4438   };
4439
4440   struct rte_flow_error {
4441       enum rte_flow_error_type type; /**< Cause field and error types. */
4442       const void *cause; /**< Object responsible for the error. */
4443       const char *message; /**< Human-readable error message. */
4444   };
4445
4446Error type ``RTE_FLOW_ERROR_TYPE_NONE`` stands for no error, in which case
4447remaining fields can be ignored. Other error types describe the type of the
4448object pointed by ``cause``.
4449
4450If non-NULL, ``cause`` points to the object responsible for the error. For a
4451flow rule, this may be a pattern item or an individual action.
4452
4453If non-NULL, ``message`` provides a human-readable error message.
4454
4455This object is normally allocated by applications and set by PMDs in case of
4456error, the message points to a constant string which does not need to be
4457freed by the application, however its pointer can be considered valid only
4458as long as its associated DPDK port remains configured. Closing the
4459underlying device or unloading the PMD invalidates it.
4460
4461Helpers
4462-------
4463
4464Error initializer
4465~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4466
4467.. code-block:: c
4468
4469   static inline int
4470   rte_flow_error_set(struct rte_flow_error *error,
4471                      int code,
4472                      enum rte_flow_error_type type,
4473                      const void *cause,
4474                      const char *message);
4475
4476This function initializes ``error`` (if non-NULL) with the provided
4477parameters and sets ``rte_errno`` to ``code``. A negative error ``code`` is
4478then returned.
4479
4480Object conversion
4481~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4482
4483.. code-block:: c
4484
4485   int
4486   rte_flow_conv(enum rte_flow_conv_op op,
4487                 void *dst,
4488                 size_t size,
4489                 const void *src,
4490                 struct rte_flow_error *error);
4491
4492Convert ``src`` to ``dst`` according to operation ``op``. Possible
4493operations include:
4494
4495- Attributes, pattern item or action duplication.
4496- Duplication of an entire pattern or list of actions.
4497- Duplication of a complete flow rule description.
4498- Pattern item or action name retrieval.
4499
4500Tunneled traffic offload
4501~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4502
4503rte_flow API provides the building blocks for vendor-agnostic flow
4504classification offloads. The rte_flow "patterns" and "actions"
4505primitives are fine-grained, thus enabling DPDK applications the
4506flexibility to offload network stacks and complex pipelines.
4507Applications wishing to offload tunneled traffic are required to use
4508the rte_flow primitives, such as group, meta, mark, tag, and others to
4509model their high-level objects.  The hardware model design for
4510high-level software objects is not trivial.  Furthermore, an optimal
4511design is often vendor-specific.
4512
4513When hardware offloads tunneled traffic in multi-group logic,
4514partially offloaded packets may arrive to the application after they
4515were modified in hardware. In this case, the application may need to
4516restore the original packet headers. Consider the following sequence:
4517The application decaps a packet in one group and jumps to a second
4518group where it tries to match on a 5-tuple, that will miss and send
4519the packet to the application. In this case, the application does not
4520receive the original packet but a modified one. Also, in this case,
4521the application cannot match on the outer header fields, such as VXLAN
4522vni and 5-tuple.
4523
4524There are several possible ways to use rte_flow "patterns" and
4525"actions" to resolve the issues above. For example:
4526
45271 Mapping headers to a hardware registers using the
4528rte_flow_action_mark/rte_flow_action_tag/rte_flow_set_meta objects.
4529
45302 Apply the decap only at the last offload stage after all the
4531"patterns" were matched and the packet will be fully offloaded.
4532
4533Every approach has its pros and cons and is highly dependent on the
4534hardware vendor.  For example, some hardware may have a limited number
4535of registers while other hardware could not support inner actions and
4536must decap before accessing inner headers.
4537
4538The tunnel offload model resolves these issues. The model goals are:
4539
45401 Provide a unified application API to offload tunneled traffic that
4541is capable to match on outer headers after decap.
4542
45432 Allow the application to restore the outer header of partially
4544offloaded packets.
4545
4546The tunnel offload model does not introduce new elements to the
4547existing RTE flow model and is implemented as a set of helper
4548functions.
4549
4550For the application to work with the tunnel offload API it
4551has to adjust flow rules in multi-table tunnel offload in the
4552following way:
4553
45541 Remove explicit call to decap action and replace it with PMD actions
4555obtained from rte_flow_tunnel_decap_and_set() helper.
4556
45572 Add PMD items obtained from rte_flow_tunnel_match() helper to all
4558other rules in the tunnel offload sequence.
4559
4560The model requirements:
4561
4562Software application must initialize
4563rte_tunnel object with tunnel parameters before calling
4564rte_flow_tunnel_decap_set() & rte_flow_tunnel_match().
4565
4566PMD actions array obtained in rte_flow_tunnel_decap_set() must be
4567released by application with rte_flow_action_release() call.
4568
4569PMD items array obtained with rte_flow_tunnel_match() must be released
4570by application with rte_flow_item_release() call.  Application can
4571release PMD items and actions after rule was created. However, if the
4572application needs to create additional rule for the same tunnel it
4573will need to obtain PMD items again.
4574
4575Application cannot destroy rte_tunnel object before it releases all
4576PMD actions & PMD items referencing that tunnel.
4577
4578Caveats
4579-------
4580
4581- DPDK does not keep track of flow rules definitions or flow rule objects
4582  automatically. Applications may keep track of the former and must keep
4583  track of the latter. PMDs may also do it for internal needs, however this
4584  must not be relied on by applications.
4585
4586- Flow rules are not maintained between successive port initializations. An
4587  application exiting without releasing them and restarting must re-create
4588  them from scratch.
4589
4590- API operations are synchronous and blocking (``EAGAIN`` cannot be
4591  returned).
4592
4593- Stopping the data path (TX/RX) should not be necessary when managing flow
4594  rules. If this cannot be achieved naturally or with workarounds (such as
4595  temporarily replacing the burst function pointers), an appropriate error
4596  code must be returned (``EBUSY``).
4597
4598- Applications, not PMDs, are responsible for maintaining flow rules
4599  configuration when closing, stopping or restarting a port or performing other
4600  actions which may affect them.
4601  Applications must assume that after port close, stop or restart all flows
4602  related to that port are not valid, hardware rules are destroyed and relevant
4603  PMD resources are released.
4604
4605For devices exposing multiple ports sharing global settings affected by flow
4606rules:
4607
4608- All ports under DPDK control must behave consistently, PMDs are
4609  responsible for making sure that existing flow rules on a port are not
4610  affected by other ports.
4611
4612- Ports not under DPDK control (unaffected or handled by other applications)
4613  are user's responsibility. They may affect existing flow rules and cause
4614  undefined behavior. PMDs aware of this may prevent flow rules creation
4615  altogether in such cases.
4616
4617PMD interface
4618-------------
4619
4620The PMD interface is defined in ``rte_flow_driver.h``. It is not subject to
4621API/ABI versioning constraints as it is not exposed to applications and may
4622evolve independently.
4623
4624The PMD interface is based on callbacks pointed by the ``struct rte_flow_ops``.
4625
4626- PMD callbacks implement exactly the interface described in `Rules
4627  management`_, except for the port ID argument which has already been
4628  converted to a pointer to the underlying ``struct rte_eth_dev``.
4629
4630- Public API functions do not process flow rules definitions at all before
4631  calling PMD functions (no basic error checking, no validation
4632  whatsoever). They only make sure these callbacks are non-NULL or return
4633  the ``ENOSYS`` (function not supported) error.
4634
4635This interface additionally defines the following helper function:
4636
4637- ``rte_flow_ops_get()``: get generic flow operations structure from a
4638  port.
4639
4640If PMD interfaces don't support re-entrancy/multi-thread safety,
4641the rte_flow API functions will protect threads by mutex per port.
4642The application can check whether ``RTE_ETH_DEV_FLOW_OPS_THREAD_SAFE``
4643is set in ``dev_flags``, meaning the PMD is thread-safe regarding rte_flow,
4644so the API level protection is disabled.
4645Please note that this API-level mutex protects only rte_flow functions,
4646other control path functions are not in scope.
4647
4648Device compatibility
4649--------------------
4650
4651No known implementation supports all the described features.
4652
4653Unsupported features or combinations are not expected to be fully emulated
4654in software by PMDs for performance reasons. Partially supported features
4655may be completed in software as long as hardware performs most of the work
4656(such as queue redirection and packet recognition).
4657
4658However PMDs are expected to do their best to satisfy application requests
4659by working around hardware limitations as long as doing so does not affect
4660the behavior of existing flow rules.
4661
4662The following sections provide a few examples of such cases and describe how
4663PMDs should handle them, they are based on limitations built into the
4664previous APIs.
4665
4666Global bit-masks
4667~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4668
4669Each flow rule comes with its own, per-layer bit-masks, while hardware may
4670support only a single, device-wide bit-mask for a given layer type, so that
4671two IPv4 rules cannot use different bit-masks.
4672
4673The expected behavior in this case is that PMDs automatically configure
4674global bit-masks according to the needs of the first flow rule created.
4675
4676Subsequent rules are allowed only if their bit-masks match those, the
4677``EEXIST`` error code should be returned otherwise.
4678
4679Unsupported layer types
4680~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4681
4682Many protocols can be simulated by crafting patterns with the `Item: RAW`_
4683type.
4684
4685PMDs can rely on this capability to simulate support for protocols with
4686headers not directly recognized by hardware.
4687
4688``ANY`` pattern item
4689~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4690
4691This pattern item stands for anything, which can be difficult to translate
4692to something hardware would understand, particularly if followed by more
4693specific types.
4694
4695Consider the following pattern:
4696
4697.. _table_rte_flow_unsupported_any:
4698
4699.. table:: Pattern with ANY as L3
4700
4701   +-------+-----------------------+
4702   | Index | Item                  |
4703   +=======+=======================+
4704   | 0     | ETHER                 |
4705   +-------+-----+---------+-------+
4706   | 1     | ANY | ``num`` | ``1`` |
4707   +-------+-----+---------+-------+
4708   | 2     | TCP                   |
4709   +-------+-----------------------+
4710   | 3     | END                   |
4711   +-------+-----------------------+
4712
4713Knowing that TCP does not make sense with something other than IPv4 and IPv6
4714as L3, such a pattern may be translated to two flow rules instead:
4715
4716.. _table_rte_flow_unsupported_any_ipv4:
4717
4718.. table:: ANY replaced with IPV4
4719
4720   +-------+--------------------+
4721   | Index | Item               |
4722   +=======+====================+
4723   | 0     | ETHER              |
4724   +-------+--------------------+
4725   | 1     | IPV4 (zeroed mask) |
4726   +-------+--------------------+
4727   | 2     | TCP                |
4728   +-------+--------------------+
4729   | 3     | END                |
4730   +-------+--------------------+
4731
4732|
4733
4734.. _table_rte_flow_unsupported_any_ipv6:
4735
4736.. table:: ANY replaced with IPV6
4737
4738   +-------+--------------------+
4739   | Index | Item               |
4740   +=======+====================+
4741   | 0     | ETHER              |
4742   +-------+--------------------+
4743   | 1     | IPV6 (zeroed mask) |
4744   +-------+--------------------+
4745   | 2     | TCP                |
4746   +-------+--------------------+
4747   | 3     | END                |
4748   +-------+--------------------+
4749
4750Note that as soon as a ANY rule covers several layers, this approach may
4751yield a large number of hidden flow rules. It is thus suggested to only
4752support the most common scenarios (anything as L2 and/or L3).
4753
4754Unsupported actions
4755~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4756
4757- When combined with `Action: QUEUE`_, packet counting (`Action: COUNT`_)
4758  and tagging (`Action: MARK`_ or `Action: FLAG`_) may be implemented in
4759  software as long as the target queue is used by a single rule.
4760
4761- When a single target queue is provided, `Action: RSS`_ can also be
4762  implemented through `Action: QUEUE`_.
4763
4764Flow rules priority
4765~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4766
4767While it would naturally make sense, flow rules cannot be assumed to be
4768processed by hardware in the same order as their creation for several
4769reasons:
4770
4771- They may be managed internally as a tree or a hash table instead of a
4772  list.
4773- Removing a flow rule before adding another one can either put the new rule
4774  at the end of the list or reuse a freed entry.
4775- Duplication may occur when packets are matched by several rules.
4776
4777For overlapping rules (particularly in order to use `Action: PASSTHRU`_)
4778predictable behavior is only guaranteed by using different priority levels.
4779
4780Priority levels are not necessarily implemented in hardware, or may be
4781severely limited (e.g. a single priority bit).
4782
4783For these reasons, priority levels may be implemented purely in software by
4784PMDs.
4785
4786- For devices expecting flow rules to be added in the correct order, PMDs
4787  may destroy and re-create existing rules after adding a new one with
4788  a higher priority.
4789
4790- A configurable number of dummy or empty rules can be created at
4791  initialization time to save high priority slots for later.
4792
4793- In order to save priority levels, PMDs may evaluate whether rules are
4794  likely to collide and adjust their priority accordingly.
4795
4796
4797.. _OpenFlow Switch Specification: https://www.opennetworking.org/software-defined-standards/specifications/
4798