1.. BSD LICENSE 2 Copyright(c) 2010-2016 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. 3 All rights reserved. 4 5 Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 6 modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 7 are met: 8 9 * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 10 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 11 * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 12 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in 13 the documentation and/or other materials provided with the 14 distribution. 15 * Neither the name of Intel Corporation nor the names of its 16 contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived 17 from this software without specific prior written permission. 18 19 THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS 20 "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT 21 LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR 22 A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT 23 OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, 24 SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT 25 LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, 26 DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY 27 THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT 28 (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE 29 OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 30 31.. _testpmd_runtime: 32 33Testpmd Runtime Functions 34========================= 35 36Where the testpmd application is started in interactive mode, (``-i|--interactive``), 37it displays a prompt that can be used to start and stop forwarding, 38configure the application, display statistics (including the extended NIC 39statistics aka xstats) , set the Flow Director and other tasks:: 40 41 testpmd> 42 43The testpmd prompt has some, limited, readline support. 44Common bash command-line functions such as ``Ctrl+a`` and ``Ctrl+e`` to go to the start and end of the prompt line are supported 45as well as access to the command history via the up-arrow. 46 47There is also support for tab completion. 48If you type a partial command and hit ``<TAB>`` you get a list of the available completions: 49 50.. code-block:: console 51 52 testpmd> show port <TAB> 53 54 info [Mul-choice STRING]: show|clear port info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap X 55 info [Mul-choice STRING]: show|clear port info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap all 56 stats [Mul-choice STRING]: show|clear port info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap X 57 stats [Mul-choice STRING]: show|clear port info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap all 58 ... 59 60 61.. note:: 62 63 Some examples in this document are too long to fit on one line are are shown wrapped at `"\\"` for display purposes:: 64 65 testpmd> set flow_ctrl rx (on|off) tx (on|off) (high_water) (low_water) \ 66 (pause_time) (send_xon) (port_id) 67 68In the real ``testpmd>`` prompt these commands should be on a single line. 69 70Help Functions 71-------------- 72 73The testpmd has on-line help for the functions that are available at runtime. 74These are divided into sections and can be accessed using help, help section or help all: 75 76.. code-block:: console 77 78 testpmd> help 79 80 help control : Start and stop forwarding. 81 help display : Displaying port, stats and config information. 82 help config : Configuration information. 83 help ports : Configuring ports. 84 help registers : Reading and setting port registers. 85 help filters : Filters configuration help. 86 help all : All of the above sections. 87 88 89Control Functions 90----------------- 91 92start 93~~~~~ 94 95Start packet forwarding with current configuration:: 96 97 testpmd> start 98 99start tx_first 100~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 101 102Start packet forwarding with current configuration after sending specified number of bursts of packets:: 103 104 testpmd> start tx_first (""|burst_num) 105 106The default burst number is 1 when ``burst_num`` not presented. 107 108stop 109~~~~ 110 111Stop packet forwarding, and display accumulated statistics:: 112 113 testpmd> stop 114 115quit 116~~~~ 117 118Quit to prompt:: 119 120 testpmd> quit 121 122 123Display Functions 124----------------- 125 126The functions in the following sections are used to display information about the 127testpmd configuration or the NIC status. 128 129show port 130~~~~~~~~~ 131 132Display information for a given port or all ports:: 133 134 testpmd> show port (info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap|dcb_tc|cap) (port_id|all) 135 136The available information categories are: 137 138* ``info``: General port information such as MAC address. 139 140* ``stats``: RX/TX statistics. 141 142* ``xstats``: RX/TX extended NIC statistics. 143 144* ``fdir``: Flow Director information and statistics. 145 146* ``stat_qmap``: Queue statistics mapping. 147 148* ``dcb_tc``: DCB information such as TC mapping. 149 150* ``cap``: Supported offload capabilities. 151 152For example: 153 154.. code-block:: console 155 156 testpmd> show port info 0 157 158 ********************* Infos for port 0 ********************* 159 160 MAC address: XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX 161 Connect to socket: 0 162 memory allocation on the socket: 0 163 Link status: up 164 Link speed: 40000 Mbps 165 Link duplex: full-duplex 166 Promiscuous mode: enabled 167 Allmulticast mode: disabled 168 Maximum number of MAC addresses: 64 169 Maximum number of MAC addresses of hash filtering: 0 170 VLAN offload: 171 strip on 172 filter on 173 qinq(extend) off 174 Redirection table size: 512 175 Supported flow types: 176 ipv4-frag 177 ipv4-tcp 178 ipv4-udp 179 ipv4-sctp 180 ipv4-other 181 ipv6-frag 182 ipv6-tcp 183 ipv6-udp 184 ipv6-sctp 185 ipv6-other 186 l2_payload 187 port 188 vxlan 189 geneve 190 nvgre 191 192show port rss reta 193~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 194 195Display the rss redirection table entry indicated by masks on port X:: 196 197 testpmd> show port (port_id) rss reta (size) (mask0, mask1...) 198 199size is used to indicate the hardware supported reta size 200 201show port rss-hash 202~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 203 204Display the RSS hash functions and RSS hash key of a port:: 205 206 testpmd> show port (port_id) rss-hash ipv4|ipv4-frag|ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp|ipv4-other|ipv6|ipv6-frag|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp|ipv6-other|l2-payload|ipv6-ex|ipv6-tcp-ex|ipv6-udp-ex [key] 207 208clear port 209~~~~~~~~~~ 210 211Clear the port statistics for a given port or for all ports:: 212 213 testpmd> clear port (info|stats|xstats|fdir|stat_qmap) (port_id|all) 214 215For example:: 216 217 testpmd> clear port stats all 218 219show (rxq|txq) 220~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 221 222Display information for a given port's RX/TX queue:: 223 224 testpmd> show (rxq|txq) info (port_id) (queue_id) 225 226show config 227~~~~~~~~~~~ 228 229Displays the configuration of the application. 230The configuration comes from the command-line, the runtime or the application defaults:: 231 232 testpmd> show config (rxtx|cores|fwd|txpkts) 233 234The available information categories are: 235 236* ``rxtx``: RX/TX configuration items. 237 238* ``cores``: List of forwarding cores. 239 240* ``fwd``: Packet forwarding configuration. 241 242* ``txpkts``: Packets to TX configuration. 243 244For example: 245 246.. code-block:: console 247 248 testpmd> show config rxtx 249 250 io packet forwarding - CRC stripping disabled - packets/burst=16 251 nb forwarding cores=2 - nb forwarding ports=1 252 RX queues=1 - RX desc=128 - RX free threshold=0 253 RX threshold registers: pthresh=8 hthresh=8 wthresh=4 254 TX queues=1 - TX desc=512 - TX free threshold=0 255 TX threshold registers: pthresh=36 hthresh=0 wthresh=0 256 TX RS bit threshold=0 - TXQ flags=0x0 257 258set fwd 259~~~~~~~ 260 261Set the packet forwarding mode:: 262 263 testpmd> set fwd (io|mac|macswap|flowgen| \ 264 rxonly|txonly|csum|icmpecho) (""|retry) 265 266``retry`` can be specified for forwarding engines except ``rx_only``. 267 268The available information categories are: 269 270* ``io``: Forwards packets "as-is" in I/O mode. 271 This is the fastest possible forwarding operation as it does not access packets data. 272 This is the default mode. 273 274* ``mac``: Changes the source and the destination Ethernet addresses of packets before forwarding them. 275 Default application behaviour is to set source Ethernet address to that of the transmitting interface, and destination 276 address to a dummy value (set during init). The user may specify a target destination Ethernet address via the 'eth-peer' or 277 'eth-peer-configfile' command-line options. It is not currently possible to specify a specific source Ethernet address. 278 279* ``macswap``: MAC swap forwarding mode. 280 Swaps the source and the destination Ethernet addresses of packets before forwarding them. 281 282* ``flowgen``: Multi-flow generation mode. 283 Originates a number of flows (with varying destination IP addresses), and terminate receive traffic. 284 285* ``rxonly``: Receives packets but doesn't transmit them. 286 287* ``txonly``: Generates and transmits packets without receiving any. 288 289* ``csum``: Changes the checksum field with hardware or software methods depending on the offload flags on the packet. 290 291* ``icmpecho``: Receives a burst of packets, lookup for IMCP echo requests and, if any, send back ICMP echo replies. 292 293* ``ieee1588``: Demonstrate L2 IEEE1588 V2 PTP timestamping for RX and TX. Requires ``CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_IEEE1588=y``. 294 295Note: TX timestamping is only available in the "Full Featured" TX path. To force ``testpmd`` into this mode set ``--txqflags=0``. 296 297Example:: 298 299 testpmd> set fwd rxonly 300 301 Set rxonly packet forwarding mode 302 303 304read rxd 305~~~~~~~~ 306 307Display an RX descriptor for a port RX queue:: 308 309 testpmd> read rxd (port_id) (queue_id) (rxd_id) 310 311For example:: 312 313 testpmd> read rxd 0 0 4 314 0x0000000B - 0x001D0180 / 0x0000000B - 0x001D0180 315 316read txd 317~~~~~~~~ 318 319Display a TX descriptor for a port TX queue:: 320 321 testpmd> read txd (port_id) (queue_id) (txd_id) 322 323For example:: 324 325 testpmd> read txd 0 0 4 326 0x00000001 - 0x24C3C440 / 0x000F0000 - 0x2330003C 327 328show vf stats 329~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 330 331Display VF statistics:: 332 333 testpmd> show vf stats (port_id) (vf_id) 334 335clear vf stats 336~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 337 338Reset VF statistics:: 339 340 testpmd> clear vf stats (port_id) (vf_id) 341 342Configuration Functions 343----------------------- 344 345The testpmd application can be configured from the runtime as well as from the command-line. 346 347This section details the available configuration functions that are available. 348 349.. note:: 350 351 Configuration changes only become active when forwarding is started/restarted. 352 353set default 354~~~~~~~~~~~ 355 356Reset forwarding to the default configuration:: 357 358 testpmd> set default 359 360set verbose 361~~~~~~~~~~~ 362 363Set the debug verbosity level:: 364 365 testpmd> set verbose (level) 366 367Currently the only available levels are 0 (silent except for error) and 1 (fully verbose). 368 369set nbport 370~~~~~~~~~~ 371 372Set the number of ports used by the application: 373 374set nbport (num) 375 376This is equivalent to the ``--nb-ports`` command-line option. 377 378set nbcore 379~~~~~~~~~~ 380 381Set the number of cores used by the application:: 382 383 testpmd> set nbcore (num) 384 385This is equivalent to the ``--nb-cores`` command-line option. 386 387.. note:: 388 389 The number of cores used must not be greater than number of ports used multiplied by the number of queues per port. 390 391set coremask 392~~~~~~~~~~~~ 393 394Set the forwarding cores hexadecimal mask:: 395 396 testpmd> set coremask (mask) 397 398This is equivalent to the ``--coremask`` command-line option. 399 400.. note:: 401 402 The master lcore is reserved for command line parsing only and cannot be masked on for packet forwarding. 403 404set portmask 405~~~~~~~~~~~~ 406 407Set the forwarding ports hexadecimal mask:: 408 409 testpmd> set portmask (mask) 410 411This is equivalent to the ``--portmask`` command-line option. 412 413set burst 414~~~~~~~~~ 415 416Set number of packets per burst:: 417 418 testpmd> set burst (num) 419 420This is equivalent to the ``--burst command-line`` option. 421 422When retry is enabled, the transmit delay time and number of retries can also be set:: 423 424 testpmd> set burst tx delay (microseconds) retry (num) 425 426set txpkts 427~~~~~~~~~~ 428 429Set the length of each segment of the TX-ONLY packets or length of packet for FLOWGEN mode:: 430 431 testpmd> set txpkts (x[,y]*) 432 433Where x[,y]* represents a CSV list of values, without white space. 434 435set txsplit 436~~~~~~~~~~~ 437 438Set the split policy for the TX packets, applicable for TX-ONLY and CSUM forwarding modes:: 439 440 testpmd> set txsplit (off|on|rand) 441 442Where: 443 444* ``off`` disable packet copy & split for CSUM mode. 445 446* ``on`` split outgoing packet into multiple segments. Size of each segment 447 and number of segments per packet is determined by ``set txpkts`` command 448 (see above). 449 450* ``rand`` same as 'on', but number of segments per each packet is a random value between 1 and total number of segments. 451 452set corelist 453~~~~~~~~~~~~ 454 455Set the list of forwarding cores:: 456 457 testpmd> set corelist (x[,y]*) 458 459For example, to change the forwarding cores: 460 461.. code-block:: console 462 463 testpmd> set corelist 3,1 464 testpmd> show config fwd 465 466 io packet forwarding - ports=2 - cores=2 - streams=2 - NUMA support disabled 467 Logical Core 3 (socket 0) forwards packets on 1 streams: 468 RX P=0/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=1/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:01 469 Logical Core 1 (socket 0) forwards packets on 1 streams: 470 RX P=1/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=0/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:00 471 472.. note:: 473 474 The cores are used in the same order as specified on the command line. 475 476set portlist 477~~~~~~~~~~~~ 478 479Set the list of forwarding ports:: 480 481 testpmd> set portlist (x[,y]*) 482 483For example, to change the port forwarding: 484 485.. code-block:: console 486 487 testpmd> set portlist 0,2,1,3 488 testpmd> show config fwd 489 490 io packet forwarding - ports=4 - cores=1 - streams=4 491 Logical Core 3 (socket 0) forwards packets on 4 streams: 492 RX P=0/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=2/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:01 493 RX P=2/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=0/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:00 494 RX P=1/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=3/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:03 495 RX P=3/Q=0 (socket 0) -> TX P=1/Q=0 (socket 0) peer=02:00:00:00:00:02 496 497set tx loopback 498~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 499 500Enable/disable tx loopback:: 501 502 testpmd> set tx loopback (port_id) (on|off) 503 504set drop enable 505~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 506 507set drop enable bit for all queues:: 508 509 testpmd> set all queues drop (port_id) (on|off) 510 511set split drop enable (for VF) 512~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 513 514set split drop enable bit for VF from PF:: 515 516 testpmd> set vf split drop (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off) 517 518set mac antispoof (for VF) 519~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 520 521Set mac antispoof for a VF from the PF:: 522 523 testpmd> set vf mac antispoof (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off) 524 525set macsec offload 526~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 527 528Enable/disable MACsec offload:: 529 530 testpmd> set macsec offload (port_id) on encrypt (on|off) replay-protect (on|off) 531 testpmd> set macsec offload (port_id) off 532 533set macsec sc 534~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 535 536Configure MACsec secure connection (SC):: 537 538 testpmd> set macsec sc (tx|rx) (port_id) (mac) (pi) 539 540.. note:: 541 542 The pi argument is ignored for tx. 543 Check the NIC Datasheet for hardware limits. 544 545set macsec sa 546~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 547 548Configure MACsec secure association (SA):: 549 550 testpmd> set macsec sa (tx|rx) (port_id) (idx) (an) (pn) (key) 551 552.. note:: 553 554 The IDX value must be 0 or 1. 555 Check the NIC Datasheet for hardware limits. 556 557set broadcast mode (for VF) 558~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 559 560Set broadcast mode for a VF from the PF:: 561 562 testpmd> set vf broadcast (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off) 563 564vlan set strip 565~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 566 567Set the VLAN strip on a port:: 568 569 testpmd> vlan set strip (on|off) (port_id) 570 571vlan set stripq 572~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 573 574Set the VLAN strip for a queue on a port:: 575 576 testpmd> vlan set stripq (on|off) (port_id,queue_id) 577 578vlan set stripq (for VF) 579~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 580 581Set VLAN strip for all queues in a pool for a VF from the PF:: 582 583 testpmd> set vf vlan stripq (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off) 584 585vlan set insert (for VF) 586~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 587 588Set VLAN insert for a VF from the PF:: 589 590 testpmd> set vf vlan insert (port_id) (vf_id) (vlan_id) 591 592vlan set tag (for VF) 593~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 594 595Set VLAN tag for a VF from the PF:: 596 597 testpmd> set vf vlan tag (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off) 598 599vlan set antispoof (for VF) 600~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 601 602Set VLAN antispoof for a VF from the PF:: 603 604 testpmd> set vf vlan antispoof (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off) 605 606vlan set filter 607~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 608 609Set the VLAN filter on a port:: 610 611 testpmd> vlan set filter (on|off) (port_id) 612 613vlan set qinq 614~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 615 616Set the VLAN QinQ (extended queue in queue) on for a port:: 617 618 testpmd> vlan set qinq (on|off) (port_id) 619 620vlan set tpid 621~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 622 623Set the inner or outer VLAN TPID for packet filtering on a port:: 624 625 testpmd> vlan set (inner|outer) tpid (value) (port_id) 626 627.. note:: 628 629 TPID value must be a 16-bit number (value <= 65536). 630 631rx_vlan add 632~~~~~~~~~~~ 633 634Add a VLAN ID, or all identifiers, to the set of VLAN identifiers filtered by port ID:: 635 636 testpmd> rx_vlan add (vlan_id|all) (port_id) 637 638.. note:: 639 640 VLAN filter must be set on that port. VLAN ID < 4096. 641 Depending on the NIC used, number of vlan_ids may be limited to the maximum entries 642 in VFTA table. This is important if enabling all vlan_ids. 643 644rx_vlan rm 645~~~~~~~~~~ 646 647Remove a VLAN ID, or all identifiers, from the set of VLAN identifiers filtered by port ID:: 648 649 testpmd> rx_vlan rm (vlan_id|all) (port_id) 650 651rx_vlan add (for VF) 652~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 653 654Add a VLAN ID, to the set of VLAN identifiers filtered for VF(s) for port ID:: 655 656 testpmd> rx_vlan add (vlan_id) port (port_id) vf (vf_mask) 657 658rx_vlan rm (for VF) 659~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 660 661Remove a VLAN ID, from the set of VLAN identifiers filtered for VF(s) for port ID:: 662 663 testpmd> rx_vlan rm (vlan_id) port (port_id) vf (vf_mask) 664 665tunnel_filter add 666~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 667 668Add a tunnel filter on a port:: 669 670 testpmd> tunnel_filter add (port_id) (outer_mac) (inner_mac) (ip_addr) \ 671 (inner_vlan) (vxlan|nvgre|ipingre) (imac-ivlan|imac-ivlan-tenid|\ 672 imac-tenid|imac|omac-imac-tenid|oip|iip) (tenant_id) (queue_id) 673 674The available information categories are: 675 676* ``vxlan``: Set tunnel type as VXLAN. 677 678* ``nvgre``: Set tunnel type as NVGRE. 679 680* ``ipingre``: Set tunnel type as IP-in-GRE. 681 682* ``imac-ivlan``: Set filter type as Inner MAC and VLAN. 683 684* ``imac-ivlan-tenid``: Set filter type as Inner MAC, VLAN and tenant ID. 685 686* ``imac-tenid``: Set filter type as Inner MAC and tenant ID. 687 688* ``imac``: Set filter type as Inner MAC. 689 690* ``omac-imac-tenid``: Set filter type as Outer MAC, Inner MAC and tenant ID. 691 692* ``oip``: Set filter type as Outer IP. 693 694* ``iip``: Set filter type as Inner IP. 695 696Example:: 697 698 testpmd> tunnel_filter add 0 68:05:CA:28:09:82 00:00:00:00:00:00 \ 699 192.168.2.2 0 ipingre oip 1 1 700 701 Set an IP-in-GRE tunnel on port 0, and the filter type is Outer IP. 702 703tunnel_filter remove 704~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 705 706Remove a tunnel filter on a port:: 707 708 testpmd> tunnel_filter rm (port_id) (outer_mac) (inner_mac) (ip_addr) \ 709 (inner_vlan) (vxlan|nvgre|ipingre) (imac-ivlan|imac-ivlan-tenid|\ 710 imac-tenid|imac|omac-imac-tenid|oip|iip) (tenant_id) (queue_id) 711 712rx_vxlan_port add 713~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 714 715Add an UDP port for VXLAN packet filter on a port:: 716 717 testpmd> rx_vxlan_port add (udp_port) (port_id) 718 719rx_vxlan_port remove 720~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 721 722Remove an UDP port for VXLAN packet filter on a port:: 723 724 testpmd> rx_vxlan_port rm (udp_port) (port_id) 725 726tx_vlan set 727~~~~~~~~~~~ 728 729Set hardware insertion of VLAN IDs in packets sent on a port:: 730 731 testpmd> tx_vlan set (port_id) vlan_id[, vlan_id_outer] 732 733For example, set a single VLAN ID (5) insertion on port 0:: 734 735 tx_vlan set 0 5 736 737Or, set double VLAN ID (inner: 2, outer: 3) insertion on port 1:: 738 739 tx_vlan set 1 2 3 740 741 742tx_vlan set pvid 743~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 744 745Set port based hardware insertion of VLAN ID in packets sent on a port:: 746 747 testpmd> tx_vlan set pvid (port_id) (vlan_id) (on|off) 748 749tx_vlan reset 750~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 751 752Disable hardware insertion of a VLAN header in packets sent on a port:: 753 754 testpmd> tx_vlan reset (port_id) 755 756csum set 757~~~~~~~~ 758 759Select hardware or software calculation of the checksum when 760transmitting a packet using the ``csum`` forwarding engine:: 761 762 testpmd> csum set (ip|udp|tcp|sctp|outer-ip) (hw|sw) (port_id) 763 764Where: 765 766* ``ip|udp|tcp|sctp`` always relate to the inner layer. 767 768* ``outer-ip`` relates to the outer IP layer (only for IPv4) in the case where the packet is recognized 769 as a tunnel packet by the forwarding engine (vxlan, gre and ipip are 770 supported). See also the ``csum parse-tunnel`` command. 771 772.. note:: 773 774 Check the NIC Datasheet for hardware limits. 775 776csum parse-tunnel 777~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 778 779Define how tunneled packets should be handled by the csum forward 780engine:: 781 782 testpmd> csum parse-tunnel (on|off) (tx_port_id) 783 784If enabled, the csum forward engine will try to recognize supported 785tunnel headers (vxlan, gre, ipip). 786 787If disabled, treat tunnel packets as non-tunneled packets (a inner 788header is handled as a packet payload). 789 790.. note:: 791 792 The port argument is the TX port like in the ``csum set`` command. 793 794Example: 795 796Consider a packet in packet like the following:: 797 798 eth_out/ipv4_out/udp_out/vxlan/eth_in/ipv4_in/tcp_in 799 800* If parse-tunnel is enabled, the ``ip|udp|tcp|sctp`` parameters of ``csum set`` 801 command relate to the inner headers (here ``ipv4_in`` and ``tcp_in``), and the 802 ``outer-ip parameter`` relates to the outer headers (here ``ipv4_out``). 803 804* If parse-tunnel is disabled, the ``ip|udp|tcp|sctp`` parameters of ``csum set`` 805 command relate to the outer headers, here ``ipv4_out`` and ``udp_out``. 806 807csum show 808~~~~~~~~~ 809 810Display tx checksum offload configuration:: 811 812 testpmd> csum show (port_id) 813 814tso set 815~~~~~~~ 816 817Enable TCP Segmentation Offload (TSO) in the ``csum`` forwarding engine:: 818 819 testpmd> tso set (segsize) (port_id) 820 821.. note:: 822 823 Check the NIC datasheet for hardware limits. 824 825tso show 826~~~~~~~~ 827 828Display the status of TCP Segmentation Offload:: 829 830 testpmd> tso show (port_id) 831 832mac_addr add 833~~~~~~~~~~~~ 834 835Add an alternative MAC address to a port:: 836 837 testpmd> mac_addr add (port_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX) 838 839mac_addr remove 840~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 841 842Remove a MAC address from a port:: 843 844 testpmd> mac_addr remove (port_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX) 845 846mac_addr add (for VF) 847~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 848 849Add an alternative MAC address for a VF to a port:: 850 851 testpmd> mac_add add port (port_id) vf (vf_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX) 852 853mac_addr set 854~~~~~~~~~~~~ 855 856Set the default MAC address for a port:: 857 858 testpmd> mac_addr set (port_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX) 859 860mac_addr set (for VF) 861~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 862 863Set the MAC address for a VF from the PF:: 864 865 testpmd> set vf mac addr (port_id) (vf_id) (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX) 866 867set port-uta 868~~~~~~~~~~~~ 869 870Set the unicast hash filter(s) on/off for a port:: 871 872 testpmd> set port (port_id) uta (XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX|all) (on|off) 873 874set promisc 875~~~~~~~~~~~ 876 877Set the promiscuous mode on for a port or for all ports. 878In promiscuous mode packets are not dropped if they aren't for the specified MAC address:: 879 880 testpmd> set promisc (port_id|all) (on|off) 881 882set allmulti 883~~~~~~~~~~~~ 884 885Set the allmulti mode for a port or for all ports:: 886 887 testpmd> set allmulti (port_id|all) (on|off) 888 889Same as the ifconfig (8) option. Controls how multicast packets are handled. 890 891set promisc (for VF) 892~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 893 894Set the unicast promiscuous mode for a VF from PF. 895It's supported by Intel i40e NICs now. 896In promiscuous mode packets are not dropped if they aren't for the specified MAC address:: 897 898 testpmd> set vf promisc (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off) 899 900set allmulticast (for VF) 901~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 902 903Set the multicast promiscuous mode for a VF from PF. 904It's supported by Intel i40e NICs now. 905In promiscuous mode packets are not dropped if they aren't for the specified MAC address:: 906 907 testpmd> set vf allmulti (port_id) (vf_id) (on|off) 908 909set tx max bandwidth (for VF) 910~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 911 912Set TX max absolute bandwidth (Mbps) for a VF from PF:: 913 914 testpmd> set vf tx max-bandwidth (port_id) (vf_id) (max_bandwidth) 915 916set tc tx min bandwidth (for VF) 917~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 918 919Set all TCs' TX min relative bandwidth (%) for a VF from PF:: 920 921 testpmd> set vf tc tx min-bandwidth (port_id) (vf_id) (bw1, bw2, ...) 922 923set tc tx max bandwidth (for VF) 924~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 925 926Set a TC's TX max absolute bandwidth (Mbps) for a VF from PF:: 927 928 testpmd> set vf tc tx max-bandwidth (port_id) (vf_id) (tc_no) (max_bandwidth) 929 930set tc strict link priority mode 931~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 932 933Set some TCs' strict link priority mode on a physical port:: 934 935 testpmd> set tx strict-link-priority (port_id) (tc_bitmap) 936 937set tc tx min bandwidth 938~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 939 940Set all TCs' TX min relative bandwidth (%) globally for all PF and VFs:: 941 942 testpmd> set tc tx min-bandwidth (port_id) (bw1, bw2, ...) 943 944set flow_ctrl rx 945~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 946 947Set the link flow control parameter on a port:: 948 949 testpmd> set flow_ctrl rx (on|off) tx (on|off) (high_water) (low_water) \ 950 (pause_time) (send_xon) mac_ctrl_frame_fwd (on|off) \ 951 autoneg (on|off) (port_id) 952 953Where: 954 955* ``high_water`` (integer): High threshold value to trigger XOFF. 956 957* ``low_water`` (integer): Low threshold value to trigger XON. 958 959* ``pause_time`` (integer): Pause quota in the Pause frame. 960 961* ``send_xon`` (0/1): Send XON frame. 962 963* ``mac_ctrl_frame_fwd``: Enable receiving MAC control frames. 964 965* ``autoneg``: Change the auto-negotiation parameter. 966 967set pfc_ctrl rx 968~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 969 970Set the priority flow control parameter on a port:: 971 972 testpmd> set pfc_ctrl rx (on|off) tx (on|off) (high_water) (low_water) \ 973 (pause_time) (priority) (port_id) 974 975Where: 976 977* ``high_water`` (integer): High threshold value. 978 979* ``low_water`` (integer): Low threshold value. 980 981* ``pause_time`` (integer): Pause quota in the Pause frame. 982 983* ``priority`` (0-7): VLAN User Priority. 984 985set stat_qmap 986~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 987 988Set statistics mapping (qmapping 0..15) for RX/TX queue on port:: 989 990 testpmd> set stat_qmap (tx|rx) (port_id) (queue_id) (qmapping) 991 992For example, to set rx queue 2 on port 0 to mapping 5:: 993 994 testpmd>set stat_qmap rx 0 2 5 995 996set port - rx/tx (for VF) 997~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 998 999Set VF receive/transmit from a port:: 1000 1001 testpmd> set port (port_id) vf (vf_id) (rx|tx) (on|off) 1002 1003set port - mac address filter (for VF) 1004~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1005 1006Add/Remove unicast or multicast MAC addr filter for a VF:: 1007 1008 testpmd> set port (port_id) vf (vf_id) (mac_addr) \ 1009 (exact-mac|exact-mac-vlan|hashmac|hashmac-vlan) (on|off) 1010 1011set port - rx mode(for VF) 1012~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1013 1014Set the VF receive mode of a port:: 1015 1016 testpmd> set port (port_id) vf (vf_id) \ 1017 rxmode (AUPE|ROPE|BAM|MPE) (on|off) 1018 1019The available receive modes are: 1020 1021* ``AUPE``: Accepts untagged VLAN. 1022 1023* ``ROPE``: Accepts unicast hash. 1024 1025* ``BAM``: Accepts broadcast packets. 1026 1027* ``MPE``: Accepts all multicast packets. 1028 1029set port - tx_rate (for Queue) 1030~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1031 1032Set TX rate limitation for a queue on a port:: 1033 1034 testpmd> set port (port_id) queue (queue_id) rate (rate_value) 1035 1036set port - tx_rate (for VF) 1037~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1038 1039Set TX rate limitation for queues in VF on a port:: 1040 1041 testpmd> set port (port_id) vf (vf_id) rate (rate_value) queue_mask (queue_mask) 1042 1043set port - mirror rule 1044~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1045 1046Set pool or vlan type mirror rule for a port:: 1047 1048 testpmd> set port (port_id) mirror-rule (rule_id) \ 1049 (pool-mirror-up|pool-mirror-down|vlan-mirror) \ 1050 (poolmask|vlanid[,vlanid]*) dst-pool (pool_id) (on|off) 1051 1052Set link mirror rule for a port:: 1053 1054 testpmd> set port (port_id) mirror-rule (rule_id) \ 1055 (uplink-mirror|downlink-mirror) dst-pool (pool_id) (on|off) 1056 1057For example to enable mirror traffic with vlan 0,1 to pool 0:: 1058 1059 set port 0 mirror-rule 0 vlan-mirror 0,1 dst-pool 0 on 1060 1061reset port - mirror rule 1062~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1063 1064Reset a mirror rule for a port:: 1065 1066 testpmd> reset port (port_id) mirror-rule (rule_id) 1067 1068set flush_rx 1069~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1070 1071Set the flush on RX streams before forwarding. 1072The default is flush ``on``. 1073Mainly used with PCAP drivers to turn off the default behavior of flushing the first 512 packets on RX streams:: 1074 1075 testpmd> set flush_rx off 1076 1077set bypass mode 1078~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1079 1080Set the bypass mode for the lowest port on bypass enabled NIC:: 1081 1082 testpmd> set bypass mode (normal|bypass|isolate) (port_id) 1083 1084set bypass event 1085~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1086 1087Set the event required to initiate specified bypass mode for the lowest port on a bypass enabled:: 1088 1089 testpmd> set bypass event (timeout|os_on|os_off|power_on|power_off) \ 1090 mode (normal|bypass|isolate) (port_id) 1091 1092Where: 1093 1094* ``timeout``: Enable bypass after watchdog timeout. 1095 1096* ``os_on``: Enable bypass when OS/board is powered on. 1097 1098* ``os_off``: Enable bypass when OS/board is powered off. 1099 1100* ``power_on``: Enable bypass when power supply is turned on. 1101 1102* ``power_off``: Enable bypass when power supply is turned off. 1103 1104 1105set bypass timeout 1106~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1107 1108Set the bypass watchdog timeout to ``n`` seconds where 0 = instant:: 1109 1110 testpmd> set bypass timeout (0|1.5|2|3|4|8|16|32) 1111 1112show bypass config 1113~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1114 1115Show the bypass configuration for a bypass enabled NIC using the lowest port on the NIC:: 1116 1117 testpmd> show bypass config (port_id) 1118 1119set link up 1120~~~~~~~~~~~ 1121 1122Set link up for a port:: 1123 1124 testpmd> set link-up port (port id) 1125 1126set link down 1127~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1128 1129Set link down for a port:: 1130 1131 testpmd> set link-down port (port id) 1132 1133E-tag set 1134~~~~~~~~~ 1135 1136Enable E-tag insertion for a VF on a port:: 1137 1138 testpmd> E-tag set insertion on port-tag-id (value) port (port_id) vf (vf_id) 1139 1140Disable E-tag insertion for a VF on a port:: 1141 1142 testpmd> E-tag set insertion off port (port_id) vf (vf_id) 1143 1144Enable/disable E-tag stripping on a port:: 1145 1146 testpmd> E-tag set stripping (on|off) port (port_id) 1147 1148Enable/disable E-tag based forwarding on a port:: 1149 1150 testpmd> E-tag set forwarding (on|off) port (port_id) 1151 1152Add an E-tag forwarding filter on a port:: 1153 1154 testpmd> E-tag set filter add e-tag-id (value) dst-pool (pool_id) port (port_id) 1155 1156Delete an E-tag forwarding filter on a port:: 1157 testpmd> E-tag set filter del e-tag-id (value) port (port_id) 1158 1159 1160Port Functions 1161-------------- 1162 1163The following sections show functions for configuring ports. 1164 1165.. note:: 1166 1167 Port configuration changes only become active when forwarding is started/restarted. 1168 1169port attach 1170~~~~~~~~~~~ 1171 1172Attach a port specified by pci address or virtual device args:: 1173 1174 testpmd> port attach (identifier) 1175 1176To attach a new pci device, the device should be recognized by kernel first. 1177Then it should be moved under DPDK management. 1178Finally the port can be attached to testpmd. 1179 1180For example, to move a pci device using ixgbe under DPDK management: 1181 1182.. code-block:: console 1183 1184 # Check the status of the available devices. 1185 ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --status 1186 1187 Network devices using DPDK-compatible driver 1188 ============================================ 1189 <none> 1190 1191 Network devices using kernel driver 1192 =================================== 1193 0000:0a:00.0 '82599ES 10-Gigabit' if=eth2 drv=ixgbe unused= 1194 1195 1196 # Bind the device to igb_uio. 1197 sudo ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -b igb_uio 0000:0a:00.0 1198 1199 1200 # Recheck the status of the devices. 1201 ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --status 1202 Network devices using DPDK-compatible driver 1203 ============================================ 1204 0000:0a:00.0 '82599ES 10-Gigabit' drv=igb_uio unused= 1205 1206To attach a port created by virtual device, above steps are not needed. 1207 1208For example, to attach a port whose pci address is 0000:0a:00.0. 1209 1210.. code-block:: console 1211 1212 testpmd> port attach 0000:0a:00.0 1213 Attaching a new port... 1214 EAL: PCI device 0000:0a:00.0 on NUMA socket -1 1215 EAL: probe driver: 8086:10fb rte_ixgbe_pmd 1216 EAL: PCI memory mapped at 0x7f83bfa00000 1217 EAL: PCI memory mapped at 0x7f83bfa80000 1218 PMD: eth_ixgbe_dev_init(): MAC: 2, PHY: 18, SFP+: 5 1219 PMD: eth_ixgbe_dev_init(): port 0 vendorID=0x8086 deviceID=0x10fb 1220 Port 0 is attached. Now total ports is 1 1221 Done 1222 1223For example, to attach a port created by pcap PMD. 1224 1225.. code-block:: console 1226 1227 testpmd> port attach net_pcap0 1228 Attaching a new port... 1229 PMD: Initializing pmd_pcap for net_pcap0 1230 PMD: Creating pcap-backed ethdev on numa socket 0 1231 Port 0 is attached. Now total ports is 1 1232 Done 1233 1234In this case, identifier is ``net_pcap0``. 1235This identifier format is the same as ``--vdev`` format of DPDK applications. 1236 1237For example, to re-attach a bonded port which has been previously detached, 1238the mode and slave parameters must be given. 1239 1240.. code-block:: console 1241 1242 testpmd> port attach net_bond_0,mode=0,slave=1 1243 Attaching a new port... 1244 EAL: Initializing pmd_bond for net_bond_0 1245 EAL: Create bonded device net_bond_0 on port 0 in mode 0 on socket 0. 1246 Port 0 is attached. Now total ports is 1 1247 Done 1248 1249 1250port detach 1251~~~~~~~~~~~ 1252 1253Detach a specific port:: 1254 1255 testpmd> port detach (port_id) 1256 1257Before detaching a port, the port should be stopped and closed. 1258 1259For example, to detach a pci device port 0. 1260 1261.. code-block:: console 1262 1263 testpmd> port stop 0 1264 Stopping ports... 1265 Done 1266 testpmd> port close 0 1267 Closing ports... 1268 Done 1269 1270 testpmd> port detach 0 1271 Detaching a port... 1272 EAL: PCI device 0000:0a:00.0 on NUMA socket -1 1273 EAL: remove driver: 8086:10fb rte_ixgbe_pmd 1274 EAL: PCI memory unmapped at 0x7f83bfa00000 1275 EAL: PCI memory unmapped at 0x7f83bfa80000 1276 Done 1277 1278 1279For example, to detach a virtual device port 0. 1280 1281.. code-block:: console 1282 1283 testpmd> port stop 0 1284 Stopping ports... 1285 Done 1286 testpmd> port close 0 1287 Closing ports... 1288 Done 1289 1290 testpmd> port detach 0 1291 Detaching a port... 1292 PMD: Closing pcap ethdev on numa socket 0 1293 Port 'net_pcap0' is detached. Now total ports is 0 1294 Done 1295 1296To remove a pci device completely from the system, first detach the port from testpmd. 1297Then the device should be moved under kernel management. 1298Finally the device can be removed using kernel pci hotplug functionality. 1299 1300For example, to move a pci device under kernel management: 1301 1302.. code-block:: console 1303 1304 sudo ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -b ixgbe 0000:0a:00.0 1305 1306 ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --status 1307 1308 Network devices using DPDK-compatible driver 1309 ============================================ 1310 <none> 1311 1312 Network devices using kernel driver 1313 =================================== 1314 0000:0a:00.0 '82599ES 10-Gigabit' if=eth2 drv=ixgbe unused=igb_uio 1315 1316To remove a port created by a virtual device, above steps are not needed. 1317 1318port start 1319~~~~~~~~~~ 1320 1321Start all ports or a specific port:: 1322 1323 testpmd> port start (port_id|all) 1324 1325port stop 1326~~~~~~~~~ 1327 1328Stop all ports or a specific port:: 1329 1330 testpmd> port stop (port_id|all) 1331 1332port close 1333~~~~~~~~~~ 1334 1335Close all ports or a specific port:: 1336 1337 testpmd> port close (port_id|all) 1338 1339port start/stop queue 1340~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1341 1342Start/stop a rx/tx queue on a specific port:: 1343 1344 testpmd> port (port_id) (rxq|txq) (queue_id) (start|stop) 1345 1346Only take effect when port is started. 1347 1348port config - speed 1349~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1350 1351Set the speed and duplex mode for all ports or a specific port:: 1352 1353 testpmd> port config (port_id|all) speed (10|100|1000|10000|25000|40000|50000|100000|auto) \ 1354 duplex (half|full|auto) 1355 1356port config - queues/descriptors 1357~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1358 1359Set number of queues/descriptors for rxq, txq, rxd and txd:: 1360 1361 testpmd> port config all (rxq|txq|rxd|txd) (value) 1362 1363This is equivalent to the ``--rxq``, ``--txq``, ``--rxd`` and ``--txd`` command-line options. 1364 1365port config - max-pkt-len 1366~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1367 1368Set the maximum packet length:: 1369 1370 testpmd> port config all max-pkt-len (value) 1371 1372This is equivalent to the ``--max-pkt-len`` command-line option. 1373 1374port config - CRC Strip 1375~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1376 1377Set hardware CRC stripping on or off for all ports:: 1378 1379 testpmd> port config all crc-strip (on|off) 1380 1381CRC stripping is off by default. 1382 1383The ``on`` option is equivalent to the ``--crc-strip`` command-line option. 1384 1385port config - scatter 1386~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1387 1388Set RX scatter mode on or off for all ports:: 1389 1390 testpmd> port config all scatter (on|off) 1391 1392RX scatter mode is off by default. 1393 1394The ``on`` option is equivalent to the ``--enable-scatter`` command-line option. 1395 1396port config - TX queue flags 1397~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1398 1399Set a hexadecimal bitmap of TX queue flags for all ports:: 1400 1401 testpmd> port config all txqflags value 1402 1403This command is equivalent to the ``--txqflags`` command-line option. 1404 1405port config - RX Checksum 1406~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1407 1408Set hardware RX checksum offload to on or off for all ports:: 1409 1410 testpmd> port config all rx-cksum (on|off) 1411 1412Checksum offload is off by default. 1413 1414The ``on`` option is equivalent to the ``--enable-rx-cksum`` command-line option. 1415 1416port config - VLAN 1417~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1418 1419Set hardware VLAN on or off for all ports:: 1420 1421 testpmd> port config all hw-vlan (on|off) 1422 1423Hardware VLAN is on by default. 1424 1425The ``off`` option is equivalent to the ``--disable-hw-vlan`` command-line option. 1426 1427port config - VLAN filter 1428~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1429 1430Set hardware VLAN filter on or off for all ports:: 1431 1432 testpmd> port config all hw-vlan-filter (on|off) 1433 1434Hardware VLAN filter is on by default. 1435 1436The ``off`` option is equivalent to the ``--disable-hw-vlan-filter`` command-line option. 1437 1438port config - VLAN strip 1439~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1440 1441Set hardware VLAN strip on or off for all ports:: 1442 1443 testpmd> port config all hw-vlan-strip (on|off) 1444 1445Hardware VLAN strip is on by default. 1446 1447The ``off`` option is equivalent to the ``--disable-hw-vlan-strip`` command-line option. 1448 1449port config - VLAN extend 1450~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1451 1452Set hardware VLAN extend on or off for all ports:: 1453 1454 testpmd> port config all hw-vlan-extend (on|off) 1455 1456Hardware VLAN extend is off by default. 1457 1458The ``off`` option is equivalent to the ``--disable-hw-vlan-extend`` command-line option. 1459 1460port config - Drop Packets 1461~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1462 1463Set packet drop for packets with no descriptors on or off for all ports:: 1464 1465 testpmd> port config all drop-en (on|off) 1466 1467Packet dropping for packets with no descriptors is off by default. 1468 1469The ``on`` option is equivalent to the ``--enable-drop-en`` command-line option. 1470 1471port config - RSS 1472~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1473 1474Set the RSS (Receive Side Scaling) mode on or off:: 1475 1476 testpmd> port config all rss (all|ip|tcp|udp|sctp|ether|port|vxlan|geneve|nvgre|none) 1477 1478RSS is on by default. 1479 1480The ``none`` option is equivalent to the ``--disable-rss`` command-line option. 1481 1482port config - RSS Reta 1483~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1484 1485Set the RSS (Receive Side Scaling) redirection table:: 1486 1487 testpmd> port config all rss reta (hash,queue)[,(hash,queue)] 1488 1489port config - DCB 1490~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1491 1492Set the DCB mode for an individual port:: 1493 1494 testpmd> port config (port_id) dcb vt (on|off) (traffic_class) pfc (on|off) 1495 1496The traffic class should be 4 or 8. 1497 1498port config - Burst 1499~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1500 1501Set the number of packets per burst:: 1502 1503 testpmd> port config all burst (value) 1504 1505This is equivalent to the ``--burst`` command-line option. 1506 1507port config - Threshold 1508~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1509 1510Set thresholds for TX/RX queues:: 1511 1512 testpmd> port config all (threshold) (value) 1513 1514Where the threshold type can be: 1515 1516* ``txpt:`` Set the prefetch threshold register of the TX rings, 0 <= value <= 255. 1517 1518* ``txht:`` Set the host threshold register of the TX rings, 0 <= value <= 255. 1519 1520* ``txwt:`` Set the write-back threshold register of the TX rings, 0 <= value <= 255. 1521 1522* ``rxpt:`` Set the prefetch threshold register of the RX rings, 0 <= value <= 255. 1523 1524* ``rxht:`` Set the host threshold register of the RX rings, 0 <= value <= 255. 1525 1526* ``rxwt:`` Set the write-back threshold register of the RX rings, 0 <= value <= 255. 1527 1528* ``txfreet:`` Set the transmit free threshold of the TX rings, 0 <= value <= txd. 1529 1530* ``rxfreet:`` Set the transmit free threshold of the RX rings, 0 <= value <= rxd. 1531 1532* ``txrst:`` Set the transmit RS bit threshold of TX rings, 0 <= value <= txd. 1533 1534These threshold options are also available from the command-line. 1535 1536port config - E-tag 1537~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1538 1539Set the value of ether-type for E-tag:: 1540 1541 testpmd> port config (port_id|all) l2-tunnel E-tag ether-type (value) 1542 1543Enable/disable the E-tag support:: 1544 1545 testpmd> port config (port_id|all) l2-tunnel E-tag (enable|disable) 1546 1547 1548Link Bonding Functions 1549---------------------- 1550 1551The Link Bonding functions make it possible to dynamically create and 1552manage link bonding devices from within testpmd interactive prompt. 1553 1554create bonded device 1555~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1556 1557Create a new bonding device:: 1558 1559 testpmd> create bonded device (mode) (socket) 1560 1561For example, to create a bonded device in mode 1 on socket 0:: 1562 1563 testpmd> create bonded 1 0 1564 created new bonded device (port X) 1565 1566add bonding slave 1567~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1568 1569Adds Ethernet device to a Link Bonding device:: 1570 1571 testpmd> add bonding slave (slave id) (port id) 1572 1573For example, to add Ethernet device (port 6) to a Link Bonding device (port 10):: 1574 1575 testpmd> add bonding slave 6 10 1576 1577 1578remove bonding slave 1579~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1580 1581Removes an Ethernet slave device from a Link Bonding device:: 1582 1583 testpmd> remove bonding slave (slave id) (port id) 1584 1585For example, to remove Ethernet slave device (port 6) to a Link Bonding device (port 10):: 1586 1587 testpmd> remove bonding slave 6 10 1588 1589set bonding mode 1590~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1591 1592Set the Link Bonding mode of a Link Bonding device:: 1593 1594 testpmd> set bonding mode (value) (port id) 1595 1596For example, to set the bonding mode of a Link Bonding device (port 10) to broadcast (mode 3):: 1597 1598 testpmd> set bonding mode 3 10 1599 1600set bonding primary 1601~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1602 1603Set an Ethernet slave device as the primary device on a Link Bonding device:: 1604 1605 testpmd> set bonding primary (slave id) (port id) 1606 1607For example, to set the Ethernet slave device (port 6) as the primary port of a Link Bonding device (port 10):: 1608 1609 testpmd> set bonding primary 6 10 1610 1611set bonding mac 1612~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1613 1614Set the MAC address of a Link Bonding device:: 1615 1616 testpmd> set bonding mac (port id) (mac) 1617 1618For example, to set the MAC address of a Link Bonding device (port 10) to 00:00:00:00:00:01:: 1619 1620 testpmd> set bonding mac 10 00:00:00:00:00:01 1621 1622set bonding xmit_balance_policy 1623~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1624 1625Set the transmission policy for a Link Bonding device when it is in Balance XOR mode:: 1626 1627 testpmd> set bonding xmit_balance_policy (port_id) (l2|l23|l34) 1628 1629For example, set a Link Bonding device (port 10) to use a balance policy of layer 3+4 (IP addresses & UDP ports):: 1630 1631 testpmd> set bonding xmit_balance_policy 10 l34 1632 1633 1634set bonding mon_period 1635~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1636 1637Set the link status monitoring polling period in milliseconds for a bonding device. 1638 1639This adds support for PMD slave devices which do not support link status interrupts. 1640When the mon_period is set to a value greater than 0 then all PMD's which do not support 1641link status ISR will be queried every polling interval to check if their link status has changed:: 1642 1643 testpmd> set bonding mon_period (port_id) (value) 1644 1645For example, to set the link status monitoring polling period of bonded device (port 5) to 150ms:: 1646 1647 testpmd> set bonding mon_period 5 150 1648 1649 1650show bonding config 1651~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1652 1653Show the current configuration of a Link Bonding device:: 1654 1655 testpmd> show bonding config (port id) 1656 1657For example, 1658to show the configuration a Link Bonding device (port 9) with 3 slave devices (1, 3, 4) 1659in balance mode with a transmission policy of layer 2+3:: 1660 1661 testpmd> show bonding config 9 1662 Bonding mode: 2 1663 Balance Xmit Policy: BALANCE_XMIT_POLICY_LAYER23 1664 Slaves (3): [1 3 4] 1665 Active Slaves (3): [1 3 4] 1666 Primary: [3] 1667 1668 1669Register Functions 1670------------------ 1671 1672The Register Functions can be used to read from and write to registers on the network card referenced by a port number. 1673This is mainly useful for debugging purposes. 1674Reference should be made to the appropriate datasheet for the network card for details on the register addresses 1675and fields that can be accessed. 1676 1677read reg 1678~~~~~~~~ 1679 1680Display the value of a port register:: 1681 1682 testpmd> read reg (port_id) (address) 1683 1684For example, to examine the Flow Director control register (FDIRCTL, 0x0000EE000) on an Intel 82599 10 GbE Controller:: 1685 1686 testpmd> read reg 0 0xEE00 1687 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: 0x4A060029 (1241907241) 1688 1689read regfield 1690~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1691 1692Display a port register bit field:: 1693 1694 testpmd> read regfield (port_id) (address) (bit_x) (bit_y) 1695 1696For example, reading the lowest two bits from the register in the example above:: 1697 1698 testpmd> read regfield 0 0xEE00 0 1 1699 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: bits[0, 1]=0x1 (1) 1700 1701read regbit 1702~~~~~~~~~~~ 1703 1704Display a single port register bit:: 1705 1706 testpmd> read regbit (port_id) (address) (bit_x) 1707 1708For example, reading the lowest bit from the register in the example above:: 1709 1710 testpmd> read regbit 0 0xEE00 0 1711 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: bit 0=1 1712 1713write reg 1714~~~~~~~~~ 1715 1716Set the value of a port register:: 1717 1718 testpmd> write reg (port_id) (address) (value) 1719 1720For example, to clear a register:: 1721 1722 testpmd> write reg 0 0xEE00 0x0 1723 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: 0x00000000 (0) 1724 1725write regfield 1726~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1727 1728Set bit field of a port register:: 1729 1730 testpmd> write regfield (port_id) (address) (bit_x) (bit_y) (value) 1731 1732For example, writing to the register cleared in the example above:: 1733 1734 testpmd> write regfield 0 0xEE00 0 1 2 1735 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: 0x00000002 (2) 1736 1737write regbit 1738~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1739 1740Set single bit value of a port register:: 1741 1742 testpmd> write regbit (port_id) (address) (bit_x) (value) 1743 1744For example, to set the high bit in the register from the example above:: 1745 1746 testpmd> write regbit 0 0xEE00 31 1 1747 port 0 PCI register at offset 0xEE00: 0x8000000A (2147483658) 1748 1749 1750Filter Functions 1751---------------- 1752 1753This section details the available filter functions that are available. 1754 1755Note these functions interface the deprecated legacy filtering framework, 1756superseded by *rte_flow*. See `Flow rules management`_. 1757 1758ethertype_filter 1759~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1760 1761Add or delete a L2 Ethertype filter, which identify packets by their L2 Ethertype mainly assign them to a receive queue:: 1762 1763 ethertype_filter (port_id) (add|del) (mac_addr|mac_ignr) (mac_address) \ 1764 ethertype (ether_type) (drop|fwd) queue (queue_id) 1765 1766The available information parameters are: 1767 1768* ``port_id``: The port which the Ethertype filter assigned on. 1769 1770* ``mac_addr``: Compare destination mac address. 1771 1772* ``mac_ignr``: Ignore destination mac address match. 1773 1774* ``mac_address``: Destination mac address to match. 1775 1776* ``ether_type``: The EtherType value want to match, 1777 for example 0x0806 for ARP packet. 0x0800 (IPv4) and 0x86DD (IPv6) are invalid. 1778 1779* ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this EtherType filter. 1780 It is meaningless when deleting or dropping. 1781 1782Example, to add/remove an ethertype filter rule:: 1783 1784 testpmd> ethertype_filter 0 add mac_ignr 00:11:22:33:44:55 \ 1785 ethertype 0x0806 fwd queue 3 1786 1787 testpmd> ethertype_filter 0 del mac_ignr 00:11:22:33:44:55 \ 1788 ethertype 0x0806 fwd queue 3 1789 17902tuple_filter 1791~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1792 1793Add or delete a 2-tuple filter, 1794which identifies packets by specific protocol and destination TCP/UDP port 1795and forwards packets into one of the receive queues:: 1796 1797 2tuple_filter (port_id) (add|del) dst_port (dst_port_value) \ 1798 protocol (protocol_value) mask (mask_value) \ 1799 tcp_flags (tcp_flags_value) priority (prio_value) \ 1800 queue (queue_id) 1801 1802The available information parameters are: 1803 1804* ``port_id``: The port which the 2-tuple filter assigned on. 1805 1806* ``dst_port_value``: Destination port in L4. 1807 1808* ``protocol_value``: IP L4 protocol. 1809 1810* ``mask_value``: Participates in the match or not by bit for field above, 1b means participate. 1811 1812* ``tcp_flags_value``: TCP control bits. The non-zero value is invalid, when the pro_value is not set to 0x06 (TCP). 1813 1814* ``prio_value``: Priority of this filter. 1815 1816* ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this 2-tuple filter. 1817 1818Example, to add/remove an 2tuple filter rule:: 1819 1820 testpmd> 2tuple_filter 0 add dst_port 32 protocol 0x06 mask 0x03 \ 1821 tcp_flags 0x02 priority 3 queue 3 1822 1823 testpmd> 2tuple_filter 0 del dst_port 32 protocol 0x06 mask 0x03 \ 1824 tcp_flags 0x02 priority 3 queue 3 1825 18265tuple_filter 1827~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1828 1829Add or delete a 5-tuple filter, 1830which consists of a 5-tuple (protocol, source and destination IP addresses, source and destination TCP/UDP/SCTP port) 1831and routes packets into one of the receive queues:: 1832 1833 5tuple_filter (port_id) (add|del) dst_ip (dst_address) src_ip \ 1834 (src_address) dst_port (dst_port_value) \ 1835 src_port (src_port_value) protocol (protocol_value) \ 1836 mask (mask_value) tcp_flags (tcp_flags_value) \ 1837 priority (prio_value) queue (queue_id) 1838 1839The available information parameters are: 1840 1841* ``port_id``: The port which the 5-tuple filter assigned on. 1842 1843* ``dst_address``: Destination IP address. 1844 1845* ``src_address``: Source IP address. 1846 1847* ``dst_port_value``: TCP/UDP destination port. 1848 1849* ``src_port_value``: TCP/UDP source port. 1850 1851* ``protocol_value``: L4 protocol. 1852 1853* ``mask_value``: Participates in the match or not by bit for field above, 1b means participate 1854 1855* ``tcp_flags_value``: TCP control bits. The non-zero value is invalid, when the protocol_value is not set to 0x06 (TCP). 1856 1857* ``prio_value``: The priority of this filter. 1858 1859* ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this 5-tuple filter. 1860 1861Example, to add/remove an 5tuple filter rule:: 1862 1863 testpmd> 5tuple_filter 0 add dst_ip 2.2.2.5 src_ip 2.2.2.4 \ 1864 dst_port 64 src_port 32 protocol 0x06 mask 0x1F \ 1865 flags 0x0 priority 3 queue 3 1866 1867 testpmd> 5tuple_filter 0 del dst_ip 2.2.2.5 src_ip 2.2.2.4 \ 1868 dst_port 64 src_port 32 protocol 0x06 mask 0x1F \ 1869 flags 0x0 priority 3 queue 3 1870 1871syn_filter 1872~~~~~~~~~~ 1873 1874Using the SYN filter, TCP packets whose *SYN* flag is set can be forwarded to a separate queue:: 1875 1876 syn_filter (port_id) (add|del) priority (high|low) queue (queue_id) 1877 1878The available information parameters are: 1879 1880* ``port_id``: The port which the SYN filter assigned on. 1881 1882* ``high``: This SYN filter has higher priority than other filters. 1883 1884* ``low``: This SYN filter has lower priority than other filters. 1885 1886* ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this SYN filter 1887 1888Example:: 1889 1890 testpmd> syn_filter 0 add priority high queue 3 1891 1892flex_filter 1893~~~~~~~~~~~ 1894 1895With flex filter, packets can be recognized by any arbitrary pattern within the first 128 bytes of the packet 1896and routed into one of the receive queues:: 1897 1898 flex_filter (port_id) (add|del) len (len_value) bytes (bytes_value) \ 1899 mask (mask_value) priority (prio_value) queue (queue_id) 1900 1901The available information parameters are: 1902 1903* ``port_id``: The port which the Flex filter is assigned on. 1904 1905* ``len_value``: Filter length in bytes, no greater than 128. 1906 1907* ``bytes_value``: A string in hexadecimal, means the value the flex filter needs to match. 1908 1909* ``mask_value``: A string in hexadecimal, bit 1 means corresponding byte participates in the match. 1910 1911* ``prio_value``: The priority of this filter. 1912 1913* ``queue_id``: The receive queue associated with this Flex filter. 1914 1915Example:: 1916 1917 testpmd> flex_filter 0 add len 16 bytes 0x00000000000000000000000008060000 \ 1918 mask 000C priority 3 queue 3 1919 1920 testpmd> flex_filter 0 del len 16 bytes 0x00000000000000000000000008060000 \ 1921 mask 000C priority 3 queue 3 1922 1923 1924.. _testpmd_flow_director: 1925 1926flow_director_filter 1927~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1928 1929The Flow Director works in receive mode to identify specific flows or sets of flows and route them to specific queues. 1930 1931Four types of filtering are supported which are referred to as Perfect Match, Signature, Perfect-mac-vlan and 1932Perfect-tunnel filters, the match mode is set by the ``--pkt-filter-mode`` command-line parameter: 1933 1934* Perfect match filters. 1935 The hardware checks a match between the masked fields of the received packets and the programmed filters. 1936 The masked fields are for IP flow. 1937 1938* Signature filters. 1939 The hardware checks a match between a hash-based signature of the masked fields of the received packet. 1940 1941* Perfect-mac-vlan match filters. 1942 The hardware checks a match between the masked fields of the received packets and the programmed filters. 1943 The masked fields are for MAC VLAN flow. 1944 1945* Perfect-tunnel match filters. 1946 The hardware checks a match between the masked fields of the received packets and the programmed filters. 1947 The masked fields are for tunnel flow. 1948 1949The Flow Director filters can match the different fields for different type of packet: flow type, specific input set 1950per flow type and the flexible payload. 1951 1952The Flow Director can also mask out parts of all of these fields so that filters 1953are only applied to certain fields or parts of the fields. 1954 1955Different NICs may have different capabilities, command show port fdir (port_id) can be used to acquire the information. 1956 1957# Commands to add flow director filters of different flow types:: 1958 1959 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode IP (add|del|update) \ 1960 flow (ipv4-other|ipv4-frag|ipv6-other|ipv6-frag) \ 1961 src (src_ip_address) dst (dst_ip_address) \ 1962 tos (tos_value) proto (proto_value) ttl (ttl_value) \ 1963 vlan (vlan_value) flexbytes (flexbytes_value) \ 1964 (drop|fwd) pf|vf(vf_id) queue (queue_id) \ 1965 fd_id (fd_id_value) 1966 1967 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode IP (add|del|update) \ 1968 flow (ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp) \ 1969 src (src_ip_address) (src_port) \ 1970 dst (dst_ip_address) (dst_port) \ 1971 tos (tos_value) ttl (ttl_value) \ 1972 vlan (vlan_value) flexbytes (flexbytes_value) \ 1973 (drop|fwd) queue pf|vf(vf_id) (queue_id) \ 1974 fd_id (fd_id_value) 1975 1976 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode IP (add|del|update) \ 1977 flow (ipv4-sctp|ipv6-sctp) \ 1978 src (src_ip_address) (src_port) \ 1979 dst (dst_ip_address) (dst_port) \ 1980 tos (tos_value) ttl (ttl_value) \ 1981 tag (verification_tag) vlan (vlan_value) \ 1982 flexbytes (flexbytes_value) (drop|fwd) \ 1983 pf|vf(vf_id) queue (queue_id) fd_id (fd_id_value) 1984 1985 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode IP (add|del|update) flow l2_payload \ 1986 ether (ethertype) flexbytes (flexbytes_value) \ 1987 (drop|fwd) pf|vf(vf_id) queue (queue_id) 1988 fd_id (fd_id_value) 1989 1990 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode MAC-VLAN (add|del|update) \ 1991 mac (mac_address) vlan (vlan_value) \ 1992 flexbytes (flexbytes_value) (drop|fwd) \ 1993 queue (queue_id) fd_id (fd_id_value) 1994 1995 flow_director_filter (port_id) mode Tunnel (add|del|update) \ 1996 mac (mac_address) vlan (vlan_value) \ 1997 tunnel (NVGRE|VxLAN) tunnel-id (tunnel_id_value) \ 1998 flexbytes (flexbytes_value) (drop|fwd) \ 1999 queue (queue_id) fd_id (fd_id_value) 2000 2001For example, to add an ipv4-udp flow type filter:: 2002 2003 testpmd> flow_director_filter 0 mode IP add flow ipv4-udp src 2.2.2.3 32 \ 2004 dst 2.2.2.5 33 tos 2 ttl 40 vlan 0x1 flexbytes (0x88,0x48) \ 2005 fwd pf queue 1 fd_id 1 2006 2007For example, add an ipv4-other flow type filter:: 2008 2009 testpmd> flow_director_filter 0 mode IP add flow ipv4-other src 2.2.2.3 \ 2010 dst 2.2.2.5 tos 2 proto 20 ttl 40 vlan 0x1 \ 2011 flexbytes (0x88,0x48) fwd pf queue 1 fd_id 1 2012 2013flush_flow_director 2014~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2015 2016Flush all flow director filters on a device:: 2017 2018 testpmd> flush_flow_director (port_id) 2019 2020Example, to flush all flow director filter on port 0:: 2021 2022 testpmd> flush_flow_director 0 2023 2024flow_director_mask 2025~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2026 2027Set flow director's input masks:: 2028 2029 flow_director_mask (port_id) mode IP vlan (vlan_value) \ 2030 src_mask (ipv4_src) (ipv6_src) (src_port) \ 2031 dst_mask (ipv4_dst) (ipv6_dst) (dst_port) 2032 2033 flow_director_mask (port_id) mode MAC-VLAN vlan (vlan_value) 2034 2035 flow_director_mask (port_id) mode Tunnel vlan (vlan_value) \ 2036 mac (mac_value) tunnel-type (tunnel_type_value) \ 2037 tunnel-id (tunnel_id_value) 2038 2039Example, to set flow director mask on port 0:: 2040 2041 testpmd> flow_director_mask 0 mode IP vlan 0xefff \ 2042 src_mask 255.255.255.255 \ 2043 FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF 0xFFFF \ 2044 dst_mask 255.255.255.255 \ 2045 FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF 0xFFFF 2046 2047flow_director_flex_mask 2048~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2049 2050set masks of flow director's flexible payload based on certain flow type:: 2051 2052 testpmd> flow_director_flex_mask (port_id) \ 2053 flow (none|ipv4-other|ipv4-frag|ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp| \ 2054 ipv6-other|ipv6-frag|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp| \ 2055 l2_payload|all) (mask) 2056 2057Example, to set flow director's flex mask for all flow type on port 0:: 2058 2059 testpmd> flow_director_flex_mask 0 flow all \ 2060 (0xff,0xff,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0) 2061 2062 2063flow_director_flex_payload 2064~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2065 2066Configure flexible payload selection:: 2067 2068 flow_director_flex_payload (port_id) (raw|l2|l3|l4) (config) 2069 2070For example, to select the first 16 bytes from the offset 4 (bytes) of packet's payload as flexible payload:: 2071 2072 testpmd> flow_director_flex_payload 0 l4 \ 2073 (4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19) 2074 2075get_sym_hash_ena_per_port 2076~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2077 2078Get symmetric hash enable configuration per port:: 2079 2080 get_sym_hash_ena_per_port (port_id) 2081 2082For example, to get symmetric hash enable configuration of port 1:: 2083 2084 testpmd> get_sym_hash_ena_per_port 1 2085 2086set_sym_hash_ena_per_port 2087~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2088 2089Set symmetric hash enable configuration per port to enable or disable:: 2090 2091 set_sym_hash_ena_per_port (port_id) (enable|disable) 2092 2093For example, to set symmetric hash enable configuration of port 1 to enable:: 2094 2095 testpmd> set_sym_hash_ena_per_port 1 enable 2096 2097get_hash_global_config 2098~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2099 2100Get the global configurations of hash filters:: 2101 2102 get_hash_global_config (port_id) 2103 2104For example, to get the global configurations of hash filters of port 1:: 2105 2106 testpmd> get_hash_global_config 1 2107 2108set_hash_global_config 2109~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2110 2111Set the global configurations of hash filters:: 2112 2113 set_hash_global_config (port_id) (toeplitz|simple_xor|default) \ 2114 (ipv4|ipv4-frag|ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp|ipv4-other|ipv6|ipv6-frag| \ 2115 ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp|ipv6-other|l2_payload) \ 2116 (enable|disable) 2117 2118For example, to enable simple_xor for flow type of ipv6 on port 2:: 2119 2120 testpmd> set_hash_global_config 2 simple_xor ipv6 enable 2121 2122set_hash_input_set 2123~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2124 2125Set the input set for hash:: 2126 2127 set_hash_input_set (port_id) (ipv4-frag|ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp| \ 2128 ipv4-other|ipv6-frag|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp|ipv6-other| \ 2129 l2_payload) (ovlan|ivlan|src-ipv4|dst-ipv4|src-ipv6|dst-ipv6|ipv4-tos| \ 2130 ipv4-proto|ipv6-tc|ipv6-next-header|udp-src-port|udp-dst-port| \ 2131 tcp-src-port|tcp-dst-port|sctp-src-port|sctp-dst-port|sctp-veri-tag| \ 2132 udp-key|gre-key|fld-1st|fld-2nd|fld-3rd|fld-4th|fld-5th|fld-6th|fld-7th| \ 2133 fld-8th|none) (select|add) 2134 2135For example, to add source IP to hash input set for flow type of ipv4-udp on port 0:: 2136 2137 testpmd> set_hash_input_set 0 ipv4-udp src-ipv4 add 2138 2139set_fdir_input_set 2140~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2141 2142The Flow Director filters can match the different fields for different type of packet, i.e. specific input set 2143on per flow type and the flexible payload. This command can be used to change input set for each flow type. 2144 2145Set the input set for flow director:: 2146 2147 set_fdir_input_set (port_id) (ipv4-frag|ipv4-tcp|ipv4-udp|ipv4-sctp| \ 2148 ipv4-other|ipv6|ipv6-frag|ipv6-tcp|ipv6-udp|ipv6-sctp|ipv6-other| \ 2149 l2_payload) (ivlan|ethertype|src-ipv4|dst-ipv4|src-ipv6|dst-ipv6|ipv4-tos| \ 2150 ipv4-proto|ipv4-ttl|ipv6-tc|ipv6-next-header|ipv6-hop-limits| \ 2151 tudp-src-port|udp-dst-port|cp-src-port|tcp-dst-port|sctp-src-port| \ 2152 sctp-dst-port|sctp-veri-tag|none) (select|add) 2153 2154For example to add source IP to FD input set for flow type of ipv4-udp on port 0:: 2155 2156 testpmd> set_fdir_input_set 0 ipv4-udp src-ipv4 add 2157 2158global_config 2159~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2160 2161Set different GRE key length for input set:: 2162 2163 global_config (port_id) gre-key-len (number in bytes) 2164 2165For example to set GRE key length for input set to 4 bytes on port 0:: 2166 2167 testpmd> global_config 0 gre-key-len 4 2168 2169 2170.. _testpmd_rte_flow: 2171 2172Flow rules management 2173--------------------- 2174 2175Control of the generic flow API (*rte_flow*) is fully exposed through the 2176``flow`` command (validation, creation, destruction and queries). 2177 2178Considering *rte_flow* overlaps with all `Filter Functions`_, using both 2179features simultaneously may cause undefined side-effects and is therefore 2180not recommended. 2181 2182``flow`` syntax 2183~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2184 2185Because the ``flow`` command uses dynamic tokens to handle the large number 2186of possible flow rules combinations, its behavior differs slightly from 2187other commands, in particular: 2188 2189- Pressing *?* or the *<tab>* key displays contextual help for the current 2190 token, not that of the entire command. 2191 2192- Optional and repeated parameters are supported (provided they are listed 2193 in the contextual help). 2194 2195The first parameter stands for the operation mode. Possible operations and 2196their general syntax are described below. They are covered in detail in the 2197following sections. 2198 2199- Check whether a flow rule can be created:: 2200 2201 flow validate {port_id} 2202 [group {group_id}] [priority {level}] [ingress] [egress] 2203 pattern {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end 2204 actions {action} [/ {action} [...]] / end 2205 2206- Create a flow rule:: 2207 2208 flow create {port_id} 2209 [group {group_id}] [priority {level}] [ingress] [egress] 2210 pattern {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end 2211 actions {action} [/ {action} [...]] / end 2212 2213- Destroy specific flow rules:: 2214 2215 flow destroy {port_id} rule {rule_id} [...] 2216 2217- Destroy all flow rules:: 2218 2219 flow flush {port_id} 2220 2221- Query an existing flow rule:: 2222 2223 flow query {port_id} {rule_id} {action} 2224 2225- List existing flow rules sorted by priority, filtered by group 2226 identifiers:: 2227 2228 flow list {port_id} [group {group_id}] [...] 2229 2230Validating flow rules 2231~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2232 2233``flow validate`` reports whether a flow rule would be accepted by the 2234underlying device in its current state but stops short of creating it. It is 2235bound to ``rte_flow_validate()``:: 2236 2237 flow validate {port_id} 2238 [group {group_id}] [priority {level}] [ingress] [egress] 2239 pattern {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end 2240 actions {action} [/ {action} [...]] / end 2241 2242If successful, it will show:: 2243 2244 Flow rule validated 2245 2246Otherwise it will show an error message of the form:: 2247 2248 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...] 2249 2250This command uses the same parameters as ``flow create``, their format is 2251described in `Creating flow rules`_. 2252 2253Check whether redirecting any Ethernet packet received on port 0 to RX queue 2254index 6 is supported:: 2255 2256 testpmd> flow validate 0 ingress pattern eth / end 2257 actions queue index 6 / end 2258 Flow rule validated 2259 testpmd> 2260 2261Port 0 does not support TCPv6 rules:: 2262 2263 testpmd> flow validate 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / tcp / end 2264 actions drop / end 2265 Caught error type 9 (specific pattern item): Invalid argument 2266 testpmd> 2267 2268Creating flow rules 2269~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2270 2271``flow create`` validates and creates the specified flow rule. It is bound 2272to ``rte_flow_create()``:: 2273 2274 flow create {port_id} 2275 [group {group_id}] [priority {level}] [ingress] [egress] 2276 pattern {item} [/ {item} [...]] / end 2277 actions {action} [/ {action} [...]] / end 2278 2279If successful, it will return a flow rule ID usable with other commands:: 2280 2281 Flow rule #[...] created 2282 2283Otherwise it will show an error message of the form:: 2284 2285 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...] 2286 2287Parameters describe in the following order: 2288 2289- Attributes (*group*, *priority*, *ingress*, *egress* tokens). 2290- A matching pattern, starting with the *pattern* token and terminated by an 2291 *end* pattern item. 2292- Actions, starting with the *actions* token and terminated by an *end* 2293 action. 2294 2295These translate directly to *rte_flow* objects provided as-is to the 2296underlying functions. 2297 2298The shortest valid definition only comprises mandatory tokens:: 2299 2300 testpmd> flow create 0 pattern end actions end 2301 2302Note that PMDs may refuse rules that essentially do nothing such as this 2303one. 2304 2305**All unspecified object values are automatically initialized to 0.** 2306 2307Attributes 2308^^^^^^^^^^ 2309 2310These tokens affect flow rule attributes (``struct rte_flow_attr``) and are 2311specified before the ``pattern`` token. 2312 2313- ``group {group id}``: priority group. 2314- ``priority {level}``: priority level within group. 2315- ``ingress``: rule applies to ingress traffic. 2316- ``egress``: rule applies to egress traffic. 2317 2318Each instance of an attribute specified several times overrides the previous 2319value as shown below (group 4 is used):: 2320 2321 testpmd> flow create 0 group 42 group 24 group 4 [...] 2322 2323Note that once enabled, ``ingress`` and ``egress`` cannot be disabled. 2324 2325While not specifying a direction is an error, some rules may allow both 2326simultaneously. 2327 2328Most rules affect RX therefore contain the ``ingress`` token:: 2329 2330 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern [...] 2331 2332Matching pattern 2333^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 2334 2335A matching pattern starts after the ``pattern`` token. It is made of pattern 2336items and is terminated by a mandatory ``end`` item. 2337 2338Items are named after their type (*RTE_FLOW_ITEM_TYPE_* from ``enum 2339rte_flow_item_type``). 2340 2341The ``/`` token is used as a separator between pattern items as shown 2342below:: 2343 2344 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end [...] 2345 2346Note that protocol items like these must be stacked from lowest to highest 2347layer to make sense. For instance, the following rule is either invalid or 2348unlikely to match any packet:: 2349 2350 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / udp / ipv4 / end [...] 2351 2352More information on these restrictions can be found in the *rte_flow* 2353documentation. 2354 2355Several items support additional specification structures, for example 2356``ipv4`` allows specifying source and destination addresses as follows:: 2357 2358 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 2359 dst is 10.2.0.0 / end [...] 2360 2361This rule matches all IPv4 traffic with the specified properties. 2362 2363In this example, ``src`` and ``dst`` are field names of the underlying 2364``struct rte_flow_item_ipv4`` object. All item properties can be specified 2365in a similar fashion. 2366 2367The ``is`` token means that the subsequent value must be matched exactly, 2368and assigns ``spec`` and ``mask`` fields in ``struct rte_flow_item`` 2369accordingly. Possible assignment tokens are: 2370 2371- ``is``: match value perfectly (with full bit-mask). 2372- ``spec``: match value according to configured bit-mask. 2373- ``last``: specify upper bound to establish a range. 2374- ``mask``: specify bit-mask with relevant bits set to one. 2375- ``prefix``: generate bit-mask from a prefix length. 2376 2377These yield identical results:: 2378 2379 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 2380 2381:: 2382 2383 ipv4 src spec 10.1.1.1 src mask 255.255.255.255 2384 2385:: 2386 2387 ipv4 src spec 10.1.1.1 src prefix 32 2388 2389:: 2390 2391 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src last 10.1.1.1 # range with a single value 2392 2393:: 2394 2395 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src last 0 # 0 disables range 2396 2397Inclusive ranges can be defined with ``last``:: 2398 2399 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src last 10.2.3.4 # 10.1.1.1 to 10.2.3.4 2400 2401Note that ``mask`` affects both ``spec`` and ``last``:: 2402 2403 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src last 10.2.3.4 src mask 255.255.0.0 2404 # matches 10.1.0.0 to 10.2.255.255 2405 2406Properties can be modified multiple times:: 2407 2408 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src is 10.1.2.3 src is 10.2.3.4 # matches 10.2.3.4 2409 2410:: 2411 2412 ipv4 src is 10.1.1.1 src prefix 24 src prefix 16 # matches 10.1.0.0/16 2413 2414Pattern items 2415^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 2416 2417This section lists supported pattern items and their attributes, if any. 2418 2419- ``end``: end list of pattern items. 2420 2421- ``void``: no-op pattern item. 2422 2423- ``invert``: perform actions when pattern does not match. 2424 2425- ``any``: match any protocol for the current layer. 2426 2427 - ``num {unsigned}``: number of layers covered. 2428 2429- ``pf``: match packets addressed to the physical function. 2430 2431- ``vf``: match packets addressed to a virtual function ID. 2432 2433 - ``id {unsigned}``: destination VF ID. 2434 2435- ``port``: device-specific physical port index to use. 2436 2437 - ``index {unsigned}``: physical port index. 2438 2439- ``raw``: match an arbitrary byte string. 2440 2441 - ``relative {boolean}``: look for pattern after the previous item. 2442 - ``search {boolean}``: search pattern from offset (see also limit). 2443 - ``offset {integer}``: absolute or relative offset for pattern. 2444 - ``limit {unsigned}``: search area limit for start of pattern. 2445 - ``pattern {string}``: byte string to look for. 2446 2447- ``eth``: match Ethernet header. 2448 2449 - ``dst {MAC-48}``: destination MAC. 2450 - ``src {MAC-48}``: source MAC. 2451 - ``type {unsigned}``: EtherType. 2452 2453- ``vlan``: match 802.1Q/ad VLAN tag. 2454 2455 - ``tpid {unsigned}``: tag protocol identifier. 2456 - ``tci {unsigned}``: tag control information. 2457 - ``pcp {unsigned}``: priority code point. 2458 - ``dei {unsigned}``: drop eligible indicator. 2459 - ``vid {unsigned}``: VLAN identifier. 2460 2461- ``ipv4``: match IPv4 header. 2462 2463 - ``tos {unsigned}``: type of service. 2464 - ``ttl {unsigned}``: time to live. 2465 - ``proto {unsigned}``: next protocol ID. 2466 - ``src {ipv4 address}``: source address. 2467 - ``dst {ipv4 address}``: destination address. 2468 2469- ``ipv6``: match IPv6 header. 2470 2471 - ``tc {unsigned}``: traffic class. 2472 - ``flow {unsigned}``: flow label. 2473 - ``proto {unsigned}``: protocol (next header). 2474 - ``hop {unsigned}``: hop limit. 2475 - ``src {ipv6 address}``: source address. 2476 - ``dst {ipv6 address}``: destination address. 2477 2478- ``icmp``: match ICMP header. 2479 2480 - ``type {unsigned}``: ICMP packet type. 2481 - ``code {unsigned}``: ICMP packet code. 2482 2483- ``udp``: match UDP header. 2484 2485 - ``src {unsigned}``: UDP source port. 2486 - ``dst {unsigned}``: UDP destination port. 2487 2488- ``tcp``: match TCP header. 2489 2490 - ``src {unsigned}``: TCP source port. 2491 - ``dst {unsigned}``: TCP destination port. 2492 2493- ``sctp``: match SCTP header. 2494 2495 - ``src {unsigned}``: SCTP source port. 2496 - ``dst {unsigned}``: SCTP destination port. 2497 - ``tag {unsigned}``: validation tag. 2498 - ``cksum {unsigned}``: checksum. 2499 2500- ``vxlan``: match VXLAN header. 2501 2502 - ``vni {unsigned}``: VXLAN identifier. 2503 2504- ``mpls``: match MPLS header. 2505 2506 - ``label {unsigned}``: MPLS label. 2507 2508- ``gre``: match GRE header. 2509 2510 - ``protocol {unsigned}``: protocol type. 2511 2512Actions list 2513^^^^^^^^^^^^ 2514 2515A list of actions starts after the ``actions`` token in the same fashion as 2516`Matching pattern`_; actions are separated by ``/`` tokens and the list is 2517terminated by a mandatory ``end`` action. 2518 2519Actions are named after their type (*RTE_FLOW_ACTION_TYPE_* from ``enum 2520rte_flow_action_type``). 2521 2522Dropping all incoming UDPv4 packets can be expressed as follows:: 2523 2524 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end 2525 actions drop / end 2526 2527Several actions have configurable properties which must be specified when 2528there is no valid default value. For example, ``queue`` requires a target 2529queue index. 2530 2531This rule redirects incoming UDPv4 traffic to queue index 6:: 2532 2533 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end 2534 actions queue index 6 / end 2535 2536While this one could be rejected by PMDs (unspecified queue index):: 2537 2538 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end 2539 actions queue / end 2540 2541As defined by *rte_flow*, the list is not ordered, all actions of a given 2542rule are performed simultaneously. These are equivalent:: 2543 2544 queue index 6 / void / mark id 42 / end 2545 2546:: 2547 2548 void / mark id 42 / queue index 6 / end 2549 2550All actions in a list should have different types, otherwise only the last 2551action of a given type is taken into account:: 2552 2553 queue index 4 / queue index 5 / queue index 6 / end # will use queue 6 2554 2555:: 2556 2557 drop / drop / drop / end # drop is performed only once 2558 2559:: 2560 2561 mark id 42 / queue index 3 / mark id 24 / end # mark will be 24 2562 2563Considering they are performed simultaneously, opposite and overlapping 2564actions can sometimes be combined when the end result is unambiguous:: 2565 2566 drop / queue index 6 / end # drop has no effect 2567 2568:: 2569 2570 drop / dup index 6 / end # same as above 2571 2572:: 2573 2574 queue index 6 / rss queues 6 7 8 / end # queue has no effect 2575 2576:: 2577 2578 drop / passthru / end # drop has no effect 2579 2580Note that PMDs may still refuse such combinations. 2581 2582Actions 2583^^^^^^^ 2584 2585This section lists supported actions and their attributes, if any. 2586 2587- ``end``: end list of actions. 2588 2589- ``void``: no-op action. 2590 2591- ``passthru``: let subsequent rule process matched packets. 2592 2593- ``mark``: attach 32 bit value to packets. 2594 2595 - ``id {unsigned}``: 32 bit value to return with packets. 2596 2597- ``flag``: flag packets. 2598 2599- ``queue``: assign packets to a given queue index. 2600 2601 - ``index {unsigned}``: queue index to use. 2602 2603- ``drop``: drop packets (note: passthru has priority). 2604 2605- ``count``: enable counters for this rule. 2606 2607- ``dup``: duplicate packets to a given queue index. 2608 2609 - ``index {unsigned}``: queue index to duplicate packets to. 2610 2611- ``rss``: spread packets among several queues. 2612 2613 - ``queues [{unsigned} [...]] end``: queue indices to use. 2614 2615- ``pf``: redirect packets to physical device function. 2616 2617- ``vf``: redirect packets to virtual device function. 2618 2619 - ``original {boolean}``: use original VF ID if possible. 2620 - ``id {unsigned}``: VF ID to redirect packets to. 2621 2622Destroying flow rules 2623~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2624 2625``flow destroy`` destroys one or more rules from their rule ID (as returned 2626by ``flow create``), this command calls ``rte_flow_destroy()`` as many 2627times as necessary:: 2628 2629 flow destroy {port_id} rule {rule_id} [...] 2630 2631If successful, it will show:: 2632 2633 Flow rule #[...] destroyed 2634 2635It does not report anything for rule IDs that do not exist. The usual error 2636message is shown when a rule cannot be destroyed:: 2637 2638 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...] 2639 2640``flow flush`` destroys all rules on a device and does not take extra 2641arguments. It is bound to ``rte_flow_flush()``:: 2642 2643 flow flush {port_id} 2644 2645Any errors are reported as above. 2646 2647Creating several rules and destroying them:: 2648 2649 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / end 2650 actions queue index 2 / end 2651 Flow rule #0 created 2652 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / end 2653 actions queue index 3 / end 2654 Flow rule #1 created 2655 testpmd> flow destroy 0 rule 0 rule 1 2656 Flow rule #1 destroyed 2657 Flow rule #0 destroyed 2658 testpmd> 2659 2660The same result can be achieved using ``flow flush``:: 2661 2662 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / end 2663 actions queue index 2 / end 2664 Flow rule #0 created 2665 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / end 2666 actions queue index 3 / end 2667 Flow rule #1 created 2668 testpmd> flow flush 0 2669 testpmd> 2670 2671Non-existent rule IDs are ignored:: 2672 2673 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / end 2674 actions queue index 2 / end 2675 Flow rule #0 created 2676 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / end 2677 actions queue index 3 / end 2678 Flow rule #1 created 2679 testpmd> flow destroy 0 rule 42 rule 10 rule 2 2680 testpmd> 2681 testpmd> flow destroy 0 rule 0 2682 Flow rule #0 destroyed 2683 testpmd> 2684 2685Querying flow rules 2686~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2687 2688``flow query`` queries a specific action of a flow rule having that 2689ability. Such actions collect information that can be reported using this 2690command. It is bound to ``rte_flow_query()``:: 2691 2692 flow query {port_id} {rule_id} {action} 2693 2694If successful, it will display either the retrieved data for known actions 2695or the following message:: 2696 2697 Cannot display result for action type [...] ([...]) 2698 2699Otherwise, it will complain either that the rule does not exist or that some 2700error occurred:: 2701 2702 Flow rule #[...] not found 2703 2704:: 2705 2706 Caught error type [...] ([...]): [...] 2707 2708Currently only the ``count`` action is supported. This action reports the 2709number of packets that hit the flow rule and the total number of bytes. Its 2710output has the following format:: 2711 2712 count: 2713 hits_set: [...] # whether "hits" contains a valid value 2714 bytes_set: [...] # whether "bytes" contains a valid value 2715 hits: [...] # number of packets 2716 bytes: [...] # number of bytes 2717 2718Querying counters for TCPv6 packets redirected to queue 6:: 2719 2720 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / tcp / end 2721 actions queue index 6 / count / end 2722 Flow rule #4 created 2723 testpmd> flow query 0 4 count 2724 count: 2725 hits_set: 1 2726 bytes_set: 0 2727 hits: 386446 2728 bytes: 0 2729 testpmd> 2730 2731Listing flow rules 2732~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2733 2734``flow list`` lists existing flow rules sorted by priority and optionally 2735filtered by group identifiers:: 2736 2737 flow list {port_id} [group {group_id}] [...] 2738 2739This command only fails with the following message if the device does not 2740exist:: 2741 2742 Invalid port [...] 2743 2744Output consists of a header line followed by a short description of each 2745flow rule, one per line. There is no output at all when no flow rules are 2746configured on the device:: 2747 2748 ID Group Prio Attr Rule 2749 [...] [...] [...] [...] [...] 2750 2751``Attr`` column flags: 2752 2753- ``i`` for ``ingress``. 2754- ``e`` for ``egress``. 2755 2756Creating several flow rules and listing them:: 2757 2758 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / end 2759 actions queue index 6 / end 2760 Flow rule #0 created 2761 testpmd> flow create 0 ingress pattern eth / ipv6 / end 2762 actions queue index 2 / end 2763 Flow rule #1 created 2764 testpmd> flow create 0 priority 5 ingress pattern eth / ipv4 / udp / end 2765 actions rss queues 6 7 8 end / end 2766 Flow rule #2 created 2767 testpmd> flow list 0 2768 ID Group Prio Attr Rule 2769 0 0 0 i- ETH IPV4 => QUEUE 2770 1 0 0 i- ETH IPV6 => QUEUE 2771 2 0 5 i- ETH IPV4 UDP => RSS 2772 testpmd> 2773 2774Rules are sorted by priority (i.e. group ID first, then priority level):: 2775 2776 testpmd> flow list 1 2777 ID Group Prio Attr Rule 2778 0 0 0 i- ETH => COUNT 2779 6 0 500 i- ETH IPV6 TCP => DROP COUNT 2780 5 0 1000 i- ETH IPV6 ICMP => QUEUE 2781 1 24 0 i- ETH IPV4 UDP => QUEUE 2782 4 24 10 i- ETH IPV4 TCP => DROP 2783 3 24 20 i- ETH IPV4 => DROP 2784 2 24 42 i- ETH IPV4 UDP => QUEUE 2785 7 63 0 i- ETH IPV6 UDP VXLAN => MARK QUEUE 2786 testpmd> 2787 2788Output can be limited to specific groups:: 2789 2790 testpmd> flow list 1 group 0 group 63 2791 ID Group Prio Attr Rule 2792 0 0 0 i- ETH => COUNT 2793 6 0 500 i- ETH IPV6 TCP => DROP COUNT 2794 5 0 1000 i- ETH IPV6 ICMP => QUEUE 2795 7 63 0 i- ETH IPV6 UDP VXLAN => MARK QUEUE 2796 testpmd> 2797