DPDK
24.07.0
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#include <rte_compat.h>
#include <rte_common.h>
#include <rte_dev.h>
#include <rte_mbuf.h>
#include "rte_regexdev_core.h"
Go to the source code of this file.
Data Structures | |
struct | rte_regexdev_info |
struct | rte_regexdev_config |
struct | rte_regexdev_qp_conf |
struct | rte_regexdev_rule |
struct | rte_regexdev_xstats_map |
struct | rte_regexdev_match |
struct | rte_regex_ops |
Typedefs | |
typedef void(* | regexdev_stop_flush_t) (uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id, struct rte_regex_ops *op) |
Functions | |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_is_valid_dev (uint16_t dev_id) |
__rte_experimental uint8_t | rte_regexdev_count (void) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_get_dev_id (const char *name) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_info_get (uint8_t dev_id, struct rte_regexdev_info *dev_info) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_configure (uint8_t dev_id, const struct rte_regexdev_config *cfg) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_queue_pair_setup (uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t queue_pair_id, const struct rte_regexdev_qp_conf *qp_conf) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_start (uint8_t dev_id) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_stop (uint8_t dev_id) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_close (uint8_t dev_id) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_attr_get (uint8_t dev_id, enum rte_regexdev_attr_id attr_id, void *attr_value) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_attr_set (uint8_t dev_id, enum rte_regexdev_attr_id attr_id, const void *attr_value) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_rule_db_update (uint8_t dev_id, const struct rte_regexdev_rule *rules, uint32_t nb_rules) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_rule_db_compile_activate (uint8_t dev_id) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_rule_db_import (uint8_t dev_id, const char *rule_db, uint32_t rule_db_len) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_rule_db_export (uint8_t dev_id, char *rule_db) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_xstats_names_get (uint8_t dev_id, struct rte_regexdev_xstats_map *xstats_map) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_xstats_get (uint8_t dev_id, const uint16_t *ids, uint64_t *values, uint16_t nb_values) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_xstats_by_name_get (uint8_t dev_id, const char *name, uint16_t *id, uint64_t *value) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_xstats_reset (uint8_t dev_id, const uint16_t *ids, uint16_t nb_ids) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_selftest (uint8_t dev_id) |
__rte_experimental int | rte_regexdev_dump (uint8_t dev_id, FILE *f) |
static __rte_experimental uint16_t | rte_regexdev_enqueue_burst (uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id, struct rte_regex_ops **ops, uint16_t nb_ops) |
static __rte_experimental uint16_t | rte_regexdev_dequeue_burst (uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id, struct rte_regex_ops **ops, uint16_t nb_ops) |
RTE RegEx Device API
Defines RTE RegEx Device APIs for RegEx operations and its provisioning.
The RegEx Device API is composed of two parts:
RegEx device components and definitions:
+-----------------+ | | | o---------+ rte_regexdev_[en|de]queue_burst() | PCRE based o------+ | | | RegEx pattern | | | +--------+ | | matching engine o------+--+--o | | +------+ | | | | | queue |<==o===>|Core 0| | o----+ | | | pair 0 | | | | | | | | +--------+ +------+ +-----------------+ | | | ^ | | | +--------+ | | | | | | +------+ | | +--+--o queue |<======>|Core 1| Rule|Database | | | pair 1 | | | +------+----------+ | | +--------+ +------+ | Group 0 | | | | +-------------+ | | | +--------+ +------+ | | Rules 0..n | | | | | | |Core 2| | +-------------+ | | +--o queue |<======>| | | Group 1 | | | pair 2 | +------+ | +-------------+ | | +--------+ | | Rules 0..n | | | | +-------------+ | | +--------+ | Group 2 | | | | +------+ | +-------------+ | | | queue |<======>|Core n| | | Rules 0..n | | +-------o pair n | | | | +-------------+ | +--------+ +------+ | Group n | | +-------------+ |<-------rte_regexdev_rule_db_update() | | | |<-------rte_regexdev_rule_db_compile_activate() | | Rules 0..n | |<-------rte_regexdev_rule_db_import() | +-------------+ |------->rte_regexdev_rule_db_export() +-----------------+
RegEx: A regular expression is a concise and flexible means for matching strings of text, such as particular characters, words, or patterns of characters. A common abbreviation for this is “RegEx”.
RegEx device: A hardware or software-based implementation of RegEx device API for PCRE based pattern matching syntax and semantics.
PCRE RegEx syntax and semantics specification: http://regexkit.sourceforge.net/Documentation/pcre/pcrepattern.html
RegEx queue pair: Each RegEx device should have one or more queue pair to transmit a burst of pattern matching request and receive a burst of receive the pattern matching response. The pattern matching request/response embedded in rte_regex_ops structure.
Rule: A pattern matching rule expressed in PCRE RegEx syntax along with Match ID and Group ID to identify the rule upon the match.
Rule database: The RegEx device accepts regular expressions and converts them into a compiled rule database that can then be used to scan data. Compilation allows the device to analyze the given pattern(s) and pre-determine how to scan for these patterns in an optimized fashion that would be far too expensive to compute at run-time. A rule database contains a set of rules that compiled in device specific binary form.
Match ID or Rule ID: A unique identifier provided at the time of rule creation for the application to identify the rule upon match.
Group ID: Group of rules can be grouped under one group ID to enable rule isolation and effective pattern matching. A unique group identifier provided at the time of rule creation for the application to identify the rule upon match.
Scan: A pattern matching request through enqueue API.
It may possible that a given RegEx device may not support all the features of PCRE. The application may probe unsupported features through struct rte_regexdev_info::pcre_unsup_flags
By default, all the functions of the RegEx Device API exported by a PMD are lock-free functions which assume to not be invoked in parallel on different logical cores to work on the same target object. For instance, the dequeue function of a PMD cannot be invoked in parallel on two logical cores to operates on same RegEx queue pair. Of course, this function can be invoked in parallel by different logical core on different queue pair. It is the responsibility of the upper level application to enforce this rule.
In all functions of the RegEx API, the RegEx device is designated by an integer >= 0 named the device identifier dev_id
At the RegEx driver level, RegEx devices are represented by a generic data structure of type rte_regexdev.
RegEx devices are dynamically registered during the PCI/SoC device probing phase performed at EAL initialization time. When a RegEx device is being probed, a rte_regexdev structure and a new device identifier are allocated for that device. Then, the regexdev_init() function supplied by the RegEx driver matching the probed device is invoked to properly initialize the device.
The role of the device init function consists of resetting the hardware or software RegEx driver implementations.
If the device init operation is successful, the correspondence between the device identifier assigned to the new device and its associated rte_regexdev structure is effectively registered. Otherwise, both the rte_regexdev structure and the device identifier are freed.
The functions exported by the application RegEx API to setup a device designated by its device identifier must be invoked in the following order:
Then, the application can invoke, in any order, the functions exported by the RegEx API to enqueue pattern matching job, dequeue pattern matching response, get the stats, update the rule database, get/set device attributes and so on
If the application wants to change the configuration (i.e. call rte_regexdev_configure() or rte_regexdev_queue_pair_setup()), it must call rte_regexdev_stop() first to stop the device and then do the reconfiguration before calling rte_regexdev_start() again. The enqueue and dequeue functions should not be invoked when the device is stopped.
Finally, an application can close a RegEx device by invoking the rte_regexdev_close() function.
Each function of the application RegEx API invokes a specific function of the PMD that controls the target device designated by its device identifier.
For this purpose, all device-specific functions of a RegEx driver are supplied through a set of pointers contained in a generic structure of type regexdev_ops. The address of the regexdev_ops structure is stored in the rte_regexdev structure by the device init function of the RegEx driver, which is invoked during the PCI/SoC device probing phase, as explained earlier.
In other words, each function of the RegEx API simply retrieves the rte_regexdev structure associated with the device identifier and performs an indirect invocation of the corresponding driver function supplied in the regexdev_ops structure of the rte_regexdev structure.
For performance reasons, the address of the fast-path functions of the RegEx driver is not contained in the regexdev_ops structure. Instead, they are directly stored at the beginning of the rte_regexdev structure to avoid an extra indirect memory access during their invocation.
RTE RegEx device drivers do not use interrupts for enqueue or dequeue operation. Instead, RegEx drivers export Poll-Mode enqueue and dequeue functions to applications.
The enqueue operation submits a burst of RegEx pattern matching request to the RegEx device and the dequeue operation gets a burst of pattern matching response for the ones submitted through enqueue operation.
Typical application utilisation of the RegEx device API will follow the following programming flow.
Definition in file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_CAPA_RUNTIME_COMPILATION_F (1ULL << 0) |
RegEx device does support compiling the rules at runtime unlike loading only the pre-built rule database using struct rte_regexdev_config::rule_db in rte_regexdev_configure()
Definition at line 277 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_CAPA_SUPP_PCRE_START_ANCHOR_F (1ULL << 1) |
RegEx device support PCRE Anchor to start of match flag. Example RegEx is /\Gfoo\d/
. Here \G
asserts position at the end of the previous match or the start of the string for the first match. This position will change each time the RegEx is applied to the subject string. If the RegEx is applied to foo1foo2Zfoo3
the first two matches will be successful for foo1foo2
and fail for Zfoo3
.
Definition at line 286 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_CAPA_SUPP_PCRE_ATOMIC_GROUPING_F (1ULL << 2) |
RegEx device support PCRE Atomic grouping. Atomic groups are represented by (?>)
. An atomic group is a group that, when the RegEx engine exits from it, automatically throws away all backtracking positions remembered by any tokens inside the group. Example RegEx is a(?>bc|b)c
if the given patterns are abc
and abcc
then a(bc|b)c
matches both where as a(?>bc|b)c
matches only abcc because atomic groups don't allow backtracking back to b
.
Definition at line 297 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_BACKTRACKING_CTRL_F (1ULL << 3) |
RegEx device support PCRE backtracking control verbs. Some examples of backtracking verbs are (*COMMIT), (*ACCEPT), (*FAIL), (*SKIP), (*PRUNE).
Definition at line 309 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_CALLOUTS_F (1ULL << 4) |
RegEx device support PCRE callouts. PCRE supports calling external function in between matches by using (?C)
. Example RegEx ABC(?C)D
if a given patter is ABCD
then the RegEx engine will parse ABC perform a userdefined callout and return a successful match at D.
Definition at line 317 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_BACKREFERENCE_F (1ULL << 5) |
RegEx device support PCRE backreference. Example RegEx is (\2ABC|(GHI))+
\2
matches the same text as most recently matched by the 2nd capturing group i.e. GHI
.
Definition at line 327 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_GREEDY_F (1ULL << 6) |
RegEx device support PCRE Greedy mode. For example if the RegEx is AB\d*?
then *?
represents zero or unlimited matches. In greedy mode the pattern AB12345
will be matched completely where as the ungreedy mode AB
will be returned as the match.
Definition at line 335 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_MATCH_ALL_F (1ULL << 7) |
RegEx device support match all mode. For example if the RegEx is AB\d*?
then *?
represents zero or unlimited matches. In match all mode the pattern AB12345
will return 6 matches. AB, AB1, AB12, AB123, AB1234, AB12345.
Definition at line 344 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_LOOKAROUND_ASRT_F (1ULL << 8) |
RegEx device support PCRE Lookaround assertions (Zero-width assertions). Example RegEx is [a-z]+\d+(?=!{3,})
if the given pattern is dwad1234!
the RegEx engine doesn't report any matches because the assert (?=!{3,})
fails. The pattern dwad123!!!
would return a successful match.
Definition at line 353 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_MATCH_POINT_RST_F (1ULL << 9) |
RegEx device doesn't support PCRE match point reset directive. Example RegEx is [a-z]+\K\d+
if the pattern is dwad123
then even though the entire pattern matches only 123
is reported as a match.
Definition at line 363 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_NEWLINE_CONVENTIONS_F (1ULL << 10) |
RegEx support PCRE newline convention. Newline conventions are represented as follows: (*CR) carriage return (*LF) linefeed (*CRLF) carriage return, followed by linefeed (*ANYCRLF) any of the three above (*ANY) all Unicode newline sequences
Definition at line 372 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_NEWLINE_SEQ_F (1ULL << 11) |
RegEx device support PCRE newline sequence. The escape sequence \R
will match any newline sequence. It is equivalent to: (?>\r\n|\n|\x0b|\f|\r|\x85)
.
Definition at line 384 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_POSSESSIVE_QUALIFIERS_F (1ULL << 12) |
RegEx device support PCRE possessive qualifiers. Example RegEx possessive qualifiers *+
, ++
, ?+
, {m,n}+
. Possessive quantifier repeats the token as many times as possible and it does not give up matches as the engine backtracks. With a possessive quantifier, the deal is all or nothing.
Definition at line 392 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_SUBROUTINE_REFERENCES_F (1ULL << 13) |
RegEx device support PCRE Subroutine references. PCRE Subroutine references allow for sub patterns to be assessed as part of the RegEx. Example RegEx is (foo|fuzz)\g<1>+bar
matches the pattern foofoofuzzfoofuzzbar
.
Definition at line 402 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_UTF_8_F (1ULL << 14) |
RegEx device support UTF-8 character encoding.
Definition at line 411 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_UTF_16_F (1ULL << 15) |
RegEx device support UTF-16 character encoding.
Definition at line 417 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_UTF_32_F (1ULL << 16) |
RegEx device support UTF-32 character encoding.
Definition at line 423 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_WORD_BOUNDARY_F (1ULL << 17) |
RegEx device support word boundaries. The meta character \b
represents word boundary anchor.
Definition at line 429 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_PCRE_FORWARD_REFERENCES_F (1ULL << 18) |
RegEx device support Forward references. Forward references allow you to use a back reference to a group that appears later in the RegEx. Example RegEx is (\3ABC|(DEF|(GHI)))+
matches the following string GHIGHIABCDEF
.
Definition at line 436 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_MATCH_AS_END_F (1ULL << 19) |
RegEx device support match as end. Match as end means that the match result holds the end offset of the detected match. No len value is set. If the device doesn't support this feature it means the match result holds the starting position of match and the length of the match.
Definition at line 445 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_CROSS_BUFFER_F (1ULL << 20) |
RegEx device support cross buffer match. Cross buffer matching means that the match can be detected even if the string was started in previous buffer. In case the device is configured as RTE_REGEXDEV_CFG_MATCH_AS_END the end offset will be relative for the first packet. For example RegEx is ABC the first buffer is xxxx second buffer yyyA and the last buffer BCzz. In case the match as end is configured the end offset will be 10.
Definition at line 455 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_SUPP_MATCH_ALL_F (1ULL << 21) |
RegEx device support match all. Match all means that the RegEx engine will return all possible matches. For example, assume the RegEx is A+b
, given the input AAAb the returned matches will be: Ab, AAb and AAAb.
Definition at line 471 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_CAPA_QUEUE_PAIR_OOS_F (1ULL << 22) |
RegEx device supports out of order scan. Out of order scan means the response of a specific job can be returned as soon as it is ready even if previous jobs on the same queue didn't complete.
Definition at line 480 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_ALLOW_EMPTY_F (1ULL << 0) |
When this flag is set, the pattern that can match against an empty string, such as .*
are allowed.
Definition at line 490 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_ANCHORED_F (1ULL << 1) |
When this flag is set, the pattern is forced to be "anchored", that is, it is constrained to match only at the first matching point in the string that is being searched. Similar to ^
and represented by \A
.
Definition at line 498 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_CASELESS_F (1ULL << 2) |
When this flag is set, letters in the pattern match both upper and lower case letters in the subject.
Definition at line 507 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_DOTALL_F (1ULL << 3) |
When this flag is set, a dot metacharacter in the pattern matches any character, including one that indicates a newline.
Definition at line 515 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_DUPNAMES_F (1ULL << 4) |
When this flag is set, names used to identify capture groups need not be unique.
Definition at line 523 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_EXTENDED_F (1ULL << 5) |
When this flag is set, most white space characters in the pattern are totally ignored except when escaped or inside a character class.
Definition at line 531 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_MATCH_UNSET_BACKREF_F (1ULL << 6) |
When this flag is set, a backreference to an unset capture group matches an empty string.
Definition at line 539 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_MULTILINE_F (1ULL << 7) |
When this flag is set, the ^
and $
constructs match immediately following or immediately before internal newlines in the subject string, respectively, as well as at the very start and end.
Definition at line 547 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE_F (1ULL << 8) |
When this Flag is set, it disables the use of numbered capturing parentheses in the pattern. References to capture groups (backreferences or recursion/subroutine calls) may only refer to named groups, though the reference can be by name or by number.
Definition at line 556 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_UCP_F (1ULL << 9) |
By default, only ASCII characters are recognized, When this flag is set, Unicode properties are used instead to classify characters.
Definition at line 566 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_UNGREEDY_F (1ULL << 10) |
When this flag is set, the "greediness" of the quantifiers is inverted so that they are not greedy by default, but become greedy if followed by ?
.
Definition at line 574 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_UTF_F (1ULL << 11) |
When this flag is set, RegEx engine has to regard both the pattern and the subject strings that are subsequently processed as strings of UTF characters instead of single-code-unit strings.
Definition at line 583 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_PCRE_RULE_NEVER_BACKSLASH_C_F (1ULL << 12) |
This flag locks out the use of \C
in the pattern that is being compiled. This escape matches one data unit, even in UTF mode which can cause unpredictable behavior in UTF-8 or UTF-16 modes, because it may leave the current matching point in the mi:set hlsearchddle of a multi-code-unit character.
Definition at line 592 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_CFG_CROSS_BUFFER_SCAN_F (1ULL << 0) |
Cross buffer scan refers to the ability to be able to detect matches that occur across buffer boundaries, where the buffers are related to each other in some way. Enable this flag when to scan payload size greater than struct rte_regexdev_info::max_payload_size and/or matches can present across scan buffer boundaries.
Definition at line 653 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_CFG_MATCH_AS_END_F (1ULL << 1) |
Match as end is the ability to return the result as ending offset. When this flag is set, the result for each match will hold the ending offset of the match in end_offset. If this flag is not set, then the match result will hold the starting offset in start_offset, and the length of the match in len.
Definition at line 666 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_CFG_MATCH_ALL_F (1ULL << 2) |
Match all is the ability to return all possible results.
Definition at line 676 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_QUEUE_PAIR_CFG_OOS_F (1ULL << 0) |
Out of order scan, If not set, a scan must retire after previously issued in-order scans to this queue pair. If set, this scan can be retired as soon as device returns completion. Application should not set out of order scan flag if it needs to maintain the ingress order of scan request.
Definition at line 752 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEXDEV_XSTATS_NAME_SIZE 64 |
Maximum name length for extended statistics counters
Definition at line 1090 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_REQ_GROUP_ID0_VALID_F (1 << 0) |
Set when struct rte_regexdev_rule::group_id0 is valid.
Definition at line 1277 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_REQ_GROUP_ID1_VALID_F (1 << 1) |
Set when struct rte_regexdev_rule::group_id1 is valid.
Definition at line 1280 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_REQ_GROUP_ID2_VALID_F (1 << 2) |
Set when struct rte_regexdev_rule::group_id2 is valid.
Definition at line 1283 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_REQ_GROUP_ID3_VALID_F (1 << 3) |
Set when struct rte_regexdev_rule::group_id3 is valid.
Definition at line 1286 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_REQ_STOP_ON_MATCH_F (1 << 4) |
The RegEx engine will stop scanning and return the first match.
Definition at line 1289 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_REQ_MATCH_HIGH_PRIORITY_F (1 << 5) |
In High Priority mode a maximum of one match will be returned per scan to reduce the post-processing required by the application. The match with the lowest Rule id, lowest start pointer and lowest match length will be returned.
Definition at line 1292 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_RSP_PMI_SOJ_F (1 << 0) |
Indicates that the RegEx device has encountered a partial match at the start of scan in the given buffer.
Definition at line 1304 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_RSP_PMI_EOJ_F (1 << 1) |
Indicates that the RegEx device has encountered a partial match at the end of scan in the given buffer.
Definition at line 1311 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_RSP_MAX_SCAN_TIMEOUT_F (1 << 2) |
Indicates that the RegEx device has exceeded the max timeout while scanning the given buffer.
Definition at line 1318 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_RSP_MAX_MATCH_F (1 << 3) |
Indicates that the RegEx device has exceeded the max matches while scanning the given buffer.
Definition at line 1325 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_RSP_MAX_PREFIX_F (1 << 4) |
Indicates that the RegEx device has reached the max allowed prefix length while scanning the given buffer.
Definition at line 1332 of file rte_regexdev.h.
#define RTE_REGEX_OPS_RSP_RESOURCE_LIMIT_REACHED_F (1 << 4) |
Indicates that the RegEx device has reached the max allowed resource allowed while scanning the given buffer.
Definition at line 1339 of file rte_regexdev.h.
typedef void(* regexdev_stop_flush_t) (uint8_t dev_id, uint16_t qp_id, struct rte_regex_ops *op) |
Callback function called during rte_regexdev_stop(), invoked once per flushed RegEx op.
Definition at line 763 of file rte_regexdev.h.
enum rte_regexdev_attr_id |
Enumerates RegEx device attribute identifier
Enumerator | |
---|---|
RTE_REGEXDEV_ATTR_SOCKET_ID | The NUMA socket id to which the device is connected or a default of zero if the socket could not be determined. datatype: int operation: get |
RTE_REGEXDEV_ATTR_MAX_MATCHES | Maximum number of matches per scan. datatype: uint8_t operation: get and set
|
RTE_REGEXDEV_ATTR_MAX_SCAN_TIMEOUT | Upper bound scan time in ns. datatype: uint16_t operation: get and set |
RTE_REGEXDEV_ATTR_MAX_PREFIX | Maximum number of prefix detected per scan. This would be useful for denial of service detection. datatype: uint16_t operation: get and set
|
Definition at line 872 of file rte_regexdev.h.
enum rte_regexdev_rule_op |
Enumerates RegEx rule operation.
Enumerator | |
---|---|
RTE_REGEX_RULE_OP_ADD | Add RegEx rule to rule database. |
RTE_REGEX_RULE_OP_REMOVE | Remove RegEx rule from rule database. |
Definition at line 950 of file rte_regexdev.h.
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_is_valid_dev | ( | uint16_t | dev_id | ) |
Check if dev_id is ready.
dev_id | The dev identifier of the RegEx device. |
__rte_experimental uint8_t rte_regexdev_count | ( | void | ) |
Get the total number of RegEx devices that have been successfully initialised.
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_get_dev_id | ( | const char * | name | ) |
Get the device identifier for the named RegEx device.
name | RegEx device name to select the RegEx device identifier. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_info_get | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
struct rte_regexdev_info * | dev_info | ||
) |
Retrieve the contextual information of a RegEx device.
dev_id | The identifier of the device. | |
[out] | dev_info | A pointer to a structure of type rte_regexdev_info to be filled with the contextual information of the device. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_configure | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
const struct rte_regexdev_config * | cfg | ||
) |
Configure a RegEx device.
This function must be invoked first before any other function in the API. This function can also be re-invoked when a device is in the stopped state.
The caller may use rte_regexdev_info_get() to get the capability of each resources available for this regex device.
dev_id | The identifier of the device to configure. |
cfg | The RegEx device configuration structure. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_queue_pair_setup | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
uint16_t | queue_pair_id, | ||
const struct rte_regexdev_qp_conf * | qp_conf | ||
) |
Allocate and set up a RegEx queue pair for a RegEx device.
dev_id | The identifier of the device. |
queue_pair_id | The index of the RegEx queue pair to setup. The value must be in the range [0, nb_queue_pairs - 1] previously supplied to rte_regexdev_configure(). |
qp_conf | The pointer to the configuration data to be used for the RegEx queue pair. NULL value is allowed, in which case default configuration used. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_start | ( | uint8_t | dev_id | ) |
Start a RegEx device.
The device start step is the last one and consists of setting the RegEx queues to start accepting the pattern matching scan requests.
On success, all basic functions exported by the API (RegEx enqueue, RegEx dequeue and so on) can be invoked.
dev_id | RegEx device identifier. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_stop | ( | uint8_t | dev_id | ) |
Stop a RegEx device.
Stop a RegEx device. The device can be restarted with a call to rte_regexdev_start().
This function causes all queued response regex ops to be drained in the response queue. While draining ops out of the device, struct rte_regexdev_qp_conf::cb will be invoked for each ops.
dev_id | RegEx device identifier. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_close | ( | uint8_t | dev_id | ) |
Close a RegEx device. The device cannot be restarted!
dev_id | RegEx device identifier |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_attr_get | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
enum rte_regexdev_attr_id | attr_id, | ||
void * | attr_value | ||
) |
Get an attribute from a RegEx device.
dev_id | RegEx device identifier. |
attr_id | The attribute ID to retrieve. |
attr_value | A pointer that will be filled in with the attribute value if successful. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_attr_set | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
enum rte_regexdev_attr_id | attr_id, | ||
const void * | attr_value | ||
) |
Set an attribute to a RegEx device.
dev_id | RegEx device identifier. |
attr_id | The attribute ID to retrieve. |
attr_value | Pointer that will be filled in with the attribute value by the application. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_rule_db_update | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
const struct rte_regexdev_rule * | rules, | ||
uint32_t | nb_rules | ||
) |
Update the local rule set. This functions only modify the rule set in memory. In order for the changes to take effect, the function rte_regexdev_rule_db_compile_active must be called.
dev_id | RegEx device identifier. |
rules | Points to an array of nb_rules objects of type rte_regexdev_rule structure which contain the regex rules attributes to be updated in rule database. |
nb_rules | The number of PCRE rules to update the rule database. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_rule_db_compile_activate | ( | uint8_t | dev_id | ) |
Compile local rule set and burn the complied result to the RegEx device.
dev_id | RegEx device identifier. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_rule_db_import | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
const char * | rule_db, | ||
uint32_t | rule_db_len | ||
) |
Import a prebuilt rule database from a buffer to a RegEx device.
dev_id | RegEx device identifier. |
rule_db | Points to prebuilt rule database. |
rule_db_len | Length of the rule database. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_rule_db_export | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
char * | rule_db | ||
) |
Export the prebuilt rule database from a RegEx device to the buffer.
dev_id | RegEx device identifier. | |
[out] | rule_db | Block of memory to insert the rule database. Must be at least size in capacity. If set to NULL, function returns required capacity. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_xstats_names_get | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
struct rte_regexdev_xstats_map * | xstats_map | ||
) |
Retrieve names of extended statistics of a regex device.
dev_id | The identifier of the regex device. | |
[out] | xstats_map | Block of memory to insert id and names into. Must be at least size in capacity. If set to NULL, function returns required capacity. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_xstats_get | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
const uint16_t * | ids, | ||
uint64_t * | values, | ||
uint16_t | nb_values | ||
) |
Retrieve extended statistics of an regex device.
dev_id | The identifier of the device. |
ids | The id numbers of the stats to get. The ids can be got from the stat position in the stat list from rte_regexdev_xstats_names_get(), or by using rte_regexdev_xstats_by_name_get(). |
values | The values for each stats request by ID. |
nb_values | The number of stats requested. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_xstats_by_name_get | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
const char * | name, | ||
uint16_t * | id, | ||
uint64_t * | value | ||
) |
Retrieve the value of a single stat by requesting it by name.
dev_id | The identifier of the device. | |
name | The stat name to retrieve. | |
id | If non-NULL, the numerical id of the stat will be returned, so that further requests for the stat can be got using rte_regexdev_xstats_get, which will be faster as it doesn't need to scan a list of names for the stat. | |
[out] | value | Must be non-NULL, retrieved xstat value will be stored in this address. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_xstats_reset | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
const uint16_t * | ids, | ||
uint16_t | nb_ids | ||
) |
Reset the values of the xstats of the selected component in the device.
dev_id | The identifier of the device. |
ids | Selects specific statistics to be reset. When NULL, all statistics will be reset. If non-NULL, must point to array of at least nb_ids size. |
nb_ids | The number of ids available from the ids array. Ignored when ids is NULL. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_selftest | ( | uint8_t | dev_id | ) |
Trigger the RegEx device self test.
dev_id | The identifier of the device. |
__rte_experimental int rte_regexdev_dump | ( | uint8_t | dev_id, |
FILE * | f | ||
) |
Dump internal information about dev_id to the FILE* provided in f.
dev_id | The identifier of the device. |
f | A pointer to a file for output. |
|
inlinestatic |
Enqueue a burst of scan request on a RegEx device.
The rte_regexdev_enqueue_burst() function is invoked to place regex operations on the queue qp_id of the device designated by its dev_id.
The nb_ops parameter is the number of operations to process which are supplied in the ops array of rte_regexdev_op structures.
The rte_regexdev_enqueue_burst() function returns the number of operations it actually enqueued for processing. A return value equal to nb_ops means that all packets have been enqueued.
dev_id | The identifier of the device. |
qp_id | The index of the queue pair which packets are to be enqueued for processing. The value must be in the range [0, nb_queue_pairs - 1] previously supplied to rte_regexdev_configure(). |
ops | The address of an array of nb_ops pointers to rte_regexdev_op structures which contain the regex operations to be processed. |
nb_ops | The number of operations to process. |
Definition at line 1470 of file rte_regexdev.h.
|
inlinestatic |
Dequeue a burst of scan response from a queue on the RegEx device. The dequeued operation are stored in rte_regexdev_op structures whose pointers are supplied in the ops array.
The rte_regexdev_dequeue_burst() function returns the number of ops actually dequeued, which is the number of rte_regexdev_op data structures effectively supplied into the ops array.
A return value equal to nb_ops indicates that the queue contained at least nb_ops operations, and this is likely to signify that other processed operations remain in the devices output queue. Applications implementing a "retrieve as many processed operations as possible" policy can check this specific case and keep invoking the rte_regexdev_dequeue_burst() function until a value less than nb_ops is returned.
The rte_regexdev_dequeue_burst() function does not provide any error notification to avoid the corresponding overhead.
dev_id | The RegEx device identifier |
qp_id | The index of the queue pair from which to retrieve processed packets. The value must be in the range [0, nb_queue_pairs - 1] previously supplied to rte_regexdev_configure(). |
ops | The address of an array of pointers to rte_regexdev_op structures that must be large enough to store nb_ops pointers in it. |
nb_ops | The maximum number of operations to dequeue. |
Definition at line 1530 of file rte_regexdev.h.