5. dpdk-devbind Application

The dpdk-devbind tool is a Data Plane Development Kit (DPDK) utility that helps binding and unbinding devices from specific drivers. As well as checking their status in that regard.

5.1. Running the Application

The tool has a number of command line options:

dpdk-devbind [options] DEVICE1 DEVICE2 ....

5.2. OPTIONS

  • --help, --usage

    Display usage information and quit

  • -s, --status

    Print the current status of all known network interfaces. For each device, it displays the PCI domain, bus, slot and function, along with a text description of the device. Depending upon whether the device is being used by a kernel driver, the vfio-pci driver, or no driver, other relevant information will be displayed: - the Linux interface name e.g. if=eth0 - the driver being used e.g. drv=vfio-pci - any suitable drivers not currently using that device e.g. unused=vfio-pci NOTE: if this flag is passed along with a bind/unbind option, the status display will always occur after the other operations have taken place.

  • -b driver, --bind=driver

    Select the driver to use or “none” to unbind the device

  • -u, --unbind

    Unbind a device (Equivalent to -b none)

  • --force

    By default, devices which are used by Linux - as indicated by having routes in the routing table - cannot be modified. Using the --force flag overrides this behavior, allowing active links to be forcibly unbound. WARNING: This can lead to loss of network connection and should be used with caution.

Warning

Due to the way VFIO works, there are certain limitations to which devices can be used with VFIO. Mainly it comes down to how IOMMU groups work. Any Virtual Function device can be used with VFIO on its own, but physical devices will require either all ports bound to VFIO, or some of them bound to VFIO while others not being bound to anything at all.

If your device is behind a PCI-to-PCI bridge, the bridge will then be part of the IOMMU group in which your device is in. Therefore, the bridge driver should also be unbound from the bridge PCI device for VFIO to work with devices behind the bridge.

Warning

While any user can run the dpdk-devbind.py script to view the status of the network ports, binding or unbinding network ports requires root privileges.

5.3. Examples

To display current device status:

dpdk-devbind --status

To bind eth1 from the current driver and move to use vfio-pci:

dpdk-devbind --bind=vfio-pci eth1

To unbind 0000:01:00.0 from using any driver:

dpdk-devbind -u 0000:01:00.0

To bind 0000:02:00.0 and 0000:02:00.1 to the ixgbe kernel driver:

dpdk-devbind -b ixgbe 02:00.0 02:00.1

To check status of all network ports, assign one to the vfio-pci driver and check status again:

# Check the status of the available devices.
dpdk-devbind --status
Network devices using DPDK-compatible driver
============================================
<none>

Network devices using kernel driver
===================================
0000:0a:00.0 '82599ES 10-Gigabit' if=eth2 drv=ixgbe unused=


# Bind the device to vfio-pci.
sudo dpdk-devbind -b vfio-pci 0000:0a:00.0


# Recheck the status of the devices.
dpdk-devbind --status
Network devices using DPDK-compatible driver
============================================
0000:0a:00.0 '82599ES 10-Gigabit' drv=vfio-pci unused=