6. Intel(R) ACC100 5G/4G FEC Poll Mode Driver
The BBDEV ACC100 5G/4G FEC poll mode driver (PMD) supports an implementation of a VRAN FEC wireless acceleration function. This device is also known as Mount Bryce.
6.1. Features
ACC100 5G/4G FEC PMD supports the following features:
- LDPC Encode in the DL (5GNR)
- LDPC Decode in the UL (5GNR)
- Turbo Encode in the DL (4G)
- Turbo Decode in the UL (4G)
- 16 VFs per PF (physical device)
- Maximum of 128 queues per VF
- PCIe Gen-3 x16 Interface
- MSI
- SR-IOV
ACC100 5G/4G FEC PMD supports the following BBDEV capabilities:
- For the LDPC encode operation:
RTE_BBDEV_LDPC_CRC_24B_ATTACH
: set to attach CRC24B to CB(s)RTE_BBDEV_LDPC_RATE_MATCH
: if set then do not do Rate Match bypassRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_INTERLEAVER_BYPASS
: if set then bypass interleaver
- For the LDPC decode operation:
RTE_BBDEV_LDPC_CRC_TYPE_24B_CHECK
: check CRC24B from CB(s)RTE_BBDEV_LDPC_ITERATION_STOP_ENABLE
: disable early terminationRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_CRC_TYPE_24B_DROP
: drops CRC24B bits appended while decodingRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_HQ_COMBINE_IN_ENABLE
: provides an input for HARQ combiningRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_HQ_COMBINE_OUT_ENABLE
: provides an input for HARQ combiningRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_INTERNAL_HARQ_MEMORY_IN_ENABLE
: HARQ memory input is internalRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_INTERNAL_HARQ_MEMORY_OUT_ENABLE
: HARQ memory output is internalRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_INTERNAL_HARQ_MEMORY_LOOPBACK
: loopback data to/from HARQ memoryRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_INTERNAL_HARQ_MEMORY_FILLERS
: HARQ memory includes the fillers bitsRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_DEC_SCATTER_GATHER
: supports scatter-gather for input/output dataRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_HARQ_6BIT_COMPRESSION
: supports compression of the HARQ input/outputRTE_BBDEV_LDPC_LLR_COMPRESSION
: supports LLR input compression
- For the turbo encode operation:
RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_CRC_24B_ATTACH
: set to attach CRC24B to CB(s)RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_RATE_MATCH
: if set then do not do Rate Match bypassRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_ENC_INTERRUPTS
: set for encoder dequeue interruptsRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_RV_INDEX_BYPASS
: set to bypass RV indexRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_ENC_SCATTER_GATHER
: supports scatter-gather for input/output data
- For the turbo decode operation:
RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_CRC_TYPE_24B
: check CRC24B from CB(s)RTE_BBDEV_TURBO_SUBBLOCK_DEINTERLEAVE
: perform subblock de-interleaveRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_DEC_INTERRUPTS
: set for decoder dequeue interruptsRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_NEG_LLR_1_BIT_IN
: set if negative LLR encoder i/p is supportedRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_POS_LLR_1_BIT_IN
: set if positive LLR encoder i/p is supportedRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_DEC_TB_CRC_24B_KEEP
: keep CRC24B bits appended while decodingRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_EARLY_TERMINATION
: set early termination featureRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_DEC_SCATTER_GATHER
: supports scatter-gather for input/output dataRTE_BBDEV_TURBO_HALF_ITERATION_EVEN
: set half iteration granularity
6.2. Installation
Section 3 of the DPDK manual provides instructions on installing and compiling DPDK.
DPDK requires hugepages to be configured as detailed in section 2 of the DPDK manual. The bbdev test application has been tested with a configuration 40 x 1GB hugepages. The hugepage configuration of a server may be examined using:
grep Huge* /proc/meminfo
6.3. Initialization
When the device first powers up, its PCI Physical Functions (PF) can be listed through this command:
sudo lspci -vd8086:0d5c
The physical and virtual functions are compatible with Linux UIO drivers:
vfio
and igb_uio
. However, in order to work the ACC100 5G/4G
FEC device first needs to be bound to one of these linux drivers through DPDK.
6.3.1. Bind PF UIO driver(s)
Install the DPDK igb_uio driver, bind it with the PF PCI device ID and use
lspci
to confirm the PF device is under use by igb_uio
DPDK UIO driver.
The igb_uio driver may be bound to the PF PCI device using one of two methods:
1. PCI functions (physical or virtual, depending on the use case) can be bound to the UIO driver by repeating this command for every function.
cd <dpdk-top-level-directory>
insmod ./build/kmod/igb_uio.ko
echo "8086 0d5c" > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/igb_uio/new_id
lspci -vd8086:0d5c
- Another way to bind PF with DPDK UIO driver is by using the
dpdk-devbind.py
tool
cd <dpdk-top-level-directory>
./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -b igb_uio 0000:06:00.0
where the PCI device ID (example: 0000:06:00.0) is obtained using lspci -vd8086:0d5c
In a similar way the ACC100 5G/4G FEC PF may be bound with vfio-pci as any PCIe device.
6.3.2. Enable Virtual Functions
Now, it should be visible in the printouts that PCI PF is under igb_uio control
“Kernel driver in use: igb_uio
”
To show the number of available VFs on the device, read sriov_totalvfs
file..
cat /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:<b>\:<d>.<f>/sriov_totalvfs
where 0000\:<b>\:<d>.<f> is the PCI device ID
To enable VFs via igb_uio, echo the number of virtual functions intended to
enable to max_vfs
file..
echo <num-of-vfs> > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:<b>\:<d>.<f>/max_vfs
Afterwards, all VFs must be bound to appropriate UIO drivers as required, same way it was done with the physical function previously.
Enabling SR-IOV via vfio driver is pretty much the same, except that the file name is different:
echo <num-of-vfs> > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:<b>\:<d>.<f>/sriov_numvfs
6.3.3. Configure the VFs through PF
The PCI virtual functions must be configured before working or getting assigned to VMs/Containers. The configuration involves allocating the number of hardware queues, priorities, load balance, bandwidth and other settings necessary for the device to perform FEC functions.
This configuration needs to be executed at least once after reboot or PCI FLR and can
be achieved by using the function acc100_configure()
, which sets up the
parameters defined in acc100_conf
structure.
6.4. Test Application
BBDEV provides a test application, test-bbdev.py
and range of test data for testing
the functionality of ACC100 5G/4G FEC encode and decode, depending on the device’s
capabilities. The test application is located under app->test-bbdev folder and has the
following options:
"-p", "--testapp-path": specifies path to the bbdev test app.
"-e", "--eal-params" : EAL arguments which are passed to the test app.
"-t", "--timeout" : Timeout in seconds (default=300).
"-c", "--test-cases" : Defines test cases to run. Run all if not specified.
"-v", "--test-vector" : Test vector path (default=dpdk_path+/app/test-bbdev/test_vectors/bbdev_null.data).
"-n", "--num-ops" : Number of operations to process on device (default=32).
"-b", "--burst-size" : Operations enqueue/dequeue burst size (default=32).
"-s", "--snr" : SNR in dB used when generating LLRs for bler tests.
"-s", "--iter_max" : Number of iterations for LDPC decoder.
"-l", "--num-lcores" : Number of lcores to run (default=16).
"-i", "--init-device" : Initialise PF device with default values.
To execute the test application tool using simple decode or encode data, type one of the following:
./test-bbdev.py -c validation -n 64 -b 1 -v ./ldpc_dec_default.data
./test-bbdev.py -c validation -n 64 -b 1 -v ./ldpc_enc_default.data
The test application test-bbdev.py
, supports the ability to configure the PF device with
a default set of values, if the “-i” or “- -init-device” option is included. The default values
are defined in test_bbdev_perf.c.
6.4.1. Test Vectors
In addition to the simple LDPC decoder and LDPC encoder tests, bbdev also provides a range of additional tests under the test_vectors folder, which may be useful. The results of these tests will depend on the ACC100 5G/4G FEC capabilities which may cause some testcases to be skipped, but no failure should be reported.
6.4.2. Alternate Baseband Device configuration tool
On top of the embedded configuration feature supported in test-bbdev using “- -init-device”
option mentioned above, there is also a tool available to perform that device configuration
using a companion application.
The pf_bb_config
application notably enables then to run bbdev-test from the VF
and not only limited to the PF as captured above.
See for more details: https://github.com/intel/pf-bb-config
Specifically for the BBDEV ACC100 PMD, the command below can be used:
./pf_bb_config ACC100 -c acc100/acc100_config_vf_5g.cfg
./test-bbdev.py -e="-c 0xff0 -a${VF_PCI_ADDR}" -c validation -n 64 -b 32 -l 1 -v ./ldpc_dec_default.data