22. Intel(R) QuickAssist (QAT) Crypto Poll Mode Driver

QAT documentation consists of three parts:

  • Details of the symmetric and asymmetric crypto services below.

  • Details of the compression service in the compressdev drivers section.

  • Details of building the common QAT infrastructure and the PMDs to support the above services. See Building PMDs on QAT below.

22.1. Symmetric Crypto Service on QAT

The QAT symmetric crypto PMD (hereafter referred to as QAT SYM [PMD]) provides poll mode crypto driver support for the following hardware accelerator devices:

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology DH895xCC

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology C62x

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology C3xxx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology 200xx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology D15xx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology C4xxx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology 4xxx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology 300xx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology 420xx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology apfxx

22.1.1. Features

The QAT SYM PMD has support for:

Cipher algorithms:

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_3DES_CBC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_3DES_CTR

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES128_CBC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES192_CBC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES256_CBC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES128_CTR

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES192_CTR

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES256_CTR

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES_XTS

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_SNOW3G_UEA2

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_NULL

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_KASUMI_F8

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_DES_CBC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_AES_DOCSISBPI

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_DES_DOCSISBPI

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_ZUC_EEA3

Hash algorithms:

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA1

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA1_HMAC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA224

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA224_HMAC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA256

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA256_HMAC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA384

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA384_HMAC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA512

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA512_HMAC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA3_224

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA3_256

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA3_384

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SHA3_512

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_AES_XCBC_MAC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SNOW3G_UIA2

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_MD5_HMAC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_NULL

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_KASUMI_F9

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_AES_GMAC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_ZUC_EIA3

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_AES_CMAC

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SM3

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AUTH_SM3_HMAC

Supported AEAD algorithms:

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AEAD_AES_GCM

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AEAD_AES_CCM

  • RTE_CRYPTO_AEAD_CHACHA20_POLY1305

Protocol offloads:

  • RTE_SECURITY_PROTOCOL_DOCSIS

22.1.2. Supported Chains

All the usual chains are supported and also some mixed chains:

Table 22.1 Supported hash-cipher chains for wireless digest-encrypted cases

Cipher algorithm

NULL AUTH

SNOW3G UIA2

ZUC EIA3

AES CMAC

NULL CIPHER

Y

2&3

2&3

Y

SNOW3G UEA2

2&3

1&2&3

2&3

2&3

ZUC EEA3

2&3

2&3

2&3

2&3

AES CTR

1&2&3

2&3

2&3

Y

  • The combinations marked as “Y” are supported on all QAT hardware versions.

  • The combinations marked as “2&3” are supported on GEN2 and GEN3 QAT hardware only.

  • The combinations marked as “1&2&3” are supported on GEN1, GEN2 and GEN3 QAT hardware only.

22.1.3. Limitations

  • Only supports the session-oriented API implementation (session-less APIs are not supported).

  • SNOW 3G (UEA2), KASUMI (F8) and ZUC (EEA3) supported only if cipher length and offset fields are byte-multiple.

  • SNOW 3G (UIA2) and ZUC (EIA3) supported only if hash length and offset fields are byte-multiple.

  • No BSD support as BSD QAT kernel driver not available.

  • ZUC EEA3/EIA3 is not supported by dh895xcc devices

  • Maximum additional authenticated data (AAD) for GCM is 240 bytes long and must be passed to the device in a buffer rounded up to the nearest block-size multiple (x16) and padded with zeros.

  • Queue-pairs are thread-safe on Intel CPUs but Queues are not (that is, within a single queue-pair all enqueues to the TX queue must be done from one thread and all dequeues from the RX queue must be done from one thread, but enqueues and dequeues may be done in different threads.)

  • A GCM limitation exists, but only in the case where there are multiple generations of QAT devices on a single platform. To optimise performance, the GCM crypto session should be initialised for the device generation to which the ops will be enqueued. Specifically if a GCM session is initialised on a GEN2 device, but then attached to an op enqueued to a GEN3 device, it will work but cannot take advantage of hardware optimisations in the GEN3 device. And if a GCM session is initialised on a GEN3 device, then attached to an op sent to a GEN1/GEN2 device, it will not be enqueued to the device and will be marked as failed. The simplest way to mitigate this is to use the PCI allowlist to avoid mixing devices of different generations in the same process if planning to use for GCM.

  • The mixed algo feature on GEN2 is not supported by all kernel drivers. Check the notes under the Available Kernel Drivers table below for specific details.

  • Out-of-place is not supported for combined Crypto-CRC DOCSIS security protocol.

  • RTE_CRYPTO_CIPHER_DES_DOCSISBPI is not supported for combined Crypto-CRC DOCSIS security protocol.

  • Multi-segment buffers are not supported for combined Crypto-CRC DOCSIS security protocol.

22.1.4. Extra notes on KASUMI F9

When using KASUMI F9 authentication algorithm, the input buffer must be constructed according to the 3GPP KASUMI specification (section 4.4, page 13). The input buffer has to have COUNT (4 bytes), FRESH (4 bytes), MESSAGE and DIRECTION (1 bit) concatenated. After the DIRECTION bit, a single ‘1’ bit is appended, followed by between 0 and 7 ‘0’ bits, so that the total length of the buffer is multiple of 8 bits. Note that the actual message can be any length, specified in bits.

Once this buffer is passed this way, when creating the crypto operation, length of data to authenticate “op.sym.auth.data.length” must be the length of all the items described above, including the padding at the end. Also, offset of data to authenticate “op.sym.auth.data.offset” must be such that points at the start of the COUNT bytes.

22.2. Asymmetric Crypto Service on QAT

The QAT asymmetric crypto PMD (hereafter referred to as QAT ASYM [PMD]) provides poll mode crypto driver support for the following hardware accelerator devices:

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology DH895xCC

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology C62x

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology C3xxx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology D15xx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology C4xxx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology 4xxx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology 401xxx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology 300xx

  • Intel QuickAssist Technology 420xx

The QAT ASYM PMD has support for:

  • RTE_CRYPTO_ASYM_XFORM_MODEX

  • RTE_CRYPTO_ASYM_XFORM_MODINV

  • RTE_CRYPTO_ASYM_XFORM_RSA

  • RTE_CRYPTO_ASYM_XFORM_ECDSA

  • RTE_CRYPTO_ASYM_XFORM_ECPM

  • RTE_CRYPTO_ASYM_XFORM_ECDH

  • RTE_CRYPTO_ASYM_XFORM_SM2

22.2.1. Limitations

  • Big integers longer than 4096 bits are not supported.

  • Queue-pairs are thread-safe on Intel CPUs but Queues are not (that is, within a single queue-pair all enqueues to the TX queue must be done from one thread and all dequeues from the RX queue must be done from one thread, but enqueues and dequeues may be done in different threads.)

  • RSA-2560, RSA-3584 are not supported

22.3. Building PMDs on QAT

A QAT device can host multiple acceleration services:

  • symmetric cryptography

  • data compression

  • asymmetric cryptography

These services are provided to DPDK applications via PMDs which register to implement the corresponding cryptodev and compressdev APIs. The PMDs use common QAT driver code which manages the QAT PCI device. They also depend on a QAT kernel driver being installed on the platform, see Dependency on the QAT kernel driver below.

22.3.1. Configuring and Building the DPDK QAT PMDs

Further information on configuring, building and installing DPDK is described here.

22.3.2. Build Configuration

These are the build configuration options affecting QAT, and their default values:

RTE_PMD_QAT_MAX_PCI_DEVICES=48
RTE_PMD_QAT_COMP_IM_BUFFER_SIZE=65536

Both QAT SYM PMD and QAT ASYM PMD have an external dependency on libcrypto, so are not built by default.

Ubuntu

apt install libssl-dev

RHEL

dnf install openssl-devel

The QAT compressdev PMD has no external dependencies, so is built by default.

The number of VFs per PF varies - see table below. If multiple QAT packages are installed on a platform then RTE_PMD_QAT_MAX_PCI_DEVICES should be adjusted to the number of VFs which the QAT common code will need to handle.

Note

There are separate config items (not QAT-specific) for max cryptodevs RTE_CRYPTO_MAX_DEVS and max compressdevs RTE_COMPRESS_MAX_DEVS, if necessary these should be adjusted to handle the total of QAT and other devices which the process will use. In particular for crypto, where each QAT VF may expose two crypto devices, sym and asym, it may happen that the number of devices will be bigger than MAX_DEVS and the process will show an error during PMD initialisation. To avoid this problem RTE_CRYPTO_MAX_DEVS may be increased or -a, allow domain:bus:devid:func option may be used.

QAT compression PMD needs intermediate buffers to support Deflate compression with Dynamic Huffman encoding. RTE_PMD_QAT_COMP_IM_BUFFER_SIZE specifies the size of a single buffer, the PMD will allocate a multiple of these, plus some extra space for associated meta-data. For GEN2 devices, 20 buffers are allocated while for GEN1 devices, 12 buffers are allocated, plus 1472 bytes overhead.

Note

If the compressed output of a Deflate operation using Dynamic Huffman Encoding is too big to fit in an intermediate buffer, then the operation will be split into smaller operations and their results will be merged afterwards. This is not possible if any checksum calculation was requested - in such case the code falls back to fixed compression. To avoid this less performant case, applications should configure the intermediate buffer size to be larger than the expected input data size (compressed output size is usually unknown, so the only option is to make larger than the input size).

22.3.3. Running QAT PMD with insecure crypto algorithms

A few insecure crypto algorithms are deprecated from QAT drivers. This needs to be reflected in DPDK QAT PMD. DPDK QAT PMD has by default disabled all the insecure crypto algorithms from Gen 1, 2, 3 and 4. A PMD devarg is used to enable the capability.

  • qat_legacy_capa

To use this feature the user must set the devarg on process start as a device additional devarg:

-a b1:01.2,qat_legacy_capa=1

22.3.4. Running QAT PMD with minimum threshold for burst size

If only a small number or packets can be enqueued. Each enqueue causes an expensive MMIO write. These MMIO write occurrences can be optimised by setting any of the following parameters:

  • qat_sym_enq_threshold

  • qat_asym_enq_threshold

  • qat_comp_enq_threshold

When any of these parameters is set rte_cryptodev_enqueue_burst function will return 0 (thereby avoiding an MMIO) if the device is congested and number of packets possible to enqueue is smaller. To use this feature the user must set the parameter on process start as a device additional parameter:

-a 03:01.1,qat_sym_enq_threshold=32,qat_comp_enq_threshold=16

All parameters can be used with the same device regardless of order. Parameters are separated by comma. When the same parameter is used more than once first occurrence of the parameter is used. Maximum threshold that can be set is 32.

22.3.5. Running QAT PMD with Cipher-CRC offload feature

Support has been added to the QAT symmetric crypto PMD for combined Cipher-CRC offload, primarily for the Crypto-CRC DOCSIS security protocol, on GEN2/GEN3/GEN4 QAT devices.

The following devarg enables a Cipher-CRC offload capability check to determine if the feature is supported on the QAT device.

  • qat_sym_cipher_crc_enable

When enabled, a capability check for the combined Cipher-CRC offload feature is triggered to the QAT firmware during queue pair initialization. If supported by the firmware, any subsequent runtime Crypto-CRC DOCSIS security protocol requests handled by the QAT PMD are offloaded to the QAT device by setting up the content descriptor and request accordingly. If not supported, the CRC is calculated by the QAT PMD using the NET CRC API.

To use this feature the user must set the devarg on process start as a device additional devarg:

-a 03:01.1,qat_sym_cipher_crc_enable=1

22.3.6. Running QAT PMD with Intel IPsec MB library for symmetric precomputes function

The QAT PMD uses Intel IPsec MB library for partial hash calculation in symmetric precomputes function by default, the minimum required version of IPsec MB library is v1.4. If this version of IPsec is not met, it will fallback to use OpenSSL. ARM will always default to using OpenSSL as ARM IPsec MB does not support the necessary algorithms.

22.3.7. Device and driver naming

  • The qat cryptodev symmetric crypto driver name is “crypto_qat”.

  • The qat cryptodev asymmetric crypto driver name is “crypto_qat_asym”.

The “rte_cryptodev_devices_get()” returns the devices exposed by either of these drivers.

  • Each qat sym crypto device has a unique name, in format “<pci bdf>_<service>”, e.g. “0000:41:01.0_qat_sym”.

  • Each qat asym crypto device has a unique name, in format “<pci bdf>_<service>”, e.g. “0000:41:01.0_qat_asym”. This name can be passed to “rte_cryptodev_get_dev_id()” to get the device_id.

Note

The cryptodev driver name is passed to the dpdk-test-crypto-perf tool in the “-devtype” parameter.

The qat crypto device name is in the format of the worker parameter passed to the crypto scheduler.

  • The qat compressdev driver name is “compress_qat”. The rte_compressdev_devices_get() returns the devices exposed by this driver.

  • Each qat compression device has a unique name, in format <pci bdf>_<service>, e.g. “0000:41:01.0_qat_comp”. This name can be passed to rte_compressdev_get_dev_id() to get the device_id.

22.3.8. Running QAT on Aarch64 based Ampere Altra platform

Requires Linux kernel v6.0+. See also this kernel patch.

22.3.9. Dependency on the QAT kernel driver

To use QAT an SRIOV-enabled QAT kernel driver is required. The VF devices created and initialised by this driver will be used by the QAT PMDs.

Instructions for installation are below, but first an explanation of the relationships between the PF/VF devices and the PMDs visible to DPDK applications.

Each QuickAssist PF device exposes a number of VF devices. Each VF device can enable one symmetric cryptodev PMD and/or one asymmetric cryptodev PMD and/or one compressdev PMD. These QAT PMDs share the same underlying device and pci-mgmt code, but are enumerated independently on their respective APIs and appear as independent devices to applications.

Note

Each VF can only be used by one DPDK process. It is not possible to share the same VF across multiple processes, even if these processes are using different acceleration services.

Conversely one DPDK process can use one or more QAT VFs and can expose both cryptodev and compressdev instances on each of those VFs.

22.3.10. Available kernel drivers

Kernel drivers for each device for each service are listed in the following table. (Scroll right to see the full table)

Table 22.2 QAT device generations, devices and drivers

S

A

C

Gen

Device

Driver/ver

Kernel Module

Pci Driver

PF Did

#PFs

VF Did

VFs/PF

Yes

No

No

1

DH895xCC

linux/4.4+

qat_dh895xcc

dh895xcc

435

1

443

32

Yes

Yes

No

IDZ/4.12.0+

Yes

Yes

Yes

IDZ/4.13.0+

Yes

No

No

2

C62x

linux/4.5+

qat_c62x

c6xx

37c8

3

37c9

16

Yes

Yes

Yes

IDZ/4.12.0+

Yes

No

No

2

C3xxx

linux/4.5+

qat_c3xxx

c3xxx

19e2

1

19e3

16

Yes

Yes

Yes

IDZ/4.12.0+

Yes

No

No

2

200xx

p

qat_200xx

200xx

18ee

1

18ef

16

Yes

No

No

2

D15xx

p

qat_d15xx

d15xx

6f54

1

6f55

16

Yes

Yes

No

3

C4xxx

p

qat_c4xxx

c4xxx

18a0

1

18a1

128

Yes

Yes

No

4

4xxx

linux/5.11+

qat_4xxx

4xxx

4940

4

4941

16

Yes

Yes

Yes

4

4xxx

linux/5.17+

qat_4xxx

4xxx

4940

4

4941

16

Yes

No

No

4

4xxx

IDZ/ N/A

qat_4xxx

4xxx

4940

4

4941

16

Yes

Yes

Yes

4

401xxx

linux/5.19+

qat_4xxx

4xxx

4942

2

4943

16

Yes

No

No

4

401xxx

IDZ/ N/A

qat_4xxx

4xxx

4942

2

4943

16

Yes

Yes

Yes

4

402xx

linux/6.4+

qat_4xxx

4xxx

4944

2

4945

16

Yes

No

No

4

402xx

IDZ/ N/A

qat_4xxx

4xxx

4944

2

4945

16

Yes

Yes

Yes

5

420xx

linux/6.8+

qat_420xx

420xx

4946

2

4947

16

  • Note: Symmetric mixed crypto algorithms feature on Gen 2 works only with IDZ driver version 4.9.0+

The first 3 columns indicate the service:

  • S = Symmetric crypto service (via cryptodev API)

  • A = Asymmetric crypto service (via cryptodev API)

  • C = Compression service (via compressdev API)

The Driver column indicates either the Linux kernel version in which support for this device was introduced or a driver available on Intel Developer Zone (IDZ). There are both linux in-tree and IDZ kernel drivers available for some devices. p = release pending.

If you are running on a kernel which includes a driver for your device, see Installation using kernel.org driver below. Otherwise see Installation using IDZ QAT driver.

Note

The asymmetric service is not supported by DPDK QAT PMD for the Gen 3 platform. The actual crypto services enabled on the system depend on QAT driver capabilities and hardware slice configuration.

22.3.11. Installation using kernel.org driver

The examples below are based on the C62x device, if you have a different device use the corresponding values in the above table.

In BIOS ensure that SRIOV is enabled and either:

  • Disable VT-d or

  • Enable VT-d and set "intel_iommu=on iommu=pt" in the grub file.

Check that the QAT driver is loaded on your system, by executing:

lsmod | grep qa

You should see the kernel module for your device listed, e.g.:

qat_c62x               5626  0
intel_qat              82336  1 qat_c62x

Next, you need to expose the Virtual Functions (VFs) using the sysfs file system.

First find the BDFs (Bus-Device-Function) of the physical functions (PFs) of your device, e.g.:

lspci -d:37c8

You should see output similar to:

1a:00.0 Co-processor: Intel Corporation Device 37c8
3d:00.0 Co-processor: Intel Corporation Device 37c8
3f:00.0 Co-processor: Intel Corporation Device 37c8

Enable the VFs for each PF by echoing the number of VFs per PF to the pci driver:

echo 16 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/c6xx/0000:1a:00.0/sriov_numvfs
echo 16 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/c6xx/0000:3d:00.0/sriov_numvfs
echo 16 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/c6xx/0000:3f:00.0/sriov_numvfs

Check that the VFs are available for use. For example lspci -d:37c9 should list 48 VF devices available for a C62x device.

To complete the installation follow the instructions in Binding the available VFs to the vfio-pci driver.

Note

If the QAT kernel modules are not loaded and you see an error like Failed to load MMP firmware qat_895xcc_mmp.bin in kernel logs, this may be as a result of not using a distribution, but just updating the kernel directly.

Download firmware from the kernel firmware repo.

Copy qat binaries to /lib/firmware:

cp qat_895xcc.bin /lib/firmware
cp qat_895xcc_mmp.bin /lib/firmware

Change to your linux source root directory and start the qat kernel modules:

insmod ./drivers/crypto/qat/qat_common/intel_qat.ko
insmod ./drivers/crypto/qat/qat_dh895xcc/qat_dh895xcc.ko

Note

If you see the following warning in /var/log/messages it can be ignored: IOMMU should be enabled for SR-IOV to work correctly.

22.3.12. Installation using IDZ QAT driver

Download the latest QuickAssist Technology Driver from Intel Developer Zone. Consult the Quick Start Guide at the same URL for further information.

The steps below assume you are:

  • Building on a platform with one C62x device.

  • Using package qat1.7.l.4.2.0-000xx.tar.gz.

  • On Fedora26 kernel 4.11.11-300.fc26.x86_64.

In the BIOS ensure that SRIOV is enabled and VT-d is disabled.

Uninstall any existing QAT driver, for example by running:

  • ./installer.sh uninstall in the directory where originally installed.

Build and install the SRIOV-enabled QAT driver:

mkdir /QAT
cd /QAT

# Copy the package to this location and unpack
tar zxof qat1.7.l.4.2.0-000xx.tar.gz

./configure --enable-icp-sriov=host
make install

You can use cat /sys/kernel/debug/qat<your device type and bdf>/version/fw to confirm the driver is correctly installed and is using firmware version 4.2.0. You can use lspci -d:37c9 to confirm the presence of the 16 VF devices available per C62x PF.

Confirm the driver is correctly installed and is using firmware version 4.2.0:

cat /sys/kernel/debug/qat<your device type and bdf>/version/fw

Confirm the presence of 48 VF devices - 16 per PF:

lspci -d:37c9

To complete the installation - follow instructions in Binding the available VFs to the vfio-pci driver.

Note

If using a later kernel and the build fails with an error relating to strict_stroul not being available apply the following patch:

/QAT/QAT1.6/quickassist/utilities/downloader/Target_CoreLibs/uclo/include/linux/uclo_platform.h
+ #if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(3,18,5)
+ #define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) {endPtr=NULL; if (kstrtoul((str), (base), (num))) printk("Error strtoull convert %s\n", str); }
+ #else
#if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(2,6,38)
#define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) {endPtr=NULL; if (strict_strtoull((str), (base), (num))) printk("Error strtoull convert %s\n", str); }
#else
#if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(2,6,25)
#define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr) {endPtr=NULL; strict_strtoll((str), (base), (num));}
#else
#define STR_TO_64(str, base, num, endPtr)                                 \
     do {                                                               \
           if (str[0] == '-')                                           \
           {                                                            \
                *(num) = -(simple_strtoull((str+1), &(endPtr), (base))); \
           }else {                                                      \
                *(num) = simple_strtoull((str), &(endPtr), (base));      \
           }                                                            \
     } while(0)
+ #endif
#endif
#endif

Note

If the build fails due to missing header files you may need to do following:

sudo yum install zlib-devel
sudo yum install openssl-devel
sudo yum install libudev-devel

Note

If the build or install fails due to mismatching kernel sources you may need to do the following:

sudo yum install kernel-headers-`uname -r`
sudo yum install kernel-src-`uname -r`
sudo yum install kernel-devel-`uname -r`

Note

If the build fails on newer GCC versions (such as GCC 12) with an error relating to -lc not being found, apply the following patch:

/QAT/quickassist/lookaside/access_layer/src/Makefile
cd $(ICP_FINAL_OUTPUT_DIR);\
cmd="$(LINKER) $(LIB_SHARED_FLAGS) -o \
  $(LIB_SHARED) $(ADDITIONAL_OBJECTS) $(ADDITIONAL_LIBS) *.o -lpthread -ludev \
- -Bstatic -L$(ADF_DIR)/src/build/$(ICP_OS)/$(ICP_OS_LEVEL) \
- -ladf_user -L$(OSAL_DIR)/src/build/$(ICP_OS)/$(ICP_OS_LEVEL)/ \
- -losal -Bdynamic -lc"; \
+ -Bstatic -L$(ADF_DIR)/src/build/$(ICP_OS)/$(ICP_OS_LEVEL) \
+ -ladf_user -L$(OSAL_DIR)/src/build/$(ICP_OS)/$(ICP_OS_LEVEL)/ \
+ -losal -Bdynamic -L/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ -lc"; \
echo "$$cmd"; \
$$cmd

Followed by this patch:

/QAT/quickassist/build_system/build_files/OS/linux_common_user_space_rules.mk
@echo 'Creating shared library ${LIB_SHARED}'; \
cd $($(PROG_ACY)_FINAL_OUTPUT_DIR);\
-  echo $(LINKER) $(LIB_SHARED_FLAGS) -o $@  $(OBJECTS) $(ADDITIONAL_OBJECTS) -lc;\
-  $(LINKER) $(LIB_SHARED_FLAGS) -o $@  $(OBJECTS) $(ADDITIONAL_OBJECTS) -lc ;
+  echo $(LINKER) $(LIB_SHARED_FLAGS) -o $@  $(OBJECTS) $(ADDITIONAL_OBJECTS) \
+  -L/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ -lc;\
+  $(LINKER) $(LIB_SHARED_FLAGS) -o $@  $(OBJECTS) $(ADDITIONAL_OBJECTS) \
+  -L/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ -lc ;

22.3.13. Binding the available VFs to the vfio-pci driver

Note:

  • Please note that due to security issues, the usage of older DPDK igb_uio driver is not recommended. This document shows how to use the more secure vfio-pci driver.

  • If QAT fails to bind to vfio-pci on Linux kernel 5.9+, please see the QATE-39220 and QATE-7495 issues in IDZ doc which details the constraint about trusted guests and add disable_denylist=1 to the vfio-pci params to use QAT. See also this patch description.

Unbind the VFs from the stock driver so they can be bound to the vfio-pci driver.

22.3.13.1. For an Intel(R) QuickAssist Technology DH895xCC device

The unbind command below assumes BDFs of 03:01.00-03:04.07, if your VFs are different adjust the unbind command below:

cd to the top-level DPDK directory
for device in $(seq 1 4); do \
    for fn in $(seq 0 7); do \
        usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -u 0000:03:0${device}.${fn}; \
    done; \
done

22.3.13.2. For an Intel(R) QuickAssist Technology C62x device

The unbind command below assumes BDFs of 1a:01.00-1a:02.07, 3d:01.00-3d:02.07 and 3f:01.00-3f:02.07, if your VFs are different adjust the unbind command below:

cd to the top-level DPDK directory
for device in $(seq 1 2); do \
    for fn in $(seq 0 7); do \
        usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -u 0000:1a:0${device}.${fn}; \
        usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -u 0000:3d:0${device}.${fn}; \
        usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -u 0000:3f:0${device}.${fn}; \
    done; \
done

22.3.13.3. For Intel(R) QuickAssist Technology C3xxx or 200xx or D15xx device

The unbind command below assumes BDFs of 01:01.00-01:02.07, if your VFs are different adjust the unbind command below:

cd to the top-level DPDK directory
for device in $(seq 1 2); do \
    for fn in $(seq 0 7); do \
        usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -u 0000:01:0${device}.${fn}; \
    done; \
done

22.3.13.4. Bind to the vfio-pci driver

Load the vfio-pci driver, bind the VF PCI Device id to it using the dpdk-devbind.py script then use the --status option to confirm the VF devices are now in use by vfio-pci kernel driver, e.g. for the C62x device:

cd to the top-level DPDK directory
modprobe vfio-pci
usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -b vfio-pci 0000:03:01.1
usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --status

Use modprobe vfio-pci disable_denylist=1 from kernel 5.9 onwards. See note in the section Binding the available VFs to the vfio-pci driver above.

22.3.14. Testing

QAT SYM crypto PMD can be tested by running the test application:

cd ./<build_dir>/app/test
./dpdk-test -l1 -n1 -a <your qat bdf>
RTE>>cryptodev_qat_autotest

QAT ASYM crypto PMD can be tested by running the test application:

cd ./<build_dir>/app/test
./dpdk-test -l1 -n1 -a <your qat bdf>
RTE>>cryptodev_qat_asym_autotest

QAT compression PMD can be tested by running the test application:

cd ./<build_dir>/app/test
./dpdk-test -l1 -n1 -a <your qat bdf>
RTE>>compressdev_autotest

22.3.15. Debugging

There are 2 sets of trace available via the dynamic logging feature:

  • pmd.qat.dp exposes trace on the data-path.

  • pmd.qat.general exposes all other trace.

pmd.qat exposes both sets of traces. They can be enabled using the log-level option (where 8=maximum log level) on the process cmdline, e.g. using any of the following:

--log-level="pmd.qat.general,8"
--log-level="pmd.qat.dp,8"
--log-level="pmd.qat,8"

Note

The global RTE_LOG_DP_LEVEL overrides data-path trace so must be set to RTE_LOG_DEBUG to see all the trace. This variable is in config/rte_config.h for meson build. Also the dynamic global log level overrides both sets of trace, so e.g. no QAT trace would display in this case:

--log-level="7" --log-level="pmd.qat.general,8"