5. NXP DPAA2 Eventdev Driver
The dpaa2 eventdev is an implementation of the eventdev API, that provides a wide range of the eventdev features. The eventdev relies on a dpaa2 hw to perform event scheduling.
More information can be found at NXP Official Website.
5.1. Features
The DPAA2 EVENTDEV implements many features in the eventdev API;
Hardware based event scheduler
8 event ports
8 event queues
Parallel flows
Atomic flows
5.2. Supported DPAA2 SoCs
LX2160A
LS2084A/LS2044A
LS2088A/LS2048A
LS1088A/LS1048A
5.3. Prerequisites
See NXP QorIQ DPAA2 Board Support Package for setup information
Follow the DPDK Getting Started Guide for Linux to setup the basic DPDK environment.
Note
Some part of fslmc bus code (mc flib - object library) routines are dual licensed (BSD & GPLv2).
5.4. Initialization
The dpaa2 eventdev is exposed as a vdev device which consists of a set of dpcon devices and dpci devices. On EAL initialization, dpcon and dpci devices will be probed and then vdev device can be created from the application code by
Invoking
rte_vdev_init("event_dpaa2")
from the applicationUsing
--vdev="event_dpaa2"
in the EAL options, which will call rte_vdev_init() internally
Example:
./your_eventdev_application --vdev="event_dpaa2"
5.5. Enabling logs
For enabling logs, use the following EAL parameter:
./your_eventdev_application <EAL args> --log-level=pmd.event.dpaa2,<level>
Using eventdev.dpaa2
as log matching criteria, all Event PMD logs can be
enabled which are lower than logging level
.
5.6. Limitations
5.6.1. Platform Requirement
DPAA2 drivers for DPDK can only work on NXP SoCs as listed in the
Supported DPAA2 SoCs
.
5.6.2. Port-core binding
DPAA2 EVENTDEV can support only one eventport per core.