Star64_linux/include/xen/interface/io/netif.h
Paul Durrant 210c34dcd8 xen-netback: add support for multicast control
Xen's PV network protocol includes messages to add/remove ethernet
multicast addresses to/from a filter list in the backend. This allows
the frontend to request the backend only forward multicast packets
which are of interest thus preventing unnecessary noise on the shared
ring.

The canonical netif header in git://xenbits.xen.org/xen.git specifies
the message format (two more XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_TYPEs) so the minimal
necessary changes have been pulled into include/xen/interface/io/netif.h.

To prevent the frontend from extending the multicast filter list
arbitrarily a limit (XEN_NETBK_MCAST_MAX) has been set to 64 entries.
This limit is not specified by the protocol and so may change in future.
If the limit is reached then the next XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_TYPE_MCAST_ADD
sent by the frontend will be failed with NETIF_RSP_ERROR.

Signed-off-by: Paul Durrant <paul.durrant@citrix.com>
Cc: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com>
Cc: Wei Liu <wei.liu2@citrix.com>
Acked-by: Wei Liu <wei.liu2@citrix.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2015-09-02 11:45:00 -07:00

268 lines
9.9 KiB
C

/******************************************************************************
* netif.h
*
* Unified network-device I/O interface for Xen guest OSes.
*
* Copyright (c) 2003-2004, Keir Fraser
*/
#ifndef __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_NETIF_H__
#define __XEN_PUBLIC_IO_NETIF_H__
#include <xen/interface/io/ring.h>
#include <xen/interface/grant_table.h>
/*
* Older implementation of Xen network frontend / backend has an
* implicit dependency on the MAX_SKB_FRAGS as the maximum number of
* ring slots a skb can use. Netfront / netback may not work as
* expected when frontend and backend have different MAX_SKB_FRAGS.
*
* A better approach is to add mechanism for netfront / netback to
* negotiate this value. However we cannot fix all possible
* frontends, so we need to define a value which states the minimum
* slots backend must support.
*
* The minimum value derives from older Linux kernel's MAX_SKB_FRAGS
* (18), which is proved to work with most frontends. Any new backend
* which doesn't negotiate with frontend should expect frontend to
* send a valid packet using slots up to this value.
*/
#define XEN_NETIF_NR_SLOTS_MIN 18
/*
* Notifications after enqueuing any type of message should be conditional on
* the appropriate req_event or rsp_event field in the shared ring.
* If the client sends notification for rx requests then it should specify
* feature 'feature-rx-notify' via xenbus. Otherwise the backend will assume
* that it cannot safely queue packets (as it may not be kicked to send them).
*/
/*
* "feature-split-event-channels" is introduced to separate guest TX
* and RX notificaion. Backend either doesn't support this feature or
* advertise it via xenstore as 0 (disabled) or 1 (enabled).
*
* To make use of this feature, frontend should allocate two event
* channels for TX and RX, advertise them to backend as
* "event-channel-tx" and "event-channel-rx" respectively. If frontend
* doesn't want to use this feature, it just writes "event-channel"
* node as before.
*/
/*
* Multiple transmit and receive queues:
* If supported, the backend will write the key "multi-queue-max-queues" to
* the directory for that vif, and set its value to the maximum supported
* number of queues.
* Frontends that are aware of this feature and wish to use it can write the
* key "multi-queue-num-queues", set to the number they wish to use, which
* must be greater than zero, and no more than the value reported by the backend
* in "multi-queue-max-queues".
*
* Queues replicate the shared rings and event channels.
* "feature-split-event-channels" may optionally be used when using
* multiple queues, but is not mandatory.
*
* Each queue consists of one shared ring pair, i.e. there must be the same
* number of tx and rx rings.
*
* For frontends requesting just one queue, the usual event-channel and
* ring-ref keys are written as before, simplifying the backend processing
* to avoid distinguishing between a frontend that doesn't understand the
* multi-queue feature, and one that does, but requested only one queue.
*
* Frontends requesting two or more queues must not write the toplevel
* event-channel (or event-channel-{tx,rx}) and {tx,rx}-ring-ref keys,
* instead writing those keys under sub-keys having the name "queue-N" where
* N is the integer ID of the queue for which those keys belong. Queues
* are indexed from zero. For example, a frontend with two queues and split
* event channels must write the following set of queue-related keys:
*
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/multi-queue-num-queues = "2"
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-0 = ""
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-0/tx-ring-ref = "<ring-ref-tx0>"
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-0/rx-ring-ref = "<ring-ref-rx0>"
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-0/event-channel-tx = "<evtchn-tx0>"
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-0/event-channel-rx = "<evtchn-rx0>"
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-1 = ""
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-1/tx-ring-ref = "<ring-ref-tx1>"
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-1/rx-ring-ref = "<ring-ref-rx1"
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-1/event-channel-tx = "<evtchn-tx1>"
* /local/domain/1/device/vif/0/queue-1/event-channel-rx = "<evtchn-rx1>"
*
* If there is any inconsistency in the XenStore data, the backend may
* choose not to connect any queues, instead treating the request as an
* error. This includes scenarios where more (or fewer) queues were
* requested than the frontend provided details for.
*
* Mapping of packets to queues is considered to be a function of the
* transmitting system (backend or frontend) and is not negotiated
* between the two. Guests are free to transmit packets on any queue
* they choose, provided it has been set up correctly. Guests must be
* prepared to receive packets on any queue they have requested be set up.
*/
/*
* "feature-no-csum-offload" should be used to turn IPv4 TCP/UDP checksum
* offload off or on. If it is missing then the feature is assumed to be on.
* "feature-ipv6-csum-offload" should be used to turn IPv6 TCP/UDP checksum
* offload on or off. If it is missing then the feature is assumed to be off.
*/
/*
* "feature-gso-tcpv4" and "feature-gso-tcpv6" advertise the capability to
* handle large TCP packets (in IPv4 or IPv6 form respectively). Neither
* frontends nor backends are assumed to be capable unless the flags are
* present.
*/
/*
* This is the 'wire' format for packets:
* Request 1: xen_netif_tx_request -- XEN_NETTXF_* (any flags)
* [Request 2: xen_netif_extra_info] (only if request 1 has XEN_NETTXF_extra_info)
* [Request 3: xen_netif_extra_info] (only if request 2 has XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_MORE)
* Request 4: xen_netif_tx_request -- XEN_NETTXF_more_data
* Request 5: xen_netif_tx_request -- XEN_NETTXF_more_data
* ...
* Request N: xen_netif_tx_request -- 0
*/
/* Protocol checksum field is blank in the packet (hardware offload)? */
#define _XEN_NETTXF_csum_blank (0)
#define XEN_NETTXF_csum_blank (1U<<_XEN_NETTXF_csum_blank)
/* Packet data has been validated against protocol checksum. */
#define _XEN_NETTXF_data_validated (1)
#define XEN_NETTXF_data_validated (1U<<_XEN_NETTXF_data_validated)
/* Packet continues in the next request descriptor. */
#define _XEN_NETTXF_more_data (2)
#define XEN_NETTXF_more_data (1U<<_XEN_NETTXF_more_data)
/* Packet to be followed by extra descriptor(s). */
#define _XEN_NETTXF_extra_info (3)
#define XEN_NETTXF_extra_info (1U<<_XEN_NETTXF_extra_info)
#define XEN_NETIF_MAX_TX_SIZE 0xFFFF
struct xen_netif_tx_request {
grant_ref_t gref; /* Reference to buffer page */
uint16_t offset; /* Offset within buffer page */
uint16_t flags; /* XEN_NETTXF_* */
uint16_t id; /* Echoed in response message. */
uint16_t size; /* Packet size in bytes. */
};
/* Types of xen_netif_extra_info descriptors. */
#define XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_TYPE_NONE (0) /* Never used - invalid */
#define XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_TYPE_GSO (1) /* u.gso */
#define XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_TYPE_MCAST_ADD (2) /* u.mcast */
#define XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_TYPE_MCAST_DEL (3) /* u.mcast */
#define XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_TYPE_MAX (4)
/* xen_netif_extra_info flags. */
#define _XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_FLAG_MORE (0)
#define XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_FLAG_MORE (1U<<_XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_FLAG_MORE)
/* GSO types */
#define XEN_NETIF_GSO_TYPE_NONE (0)
#define XEN_NETIF_GSO_TYPE_TCPV4 (1)
#define XEN_NETIF_GSO_TYPE_TCPV6 (2)
/*
* This structure needs to fit within both netif_tx_request and
* netif_rx_response for compatibility.
*/
struct xen_netif_extra_info {
uint8_t type; /* XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_TYPE_* */
uint8_t flags; /* XEN_NETIF_EXTRA_FLAG_* */
union {
struct {
/*
* Maximum payload size of each segment. For
* example, for TCP this is just the path MSS.
*/
uint16_t size;
/*
* GSO type. This determines the protocol of
* the packet and any extra features required
* to segment the packet properly.
*/
uint8_t type; /* XEN_NETIF_GSO_TYPE_* */
/* Future expansion. */
uint8_t pad;
/*
* GSO features. This specifies any extra GSO
* features required to process this packet,
* such as ECN support for TCPv4.
*/
uint16_t features; /* XEN_NETIF_GSO_FEAT_* */
} gso;
struct {
uint8_t addr[6]; /* Address to add/remove. */
} mcast;
uint16_t pad[3];
} u;
};
struct xen_netif_tx_response {
uint16_t id;
int16_t status; /* XEN_NETIF_RSP_* */
};
struct xen_netif_rx_request {
uint16_t id; /* Echoed in response message. */
grant_ref_t gref; /* Reference to incoming granted frame */
};
/* Packet data has been validated against protocol checksum. */
#define _XEN_NETRXF_data_validated (0)
#define XEN_NETRXF_data_validated (1U<<_XEN_NETRXF_data_validated)
/* Protocol checksum field is blank in the packet (hardware offload)? */
#define _XEN_NETRXF_csum_blank (1)
#define XEN_NETRXF_csum_blank (1U<<_XEN_NETRXF_csum_blank)
/* Packet continues in the next request descriptor. */
#define _XEN_NETRXF_more_data (2)
#define XEN_NETRXF_more_data (1U<<_XEN_NETRXF_more_data)
/* Packet to be followed by extra descriptor(s). */
#define _XEN_NETRXF_extra_info (3)
#define XEN_NETRXF_extra_info (1U<<_XEN_NETRXF_extra_info)
/* GSO Prefix descriptor. */
#define _XEN_NETRXF_gso_prefix (4)
#define XEN_NETRXF_gso_prefix (1U<<_XEN_NETRXF_gso_prefix)
struct xen_netif_rx_response {
uint16_t id;
uint16_t offset; /* Offset in page of start of received packet */
uint16_t flags; /* XEN_NETRXF_* */
int16_t status; /* -ve: BLKIF_RSP_* ; +ve: Rx'ed pkt size. */
};
/*
* Generate netif ring structures and types.
*/
DEFINE_RING_TYPES(xen_netif_tx,
struct xen_netif_tx_request,
struct xen_netif_tx_response);
DEFINE_RING_TYPES(xen_netif_rx,
struct xen_netif_rx_request,
struct xen_netif_rx_response);
#define XEN_NETIF_RSP_DROPPED -2
#define XEN_NETIF_RSP_ERROR -1
#define XEN_NETIF_RSP_OKAY 0
/* No response: used for auxiliary requests (e.g., xen_netif_extra_info). */
#define XEN_NETIF_RSP_NULL 1
#endif