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IOAT(4)		       FreeBSD Kernel Interfaces Manual		       IOAT(4)

NAME
     I/OAT -- Intel I/O	Acceleration Technology

SYNOPSIS
     To	compile	this driver into your kernel, place the	following line in your
     kernel configuration file:

	   device ioat

     Or, to load the driver as a module	at boot, place the following line in
     loader.conf(5):

	   ioat_load="YES"

     In	loader.conf(5):

     hw.ioat.force_legacy_interrupts=0

     In	loader.conf(5) or sysctl.conf(5):

     hw.ioat.enable_ioat_test=0
     hw.ioat.debug_level=0
     (only critical errors; maximum of 3)

     typedef void
     (*bus_dmaengine_callback_t)(void *arg, int	error);

     bus_dmaengine_t
     ioat_get_dmaengine(uint32_t channel_index);

     void
     ioat_put_dmaengine(bus_dmaengine_t	dmaengine);

     int
     ioat_get_hwversion(bus_dmaengine_t	dmaengine);

     size_t
     ioat_get_max_io_size(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine);

     int
     ioat_set_interrupt_coalesce(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine, uint16_t delay);

     uint16_t
     ioat_get_max_coalesce_period(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine);

     void
     ioat_acquire(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine);

     int
     ioat_acquire_reserve(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine, uint32_t n, int mflags);

     void
     ioat_release(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine);

     struct bus_dmadesc	*
     ioat_copy(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine, bus_addr_t dst, bus_addr_t src,
	   bus_size_t len, bus_dmaengine_callback_t callback_fn,
	   void	*callback_arg, uint32_t	flags);

     struct bus_dmadesc	*
     ioat_copy_8k_aligned(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine, bus_addr_t	dst1,
	   bus_addr_t dst2, bus_addr_t src1, bus_addr_t	src2,
	   bus_dmaengine_callback_t callback_fn, void *callback_arg,
	   uint32_t flags);

     struct bus_dmadesc	*
     ioat_copy_crc(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine, bus_addr_t dst, bus_addr_t src,
	   bus_size_t len, uint32_t *initialseed, bus_addr_t crcptr,
	   bus_dmaengine_callback_t callback_fn, void *callback_arg,
	   uint32_t flags);

     struct bus_dmadesc	*
     ioat_crc(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine, bus_addr_t src, bus_size_t len,
	   uint32_t *initialseed, bus_addr_t crcptr,
	   bus_dmaengine_callback_t callback_fn, void *callback_arg,
	   uint32_t flags);

     struct bus_dmadesc	*
     ioat_blockfill(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine, bus_addr_t dst,
	   uint64_t fillpattern, bus_size_t len,
	   bus_dmaengine_callback_t callback_fn, void *callback_arg,
	   uint32_t flags);

     struct bus_dmadesc	*
     ioat_null(bus_dmaengine_t dmaengine,
	   bus_dmaengine_callback_t callback_fn, void *callback_arg,
	   uint32_t flags);

DESCRIPTION
     The I/OAT driver provides a kernel	API to a variety of DMA	engines	on
     some Intel	server platforms.

     There is a	number of DMA channels per CPU package.	 (Typically 4 or 8.)
     Each may be used independently.  Operations on a single channel proceed
     sequentially.

     Blockfill operations can be used to write a 64-bit	pattern	to memory.

     Copy operations can be used to offload memory copies to the DMA engines.

     Null operations do	nothing, but may be used to test the interrupt and
     callback mechanism.

     All operations can	optionally trigger an interrupt	at completion with the
     DMA_INT_EN	flag.  For example, a user might submit	multiple operations to
     the same channel and only enable an interrupt and callback	for the	last
     operation.

     The hardware can delay and	coalesce interrupts on a given channel for a
     configurable period of time, in microseconds.  This may be	desired	to
     reduce the	processing and interrupt overhead per descriptor, especially
     for workflows consisting of many small operations.	 Software can control
     this on a per-channel basis with the ioat_set_interrupt_coalesce()	API.
     The ioat_get_max_coalesce_period()	API can	be used	to determine the maxi-
     mum coalescing period supported by	the hardware, in microseconds.	Cur-
     rent platforms support up to a 16.383 millisecond coalescing period.
     Optimal configuration will	vary by	workflow and desired operation
     latency.

     All operations are	safe to	use in a non-blocking context with the
     DMA_NO_WAIT flag.	(Of course, allocations	may fail and operations
     requested with DMA_NO_WAIT	may return NULL.)

     Operations	that depend on the result of prior operations should use
     DMA_FENCE.	 For example, such a scenario can happen when two related DMA
     operations	are queued.  First, a DMA copy to one location (A), followed
     directly by a DMA copy from A to B.  In this scenario, some classes of
     I/OAT hardware may	prefetch A for the second operation before it is writ-
     ten by the	first operation.  To avoid reading a stale value in sequences
     of	dependent operations, use DMA_FENCE.

     All operations, as	well as	ioat_get_dmaengine(), can return NULL in spe-
     cial circumstances.  For example, if the I/OAT driver is being unloaded,
     or	the administrator has induced a	hardware reset,	or a usage error has
     resulted in a hardware error state	that needs to be recovered from.

     It	is invalid to attempt to submit	new DMA	operations in a
     bus_dmaengine_callback_t context.

     The CRC operations	have three distinct modes.  The	default	mode is	to
     accumulate.  By accumulating over multiple	descriptors, a user may	gather
     a CRC over	several	chunks of memory and only write	out the	result once.

     The DMA_CRC_STORE flag causes the operation to emit the CRC32C result.
     If	DMA_CRC_INLINE is set, the result is written inline with the destina-
     tion data (or source in ioat_crc()	mode).	If DMA_CRC_INLINE is not set,
     the result	is written to the provided crcptr.

     Similarly,	the DMA_CRC_TEST flag causes the operation to compare the
     CRC32C result to an existing checksum.  If	DMA_CRC_INLINE is set, the
     result is compared	against	the inline four	bytes trailing the source
     data.  If it is not set, the result is compared against the value pointed
     to	by crcptr.

     ioat_copy_crc() calculates	a CRC32C while copying data.  ioat_crc() only
     computes a	CRC32C of some data.  If the initialseed argument to either
     routine is	non-NULL, the CRC32C engine is initialized with	the value it
     points to.

USAGE
     A typical user will lookup	the DMA	engine object for a given channel with
     ioat_get_dmaengine().  When the user wants	to offload a copy, they	will
     first ioat_acquire() the bus_dmaengine_t object for exclusive access to
     enqueue operations	on that	channel.  Optionally, the user can reserve
     space by using ioat_acquire_reserve() instead.  If	ioat_acquire_reserve()
     succeeds, there is	guaranteed to be room for N new	operations in the
     internal ring buffer.

     Then, they	will submit one	or more	operations using ioat_blockfill(),
     ioat_copy(), ioat_copy_8k_aligned(), ioat_copy_crc(), ioat_crc(), or
     ioat_null().  After queuing one or	more individual	DMA operations,	they
     will ioat_release() the bus_dmaengine_t to	drop their exclusive access to
     the channel.  The routine they provided for the callback_fn argument will
     be	invoked	with the provided callback_arg when the	operation is complete.
     When they are finished with the bus_dmaengine_t, the user should
     ioat_put_dmaengine().

     Users MUST	NOT block between ioat_acquire() and ioat_release().  Users
     SHOULD NOT	hold bus_dmaengine_t references	for a very long	time to	enable
     fault recovery and	kernel module unload.

     For an example of usage, see src/sys/dev/ioat/ioat_test.c.

FILES
     /dev/ioat_test		       test device for ioatcontrol(8)

SEE ALSO
     ioatcontrol(8)

HISTORY
     The I/OAT driver first appeared in	FreeBSD	11.0.

AUTHORS
     The I/OAT driver was developed by Jim Harris <jimharris@FreeBSD.org>,
     Carl Delsey <carl.r.delsey@intel.com>, and
     Conrad Meyer <cem@FreeBSD.org>.  This manual page was written by
     Conrad Meyer <cem@FreeBSD.org>.

CAVEATS
     Copy operation takes bus addresses	as parameters, not virtual addresses.

     Buffers for individual copy operations must be physically contiguous.

     Copies larger than	max transfer size (1MB,	but may	vary by	hardware) are
     not supported.  Future versions will likely support this by breaking up
     the transfer into smaller sizes.

BUGS
     The I/OAT driver only supports blockfill, copy, and null operations at
     this time.	 The driver does not yet support advanced DMA modes, such as
     XOR, that some I/OAT devices support.

FreeBSD	11.1			  May 3, 2016			  FreeBSD 11.1

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | USAGE | FILES | SEE ALSO | HISTORY | AUTHORS | CAVEATS | BUGS

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