1# Chelsio T6 Factory Default configuration file.
2#
3# Copyright (C) 2014-2015 Chelsio Communications.  All rights reserved.
4#
5#   DO NOT MODIFY THIS FILE UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES.  MODIFICATION OF THIS FILE
6#   WILL RESULT IN A NON-FUNCTIONAL ADAPTER AND MAY RESULT IN PHYSICAL DAMAGE
7#   TO ADAPTERS.
8
9
10# This file provides the default, power-on configuration for 2-port T6-based
11# adapters shipped from the factory.  These defaults are designed to address
12# the needs of the vast majority of Terminator customers.  The basic idea is to
13# have a default configuration which allows a customer to plug a Terminator
14# adapter in and have it work regardless of OS, driver or application except in
15# the most unusual and/or demanding customer applications.
16#
17# Many of the Terminator resources which are described by this configuration
18# are finite.  This requires balancing the configuration/operation needs of
19# device drivers across OSes and a large number of customer application.
20#
21# Some of the more important resources to allocate and their constaints are:
22#  1. Virtual Interfaces: 256.
23#  2. Ingress Queues with Free Lists: 1024.
24#  3. Egress Queues: 128K.
25#  4. MSI-X Vectors: 1088.
26#  5. Multi-Port Support (MPS) TCAM: 336 entries to support MAC destination
27#     address matching on Ingress Packets.
28#
29# Some of the important OS/Driver resource needs are:
30#  6. Some OS Drivers will manage all resources through a single Physical
31#     Function (currently PF4 but it could be any Physical Function).
32#  7. Some OS Drivers will manage different ports and functions (NIC,
33#     storage, etc.) on different Physical Functions.  For example, NIC
34#     functions for ports 0-1 on PF0-1, FCoE on PF4, iSCSI on PF5, etc.
35#
36# Some of the customer application needs which need to be accommodated:
37#  8. Some customers will want to support large CPU count systems with
38#     good scaling.  Thus, we'll need to accommodate a number of
39#     Ingress Queues and MSI-X Vectors to allow up to some number of CPUs
40#     to be involved per port and per application function.  For example,
41#     in the case where all ports and application functions will be
42#     managed via a single Unified PF and we want to accommodate scaling up
43#     to 8 CPUs, we would want:
44#
45#         2 ports *
46#         3 application functions (NIC, FCoE, iSCSI) per port *
47#         16 Ingress Queue/MSI-X Vectors per application function
48#
49#     for a total of 96 Ingress Queues and MSI-X Vectors on the Unified PF.
50#     (Plus a few for Firmware Event Queues, etc.)
51#
52#  9. Some customers will want to use PCI-E SR-IOV Capability to allow Virtual
53#     Machines to directly access T6 functionality via SR-IOV Virtual Functions
54#     and "PCI Device Passthrough" -- this is especially true for the NIC
55#     application functionality.
56#
57
58
59# Global configuration settings.
60#
61[global]
62	rss_glb_config_mode = basicvirtual
63	rss_glb_config_options = tnlmapen,hashtoeplitz,tnlalllkp
64
65	# PL_TIMEOUT register
66	pl_timeout_value = 200		# the timeout value in units of us
67
68	# The following Scatter Gather Engine (SGE) settings assume a 4KB Host
69	# Page Size and a 64B L1 Cache Line Size. It programs the
70	# EgrStatusPageSize and IngPadBoundary to 64B and the PktShift to 2.
71	# If a Master PF Driver finds itself on a machine with different
72	# parameters, then the Master PF Driver is responsible for initializing
73	# these parameters to appropriate values.
74	#
75	# Notes:
76	#  1. The Free List Buffer Sizes below are raw and the firmware will
77	#     round them up to the Ingress Padding Boundary.
78	#  2. The SGE Timer Values below are expressed below in microseconds.
79	#     The firmware will convert these values to Core Clock Ticks when
80	#     it processes the configuration parameters.
81	#
82	reg[0x1008] = 0x40800/0x21c70	# SGE_CONTROL
83	reg[0x100c] = 0x22222222	# SGE_HOST_PAGE_SIZE
84	reg[0x10a0] = 0x01040810	# SGE_INGRESS_RX_THRESHOLD
85	reg[0x1044] = 4096		# SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE0
86	reg[0x1048] = 65536		# SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE1
87	reg[0x104c] = 1536		# SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE2
88	reg[0x1050] = 9024		# SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE3
89	reg[0x1054] = 9216		# SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE4
90	reg[0x1058] = 2048		# SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE5
91	reg[0x105c] = 128		# SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE6
92	reg[0x1060] = 8192		# SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE7
93	reg[0x1064] = 16384		# SGE_FL_BUFFER_SIZE8
94
95	sge_timer_value = 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 # SGE_TIMER_VALUE* in usecs
96	reg[0x10c4] = 0x20000000/0x20000000 # GK_CONTROL, enable 5th thread
97
98	# Set the SGE Doorbell Queue Timer "tick" to 50us and initialize
99	# the Timer Table to a default set of values (which are multiples
100	# of the Timer Tick).  Note that the set of Tick Multipliers are
101	# NOT sorted.  The Host Drivers are expected to pick amongst them
102	# for (Tick * Multiplier[i]) values which most closely match the Host
103	# Drivers' needs.  Also, most Host Drivers will be default start
104	# start with (Tick * Multiplier[0]), so this gives us some flexibility
105	# in terms of picking a Tick and a default Multiplier somewhere in
106	# the middle of the achievable set of (Tick * Multiplier[i]) values.
107	# Thus, the below select for 150us by this default.
108	#
109	sge_dbq_timertick = 50
110	sge_dbq_timer = 3, 2, 1, 5, 7, 9, 12, 16
111
112	# enable TP_OUT_CONFIG.IPIDSPLITMODE
113	reg[0x7d04] = 0x00010000/0x00010000
114
115	reg[0x7dc0] = 0x0e2f8849	# TP_SHIFT_CNT
116
117	#Tick granularities in kbps
118	tsch_ticks = 100000, 10000, 1000, 10
119
120	# TP_VLAN_PRI_MAP to select filter tuples and enable ServerSram
121	# filter control: compact, fcoemask
122	# server sram   : srvrsram
123	# filter tuples : fragmentation, mpshittype, macmatch, ethertype,
124	#		  protocol, tos, vlan, vnic_id, port, fcoe
125	# valid filterModes are described the Terminator 5 Data Book
126	# vnicMode = pf_vf  #default. Other values are outer_vlan, encapsulation
127	filterMode = fcoemask, srvrsram, fragmentation, mpshittype, protocol, vlan, port, fcoe
128
129	# filter tuples enforced in LE active region (equal to or subset of filterMode)
130	filterMask = protocol, fcoe
131
132	# Percentage of dynamic memory (in either the EDRAM or external MEM)
133	# to use for TP RX payload
134	tp_pmrx = 30
135
136	# TP RX payload page size
137	tp_pmrx_pagesize = 64K
138
139	# TP number of RX channels
140	tp_nrxch = 0		# 0 (auto) = 1
141
142	# Percentage of dynamic memory (in either the EDRAM or external MEM)
143	# to use for TP TX payload
144	tp_pmtx = 50
145
146	# TP TX payload page size
147	tp_pmtx_pagesize = 64K
148
149	# TP number of TX channels
150	tp_ntxch = 0		# 0 (auto) = equal number of ports
151
152	# TP OFLD MTUs
153	tp_mtus = 88, 256, 512, 576, 808, 1024, 1280, 1488, 1500, 2002, 2048, 4096, 4352, 8192, 9000, 9600
154
155	# enable TP_OUT_CONFIG.IPIDSPLITMODE and CRXPKTENC
156	reg[0x7d04] = 0x00010008/0x00010008
157
158	# TP_GLOBAL_CONFIG
159	reg[0x7d08] = 0x00000800/0x00000800 # set IssFromCplEnable
160
161	# TP_PC_CONFIG
162	reg[0x7d48] = 0x00000000/0x00000400 # clear EnableFLMError
163
164	# TP_PARA_REG0
165	reg[0x7d60] = 0x06000000/0x07000000 # set InitCWND to 6
166
167	# ULPRX iSCSI Page Sizes
168	reg[0x19168] = 0x04020100 # 64K, 16K, 8K and 4K
169
170	# LE_DB_CONFIG
171	reg[0x19c04] = 0x00000000/0x00440000 # LE Server SRAM disabled
172					     # LE IPv4 compression disabled
173	# LE_DB_HASH_CONFIG
174	reg[0x19c28] = 0x00800000/0x01f00000 # LE Hash bucket size 8,
175
176	# ULP_TX_CONFIG
177	reg[0x8dc0] = 0x00000104/0x00000104 # Enable ITT on PI err
178					    # Enable more error msg for ...
179					    # TPT error.
180
181	# ULP_RX_MISC_FEATURE_ENABLE
182	#reg[0x1925c] = 0x01003400/0x01003400 # iscsi tag pi bit
183					     # Enable offset decrement after ...
184					     # PI extraction and before DDP
185					     # ulp insert pi source info in DIF
186					     # iscsi_eff_offset_en
187
188	#Enable iscsi completion moderation feature
189	reg[0x1925c] = 0x000041c0/0x000031c0	# Enable offset decrement after
190						# PI extraction and before DDP.
191						# ulp insert pi source info in
192						# DIF.
193						# Enable iscsi hdr cmd mode.
194						# iscsi force cmd mode.
195						# Enable iscsi cmp mode.
196	# MC configuration
197	#mc_mode_brc[0] = 1		# mc0 - 1: enable BRC, 0: enable RBC, 2: enable BRBC
198
199	# HMA configuration
200	hma_size = 92 			# Size (in MBs) of host memory expected
201	hma_regions = stag,pbl,rq	# What all regions to place in host memory
202
203# Some "definitions" to make the rest of this a bit more readable.  We support
204# 4 ports, 3 functions (NIC, FCoE and iSCSI), scaling up to 8 "CPU Queue Sets"
205# per function per port ...
206#
207# NMSIX = 1088			# available MSI-X Vectors
208# NVI = 256			# available Virtual Interfaces
209# NMPSTCAM = 336		# MPS TCAM entries
210#
211# NPORTS = 2			# ports
212# NCPUS = 16			# CPUs we want to support scalably
213# NFUNCS = 3			# functions per port (NIC, FCoE, iSCSI)
214
215# Breakdown of Virtual Interface/Queue/Interrupt resources for the "Unified
216# PF" which many OS Drivers will use to manage most or all functions.
217#
218# Each Ingress Queue can use one MSI-X interrupt but some Ingress Queues can
219# use Forwarded Interrupt Ingress Queues.  For these latter, an Ingress Queue
220# would be created and the Queue ID of a Forwarded Interrupt Ingress Queue
221# will be specified as the "Ingress Queue Asynchronous Destination Index."
222# Thus, the number of MSI-X Vectors assigned to the Unified PF will be less
223# than or equal to the number of Ingress Queues ...
224#
225# NVI_NIC = 4			# NIC access to NPORTS
226# NFLIQ_NIC = 32		# NIC Ingress Queues with Free Lists
227# NETHCTRL_NIC = 32		# NIC Ethernet Control/TX Queues
228# NEQ_NIC = 64			# NIC Egress Queues (FL, ETHCTRL/TX)
229# NMPSTCAM_NIC = 16		# NIC MPS TCAM Entries (NPORTS*4)
230# NMSIX_NIC = 32		# NIC MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
231#
232# NVI_OFLD = 0			# Offload uses NIC function to access ports
233# NFLIQ_OFLD = 16		# Offload Ingress Queues with Free Lists
234# NETHCTRL_OFLD = 0		# Offload Ethernet Control/TX Queues
235# NEQ_OFLD = 16			# Offload Egress Queues (FL)
236# NMPSTCAM_OFLD = 0		# Offload MPS TCAM Entries (uses NIC's)
237# NMSIX_OFLD = 16		# Offload MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
238#
239# NVI_RDMA = 0			# RDMA uses NIC function to access ports
240# NFLIQ_RDMA = 4		# RDMA Ingress Queues with Free Lists
241# NETHCTRL_RDMA = 0		# RDMA Ethernet Control/TX Queues
242# NEQ_RDMA = 4			# RDMA Egress Queues (FL)
243# NMPSTCAM_RDMA = 0		# RDMA MPS TCAM Entries (uses NIC's)
244# NMSIX_RDMA = 4		# RDMA MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
245#
246# NEQ_WD = 128			# Wire Direct TX Queues and FLs
247# NETHCTRL_WD = 64		# Wire Direct TX Queues
248# NFLIQ_WD = 64	`		# Wire Direct Ingress Queues with Free Lists
249#
250# NVI_ISCSI = 4			# ISCSI access to NPORTS
251# NFLIQ_ISCSI = 4		# ISCSI Ingress Queues with Free Lists
252# NETHCTRL_ISCSI = 0		# ISCSI Ethernet Control/TX Queues
253# NEQ_ISCSI = 4			# ISCSI Egress Queues (FL)
254# NMPSTCAM_ISCSI = 4		# ISCSI MPS TCAM Entries (NPORTS)
255# NMSIX_ISCSI = 4		# ISCSI MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
256#
257# NVI_FCOE = 4			# FCOE access to NPORTS
258# NFLIQ_FCOE = 34		# FCOE Ingress Queues with Free Lists
259# NETHCTRL_FCOE = 32		# FCOE Ethernet Control/TX Queues
260# NEQ_FCOE = 66			# FCOE Egress Queues (FL)
261# NMPSTCAM_FCOE = 32 		# FCOE MPS TCAM Entries (NPORTS)
262# NMSIX_FCOE = 34		# FCOE MSI-X Interrupt Vectors (FLIQ)
263
264# Two extra Ingress Queues per function for Firmware Events and Forwarded
265# Interrupts, and two extra interrupts per function for Firmware Events (or a
266# Forwarded Interrupt Queue) and General Interrupts per function.
267#
268# NFLIQ_EXTRA = 6		# "extra" Ingress Queues 2*NFUNCS (Firmware and
269# 				#   Forwarded Interrupts
270# NMSIX_EXTRA = 6		# extra interrupts 2*NFUNCS (Firmware and
271# 				#   General Interrupts
272
273# Microsoft HyperV resources.  The HyperV Virtual Ingress Queues will have
274# their interrupts forwarded to another set of Forwarded Interrupt Queues.
275#
276# NVI_HYPERV = 16		# VMs we want to support
277# NVIIQ_HYPERV = 2		# Virtual Ingress Queues with Free Lists per VM
278# NFLIQ_HYPERV = 40		# VIQs + NCPUS Forwarded Interrupt Queues
279# NEQ_HYPERV = 32		# VIQs Free Lists
280# NMPSTCAM_HYPERV = 16		# MPS TCAM Entries (NVI_HYPERV)
281# NMSIX_HYPERV = 8		# NCPUS Forwarded Interrupt Queues
282
283# Adding all of the above Unified PF resource needs together: (NIC + OFLD +
284# RDMA + ISCSI + FCOE + EXTRA + HYPERV)
285#
286# NVI_UNIFIED = 28
287# NFLIQ_UNIFIED = 106
288# NETHCTRL_UNIFIED = 32
289# NEQ_UNIFIED = 124
290# NMPSTCAM_UNIFIED = 40
291#
292# The sum of all the MSI-X resources above is 74 MSI-X Vectors but we'll round
293# that up to 128 to make sure the Unified PF doesn't run out of resources.
294#
295# NMSIX_UNIFIED = 128
296#
297# The Storage PFs could need up to NPORTS*NCPUS + NMSIX_EXTRA MSI-X Vectors
298# which is 34 but they're probably safe with 32.
299#
300# NMSIX_STORAGE = 32
301
302# Note: The UnifiedPF is PF4 which doesn't have any Virtual Functions
303# associated with it.  Thus, the MSI-X Vector allocations we give to the
304# UnifiedPF aren't inherited by any Virtual Functions.  As a result we can
305# provision many more Virtual Functions than we can if the UnifiedPF were
306# one of PF0-3.
307#
308
309# All of the below PCI-E parameters are actually stored in various *_init.txt
310# files.  We include them below essentially as comments.
311#
312# For PF0-3 we assign 8 vectors each for NIC Ingress Queues of the associated
313# ports 0-3.
314#
315# For PF4, the Unified PF, we give it an MSI-X Table Size as outlined above.
316#
317# For PF5-6 we assign enough MSI-X Vectors to support FCoE and iSCSI
318# storage applications across all four possible ports.
319#
320# Additionally, since the UnifiedPF isn't one of the per-port Physical
321# Functions, we give the UnifiedPF and the PF0-3 Physical Functions
322# different PCI Device IDs which will allow Unified and Per-Port Drivers
323# to directly select the type of Physical Function to which they wish to be
324# attached.
325#
326# Note that the actual values used for the PCI-E Intelectual Property will be
327# 1 less than those below since that's the way it "counts" things.  For
328# readability, we use the number we actually mean ...
329#
330# PF0_INT = 8			# NCPUS
331# PF1_INT = 8			# NCPUS
332# PF0_3_INT = 32		# PF0_INT + PF1_INT + PF2_INT + PF3_INT
333#
334# PF4_INT = 128			# NMSIX_UNIFIED
335# PF5_INT = 32			# NMSIX_STORAGE
336# PF6_INT = 32			# NMSIX_STORAGE
337# PF7_INT = 0			# Nothing Assigned
338# PF4_7_INT = 192		# PF4_INT + PF5_INT + PF6_INT + PF7_INT
339#
340# PF0_7_INT = 224		# PF0_3_INT + PF4_7_INT
341#
342# With the above we can get 17 VFs/PF0-3 (limited by 336 MPS TCAM entries)
343# but we'll lower that to 16 to make our total 64 and a nice power of 2 ...
344#
345# NVF = 16
346
347
348# For those OSes which manage different ports on different PFs, we need
349# only enough resources to support a single port's NIC application functions
350# on PF0-3.  The below assumes that we're only doing NIC with NCPUS "Queue
351# Sets" for ports 0-3.  The FCoE and iSCSI functions for such OSes will be
352# managed on the "storage PFs" (see below).
353#
354[function "0"]
355	nvf = 16		# NVF on this function
356	wx_caps = all		# write/execute permissions for all commands
357	r_caps = all		# read permissions for all commands
358	nvi = 1			# 1 port
359	niqflint = 8		# NCPUS "Queue Sets"
360	nethctrl = 8		# NCPUS "Queue Sets"
361	neq = 16		# niqflint + nethctrl Egress Queues
362	nexactf = 8		# number of exact MPSTCAM MAC filters
363	cmask = all		# access to all channels
364	pmask = 0x1		# access to only one port
365
366
367[function "1"]
368	nvf = 16		# NVF on this function
369	wx_caps = all		# write/execute permissions for all commands
370	r_caps = all		# read permissions for all commands
371	nvi = 1			# 1 port
372	niqflint = 8		# NCPUS "Queue Sets"
373	nethctrl = 8		# NCPUS "Queue Sets"
374	neq = 16		# niqflint + nethctrl Egress Queues
375	nexactf = 8		# number of exact MPSTCAM MAC filters
376	cmask = all		# access to all channels
377	pmask = 0x2		# access to only one port
378
379[function "2"]
380	nvf = 16		# NVF on this function
381	wx_caps = all		# write/execute permissions for all commands
382	r_caps = all		# read permissions for all commands
383	nvi = 1			# 1 port
384	niqflint = 8		# NCPUS "Queue Sets"
385	nethctrl = 8		# NCPUS "Queue Sets"
386	neq = 16		# niqflint + nethctrl Egress Queues
387	nexactf = 8		# number of exact MPSTCAM MAC filters
388	cmask = all		# access to all channels
389	pmask = 0x4		# access to only one port
390
391[function "3"]
392	nvf = 16		# NVF on this function
393	wx_caps = all		# write/execute permissions for all commands
394	r_caps = all		# read permissions for all commands
395	nvi = 1			# 1 port
396	niqflint = 8		# NCPUS "Queue Sets"
397	nethctrl = 8		# NCPUS "Queue Sets"
398	neq = 16		# niqflint + nethctrl Egress Queues
399	nexactf = 8		# number of exact MPSTCAM MAC filters
400	cmask = all		# access to all channels
401	pmask = 0x8		# access to only one port
402
403
404# Some OS Drivers manage all application functions for all ports via PF4.
405# Thus we need to provide a large number of resources here.  For Egress
406# Queues we need to account for both TX Queues as well as Free List Queues
407# (because the host is responsible for producing Free List Buffers for the
408# hardware to consume).
409#
410[function "4"]
411	wx_caps = all		# write/execute permissions for all commands
412	r_caps = all		# read permissions for all commands
413	nvi = 28		# NVI_UNIFIED
414	niqflint = 218		# NFLIQ_UNIFIED + NLFIQ_WD + NFLIQ_CRYPTO (32)
415	nethctrl = 116		# NETHCTRL_UNIFIED + NETHCTRL_WD + ncrypto_lookaside
416	neq = 256		# NEQ_UNIFIED + NEQ_WD
417	nqpcq = 12288
418	nexactf = 40		# NMPSTCAM_UNIFIED
419	nrawf = 2
420	cmask = all		# access to all channels
421	pmask = all		# access to all four ports ...
422	nethofld = 1024		# number of user mode ethernet flow contexts
423	ncrypto_lookaside = 16  # Number of lookaside flow contexts
424	nclip = 320		# number of clip region entries
425	nfilter = 496		# number of filter region entries
426	nserver = 496		# number of server region entries
427	nhash = 12288		# number of hash region entries
428	nhpfilter = 64		# number of high priority filter region entries
429	protocol = nic_vm, ofld, rddp, rdmac, iscsi_initiator_pdu, iscsi_target_pdu, iscsi_t10dif, tlskeys, crypto_lookaside, ipsec_inline, nic_hashfilter
430	tp_l2t = 3072
431	tp_ddp = 2
432	tp_ddp_iscsi = 2
433	tp_tls_key = 2
434	tp_tls_mxrxsize = 17408    # 16384 + 1024, governs max rx data, pm max xfer len, rx coalesce sizes
435	tp_stag = 2
436	tp_pbl = 7
437	tp_rq = 7
438	tp_srq = 128
439
440# We have FCoE and iSCSI storage functions on PF5 and PF6 each of which may
441# need to have Virtual Interfaces on each of the four ports with up to NCPUS
442# "Queue Sets" each.
443#
444[function "5"]
445	wx_caps = all		# write/execute permissions for all commands
446	r_caps = all		# read permissions for all commands
447	nvi = 4			# NPORTS
448	niqflint = 34		# NPORTS*NCPUS + NMSIX_EXTRA
449	nethctrl = 32		# NPORTS*NCPUS
450	neq = 64		# NPORTS*NCPUS * 2 (FL, ETHCTRL/TX)
451	nexactf = 16		# (NPORTS *(no of snmc grp + 1 hw mac) + 1 anmc grp)) rounded to 16.
452	cmask = all		# access to all channels
453	pmask = all		# access to all four ports ...
454	nserver = 16
455	nhash = 2048
456	tp_l2t = 1020
457	nclip = 64
458	protocol = iscsi_initiator_fofld
459	tp_ddp_iscsi = 2
460	iscsi_ntask = 2048
461	iscsi_nsess = 2048
462	iscsi_nconn_per_session = 1
463	iscsi_ninitiator_instance = 64
464
465
466[function "6"]
467	wx_caps = all		# write/execute permissions for all commands
468	r_caps = all		# read permissions for all commands
469	nvi = 4			# NPORTS
470	niqflint = 34		# NPORTS*NCPUS + NMSIX_EXTRA
471	nethctrl = 32		# NPORTS*NCPUS
472	neq = 66		# NPORTS*NCPUS * 2 (FL, ETHCTRL/TX) + 2 (EXTRA)
473	nexactf = 32		# NPORTS + adding 28 exact entries for FCoE
474				# which is OK since < MIN(SUM PF0..3, PF4)
475				# and we never load PF0..3 and PF4 concurrently
476	cmask = all		# access to all channels
477	pmask = all		# access to all four ports ...
478	nhash = 2048
479	tp_l2t = 4
480	protocol = fcoe_initiator
481	tp_ddp = 1
482	fcoe_nfcf = 16
483	fcoe_nvnp = 32
484	fcoe_nssn = 1024
485
486
487# The following function, 1023, is not an actual PCIE function but is used to
488# configure and reserve firmware internal resources that come from the global
489# resource pool.
490#
491[function "1023"]
492	wx_caps = all		# write/execute permissions for all commands
493	r_caps = all		# read permissions for all commands
494	nvi = 4			# NVI_UNIFIED
495	cmask = all		# access to all channels
496	pmask = all		# access to all four ports ...
497	nexactf = 8		# NPORTS + DCBX +
498	nfilter = 16		# number of filter region entries
499
500
501# For Virtual functions, we only allow NIC functionality and we only allow
502# access to one port (1 << PF).  Note that because of limitations in the
503# Scatter Gather Engine (SGE) hardware which checks writes to VF KDOORBELL
504# and GTS registers, the number of Ingress and Egress Queues must be a power
505# of 2.
506#
507[function "0/*"]		# NVF
508	wx_caps = 0x82		# DMAQ | VF
509	r_caps = 0x86		# DMAQ | VF | PORT
510	nvi = 1			# 1 port
511	niqflint = 6		# 2 "Queue Sets" + NXIQ
512	nethctrl = 4		# 2 "Queue Sets"
513	neq = 8			# 2 "Queue Sets" * 2
514	nexactf = 4
515	cmask = all		# access to all channels
516	pmask = 0x1		# access to only one port ...
517
518
519[function "1/*"]		# NVF
520	wx_caps = 0x82		# DMAQ | VF
521	r_caps = 0x86		# DMAQ | VF | PORT
522	nvi = 1			# 1 port
523	niqflint = 6		# 2 "Queue Sets" + NXIQ
524	nethctrl = 4		# 2 "Queue Sets"
525	neq = 8			# 2 "Queue Sets" * 2
526	nexactf = 4
527	cmask = all		# access to all channels
528	pmask = 0x2		# access to only one port ...
529
530[function "2/*"]		# NVF
531	wx_caps = 0x82		# DMAQ | VF
532	r_caps = 0x86		# DMAQ | VF | PORT
533	nvi = 1			# 1 port
534	niqflint = 6		# 2 "Queue Sets" + NXIQ
535	nethctrl = 4		# 2 "Queue Sets"
536	neq = 8			# 2 "Queue Sets" * 2
537	nexactf = 4
538	cmask = all		# access to all channels
539	pmask = 0x1		# access to only one port ...
540
541
542[function "3/*"]		# NVF
543	wx_caps = 0x82		# DMAQ | VF
544	r_caps = 0x86		# DMAQ | VF | PORT
545	nvi = 1			# 1 port
546	niqflint = 6		# 2 "Queue Sets" + NXIQ
547	nethctrl = 4		# 2 "Queue Sets"
548	neq = 8			# 2 "Queue Sets" * 2
549	nexactf = 4
550	cmask = all		# access to all channels
551	pmask = 0x2		# access to only one port ...
552
553# MPS features a 196608 bytes ingress buffer that is used for ingress buffering
554# for packets from the wire as well as the loopback path of the L2 switch. The
555# folling params control how the buffer memory is distributed and the L2 flow
556# control settings:
557#
558# bg_mem:	%-age of mem to use for port/buffer group
559# lpbk_mem:	%-age of port/bg mem to use for loopback
560# hwm:		high watermark; bytes available when starting to send pause
561#		frames (in units of 0.1 MTU)
562# lwm:		low watermark; bytes remaining when sending 'unpause' frame
563#		(in inuits of 0.1 MTU)
564# dwm:		minimum delta between high and low watermark (in units of 100
565#		Bytes)
566#
567[port "0"]
568	dcb = ppp, dcbx		# configure for DCB PPP and enable DCBX offload
569	#bg_mem = 25
570	#lpbk_mem = 25
571	hwm = 60
572	lwm = 15
573	dwm = 30
574	dcb_app_tlv[0] = 0x8906, ethertype, 3
575	dcb_app_tlv[1] = 0x8914, ethertype, 3
576	dcb_app_tlv[2] = 3260, socketnum, 5
577
578[port "1"]
579	dcb = ppp, dcbx
580	#bg_mem = 25
581	#lpbk_mem = 25
582	hwm = 60
583	lwm = 15
584	dwm = 30
585	dcb_app_tlv[0] = 0x8906, ethertype, 3
586	dcb_app_tlv[1] = 0x8914, ethertype, 3
587	dcb_app_tlv[2] = 3260, socketnum, 5
588
589[fini]
590	version = 0x1425001d
591	checksum = 0x14a022cd
592
593# Total resources used by above allocations:
594#   Virtual Interfaces: 104
595#   Ingress Queues/w Free Lists and Interrupts: 526
596#   Egress Queues: 702
597#   MPS TCAM Entries: 336
598#   MSI-X Vectors: 736
599#   Virtual Functions: 64
600#
601# $FreeBSD$
602#