OS Default Dynamic Device Personalization (DDP) Package ====================================================================== July 7, 2020 Contents ======== - Overview - Safe Mode - Notes - Installation & Troubleshooting - Legal Overview ======== Devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet 800 Series require a Dynamic Device Personalization (DDP) package file to enable advanced features (such as dynamic tunneling, Intel(R) Ethernet Flow Director, RSS, and ADQ). DDP allows you to change the packet processing pipeline of a device by applying a profile package to the device at runtime. Profiles can be used to, for example, add support for new protocols, change existing protocols, or change default settings. DDP profiles can also be rolled back without rebooting the system. The DDP package loads during device initialization. The driver checks to see if the DDP package is present and compatible. If this file exists, the driver will load it into the device. If the DDP package file is missing or incompatible with the driver, the driver will go into Safe Mode where it will use the configuration contained in the device's NVM. Refer to the Intel(R) Ethernet Adapters and Devices User Guide for more information on Safe Mode. A general-purpose, default DDP package is automatically installed with all supported Intel Ethernet 800 Series drivers on supported operating systems. Additional DDP packages are available to address needs for specific market segments or targeted solutions. The default DDP package supports the following: - MAC - EtherType - VLAN - IPv4 - IPv6 - TCP - ARP - UDP - SCTP - ICMP - ICMPv6 - CTRL - LLDP - VXLAN-GPE - VXLAN (non-GPE) - Geneve - GRE - NVGRE - RoCEv2 - MPLS (up to 5 consecutive MPLS labels in the outermost Layer 2 header group) Safe Mode ========= Safe Mode disables advanced and performance features, and supports only basic traffic and minimal functionality, such as updating the NVM or downloading a new driver or DDP package. Refer to the Intel(R) Ethernet Adapters and Devices User Guide for more details on DDP and Safe Mode. Notes ===== - You cannot update the DDP package if any PF drivers are already loaded. To overwrite a package, unload all PFs and then reload the driver with the new package. - Except for Linux, you can only use one DDP package per driver, even if you have more than one device installed that uses the driver. - Only the first loaded PF per device can download a package for that device. - If you are using DPDK, see the DPDK documentation at https://www.dpdk.org/ for installation instructions and more information. Installation and Troubleshooting ================================ Microsoft* Windows* ------------------- The DDP package is installed as part of the driver binary. You don't need to take additional steps to install the DDP package file. If you encounter issues with the DDP package file, download the latest driver. ESX --- The DDP package is installed as part of the driver binary. You don't need to take additional steps to install the DDP package file. If you encounter issues with the DDP package file, download the latest driver. FreeBSD ------- The FreeBSD driver automatically installs the default DDP package file during driver installation. See the base driver README for general installation and building instructions. The DDP package loads during device initialization. The driver looks for the ice_ddp module and checks that it contains a valid DDP package file. If you encounter issues with the DDP package file, you may need to download an updated driver or ice_ddp module. See the log messages for more information. NOTE: It's important to do 'make install' during initial ice driver installation so that the driver loads the DDP package automatically. Linux ----- The Linux driver automatically installs the default DDP package file during driver installation. Read the base driver README for general installation and building instructions. The DDP package loads during device initialization. The driver looks for intel/ice/ddp/ice.pkg in your firmware root (typically /lib/firmware/ or /lib/firmware/updates/) and checks that it contains a valid DDP package file. The ice.pkg file is a symbolic link to the default DDP package file installed by the linux-firmware software package or the out-of-tree driver installation. If you encounter issues with the DDP package file, you may need to download an updated driver or DDP package file. Refer to the log messages for more information. You can install specific DDP package files for different physical devices in the same system. To install a specific DDP package: 1. Download the DDP package file (ice-x.x.x.x.zip) you want for your device. In addition to licensing information and this README, this zip file contains the following files: ice-x.x.x.x.pkg ice.pkg NOTE: The ice.pkg file is a Linux symbolic link file pointing to ice-x.x.x.x.pkg (in the same path). 2. Rename the ice-x.x.x.x.pkg file as ice-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.pkg, where 'xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx' is the unique 64-bit PCI Express device serial number (in hex) of the device you want the package downloaded on. The filename must include the complete serial number (including leading zeros) and be all lowercase. For example, if the 64-bit serial number is b887a3ffffca0568, then the file name would be ice-b887a3ffffca0568.pkg. To find the serial number from the PCI bus address, you can use the following command: # lspci -vv -s af:00.0 | grep -i Serial Capabilities: [150 v1] Device Serial Number b8-87-a3-ff-ff-ca-05-68 You can use the following command to format the serial number without the dashes: # lspci -vv -s af:00.0 | grep -i Serial | awk '{print $7}' | sed s/-//g b887a3ffffca0568 3. Copy the renamed DDP package file to /lib/firmware/updates/intel/ice/ddp/. If the directory does not yet exist, create it before copying the file. 4. Unload all of the PFs on the device. 5. Reload the driver with the new package. NOTE: The presence of a device-specific DDP package file overrides the loading of the default DDP package file. Legal / Disclaimers =================== Copyright (c) 2019 - 2020, Intel Corporation. Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the U.S. and/or other countries. *Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others. This software and the related documents are Intel copyrighted materials, and your use of them is governed by the express license under which they were provided to you ("License"). Unless the License provides otherwise, you may not use, modify, copy, publish, distribute, disclose or transmit this software or the related documents without Intel's prior written permission. This software and the related documents are provided as is, with no express or implied warranties, other than those that are expressly stated in the License.