1 /*- 2 * SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD 3 * 4 * Copyright (C) 2011-2014 Matteo Landi, Luigi Rizzo. All rights reserved. 5 * 6 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 7 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 8 * are met: 9 * 10 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 11 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 12 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 13 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 14 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 15 * 16 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``S IS''AND 17 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 18 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 19 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 20 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 21 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 22 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 23 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 24 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 25 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 26 * SUCH DAMAGE. 27 */ 28 29 /* 30 * $FreeBSD$ 31 * 32 * Definitions of constants and the structures used by the netmap 33 * framework, for the part visible to both kernel and userspace. 34 * Detailed info on netmap is available with "man netmap" or at 35 * 36 * http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ 37 * 38 * This API is also used to communicate with the VALE software switch 39 */ 40 41 #ifndef _NET_NETMAP_H_ 42 #define _NET_NETMAP_H_ 43 44 #define NETMAP_API 11 /* current API version */ 45 46 #define NETMAP_MIN_API 11 /* min and max versions accepted */ 47 #define NETMAP_MAX_API 15 48 /* 49 * Some fields should be cache-aligned to reduce contention. 50 * The alignment is architecture and OS dependent, but rather than 51 * digging into OS headers to find the exact value we use an estimate 52 * that should cover most architectures. 53 */ 54 #define NM_CACHE_ALIGN 128 55 56 /* 57 * --- Netmap data structures --- 58 * 59 * The userspace data structures used by netmap are shown below. 60 * They are allocated by the kernel and mmap()ed by userspace threads. 61 * Pointers are implemented as memory offsets or indexes, 62 * so that they can be easily dereferenced in kernel and userspace. 63 64 KERNEL (opaque, obviously) 65 66 ==================================================================== 67 | 68 USERSPACE | struct netmap_ring 69 +---->+---------------+ 70 / | head,cur,tail | 71 struct netmap_if (nifp, 1 per fd) / | buf_ofs | 72 +---------------+ / | other fields | 73 | ni_tx_rings | / +===============+ 74 | ni_rx_rings | / | buf_idx, len | slot[0] 75 | | / | flags, ptr | 76 | | / +---------------+ 77 +===============+ / | buf_idx, len | slot[1] 78 | txring_ofs[0] | (rel.to nifp)--' | flags, ptr | 79 | txring_ofs[1] | +---------------+ 80 (tx+1 entries) (num_slots entries) 81 | txring_ofs[t] | | buf_idx, len | slot[n-1] 82 +---------------+ | flags, ptr | 83 | rxring_ofs[0] | +---------------+ 84 | rxring_ofs[1] | 85 (rx+1 entries) 86 | rxring_ofs[r] | 87 +---------------+ 88 89 * For each "interface" (NIC, host stack, PIPE, VALE switch port) bound to 90 * a file descriptor, the mmap()ed region contains a (logically readonly) 91 * struct netmap_if pointing to struct netmap_ring's. 92 * 93 * There is one netmap_ring per physical NIC ring, plus one tx/rx ring 94 * pair attached to the host stack (this pair is unused for non-NIC ports). 95 * 96 * All physical/host stack ports share the same memory region, 97 * so that zero-copy can be implemented between them. 98 * VALE switch ports instead have separate memory regions. 99 * 100 * The netmap_ring is the userspace-visible replica of the NIC ring. 101 * Each slot has the index of a buffer (MTU-sized and residing in the 102 * mmapped region), its length and some flags. An extra 64-bit pointer 103 * is provided for user-supplied buffers in the tx path. 104 * 105 * In user space, the buffer address is computed as 106 * (char *)ring + buf_ofs + index * NETMAP_BUF_SIZE 107 * 108 * Added in NETMAP_API 11: 109 * 110 * + NIOCREGIF can request the allocation of extra spare buffers from 111 * the same memory pool. The desired number of buffers must be in 112 * nr_arg3. The ioctl may return fewer buffers, depending on memory 113 * availability. nr_arg3 will return the actual value, and, once 114 * mapped, nifp->ni_bufs_head will be the index of the first buffer. 115 * 116 * The buffers are linked to each other using the first uint32_t 117 * as the index. On close, ni_bufs_head must point to the list of 118 * buffers to be released. 119 * 120 * + NIOCREGIF can request space for extra rings (and buffers) 121 * allocated in the same memory space. The number of extra rings 122 * is in nr_arg1, and is advisory. This is a no-op on NICs where 123 * the size of the memory space is fixed. 124 * 125 * + NIOCREGIF can attach to PIPE rings sharing the same memory 126 * space with a parent device. The ifname indicates the parent device, 127 * which must already exist. Flags in nr_flags indicate if we want to 128 * bind the master or slave side, the index (from nr_ringid) 129 * is just a cookie and does not need to be sequential. 130 * 131 * + NIOCREGIF can also attach to 'monitor' rings that replicate 132 * the content of specific rings, also from the same memory space. 133 * 134 * Extra flags in nr_flags support the above functions. 135 * Application libraries may use the following naming scheme: 136 * netmap:foo all NIC ring pairs 137 * netmap:foo^ only host ring pair 138 * netmap:foo+ all NIC ring + host ring pairs 139 * netmap:foo-k the k-th NIC ring pair 140 * netmap:foo{k PIPE ring pair k, master side 141 * netmap:foo}k PIPE ring pair k, slave side 142 * 143 * Some notes about host rings: 144 * 145 * + The RX host ring is used to store those packets that the host network 146 * stack is trying to transmit through a NIC queue, but only if that queue 147 * is currently in netmap mode. Netmap will not intercept host stack mbufs 148 * designated to NIC queues that are not in netmap mode. As a consequence, 149 * registering a netmap port with netmap:foo^ is not enough to intercept 150 * mbufs in the RX host ring; the netmap port should be registered with 151 * netmap:foo*, or another registration should be done to open at least a 152 * NIC TX queue in netmap mode. 153 * 154 * + Netmap is not currently able to deal with intercepted trasmit mbufs which 155 * require offloadings like TSO, UFO, checksumming offloadings, etc. It is 156 * responsibility of the user to disable those offloadings (e.g. using 157 * ifconfig on FreeBSD or ethtool -K on Linux) for an interface that is being 158 * used in netmap mode. If the offloadings are not disabled, GSO and/or 159 * unchecksummed packets may be dropped immediately or end up in the host RX 160 * ring, and will be dropped as soon as the packet reaches another netmap 161 * adapter. 162 */ 163 164 /* 165 * struct netmap_slot is a buffer descriptor 166 */ 167 struct netmap_slot { 168 uint32_t buf_idx; /* buffer index */ 169 uint16_t len; /* length for this slot */ 170 uint16_t flags; /* buf changed, etc. */ 171 uint64_t ptr; /* pointer for indirect buffers */ 172 }; 173 174 /* 175 * The following flags control how the slot is used 176 */ 177 178 #define NS_BUF_CHANGED 0x0001 /* buf_idx changed */ 179 /* 180 * must be set whenever buf_idx is changed (as it might be 181 * necessary to recompute the physical address and mapping) 182 * 183 * It is also set by the kernel whenever the buf_idx is 184 * changed internally (e.g., by pipes). Applications may 185 * use this information to know when they can reuse the 186 * contents of previously prepared buffers. 187 */ 188 189 #define NS_REPORT 0x0002 /* ask the hardware to report results */ 190 /* 191 * Request notification when slot is used by the hardware. 192 * Normally transmit completions are handled lazily and 193 * may be unreported. This flag lets us know when a slot 194 * has been sent (e.g. to terminate the sender). 195 */ 196 197 #define NS_FORWARD 0x0004 /* pass packet 'forward' */ 198 /* 199 * (Only for physical ports, rx rings with NR_FORWARD set). 200 * Slot released to the kernel (i.e. before ring->head) with 201 * this flag set are passed to the peer ring (host/NIC), 202 * thus restoring the host-NIC connection for these slots. 203 * This supports efficient traffic monitoring or firewalling. 204 */ 205 206 #define NS_NO_LEARN 0x0008 /* disable bridge learning */ 207 /* 208 * On a VALE switch, do not 'learn' the source port for 209 * this buffer. 210 */ 211 212 #define NS_INDIRECT 0x0010 /* userspace buffer */ 213 /* 214 * (VALE tx rings only) data is in a userspace buffer, 215 * whose address is in the 'ptr' field in the slot. 216 */ 217 218 #define NS_MOREFRAG 0x0020 /* packet has more fragments */ 219 /* 220 * (VALE ports, ptnetmap ports and some NIC ports, e.g. 221 * ixgbe and i40e on Linux) 222 * Set on all but the last slot of a multi-segment packet. 223 * The 'len' field refers to the individual fragment. 224 */ 225 226 #define NS_PORT_SHIFT 8 227 #define NS_PORT_MASK (0xff << NS_PORT_SHIFT) 228 /* 229 * The high 8 bits of the flag, if not zero, indicate the 230 * destination port for the VALE switch, overriding 231 * the lookup table. 232 */ 233 234 #define NS_RFRAGS(_slot) ( ((_slot)->flags >> 8) & 0xff) 235 /* 236 * (VALE rx rings only) the high 8 bits 237 * are the number of fragments. 238 */ 239 240 241 /* 242 * struct netmap_ring 243 * 244 * Netmap representation of a TX or RX ring (also known as "queue"). 245 * This is a queue implemented as a fixed-size circular array. 246 * At the software level the important fields are: head, cur, tail. 247 * 248 * In TX rings: 249 * 250 * head first slot available for transmission. 251 * cur wakeup point. select() and poll() will unblock 252 * when 'tail' moves past 'cur' 253 * tail (readonly) first slot reserved to the kernel 254 * 255 * [head .. tail-1] can be used for new packets to send; 256 * 'head' and 'cur' must be incremented as slots are filled 257 * with new packets to be sent; 258 * 'cur' can be moved further ahead if we need more space 259 * for new transmissions. XXX todo (2014-03-12) 260 * 261 * In RX rings: 262 * 263 * head first valid received packet 264 * cur wakeup point. select() and poll() will unblock 265 * when 'tail' moves past 'cur' 266 * tail (readonly) first slot reserved to the kernel 267 * 268 * [head .. tail-1] contain received packets; 269 * 'head' and 'cur' must be incremented as slots are consumed 270 * and can be returned to the kernel; 271 * 'cur' can be moved further ahead if we want to wait for 272 * new packets without returning the previous ones. 273 * 274 * DATA OWNERSHIP/LOCKING: 275 * The netmap_ring, and all slots and buffers in the range 276 * [head .. tail-1] are owned by the user program; 277 * the kernel only accesses them during a netmap system call 278 * and in the user thread context. 279 * 280 * Other slots and buffers are reserved for use by the kernel 281 */ 282 struct netmap_ring { 283 /* 284 * buf_ofs is meant to be used through macros. 285 * It contains the offset of the buffer region from this 286 * descriptor. 287 */ 288 const int64_t buf_ofs; 289 const uint32_t num_slots; /* number of slots in the ring. */ 290 const uint32_t nr_buf_size; 291 const uint16_t ringid; 292 const uint16_t dir; /* 0: tx, 1: rx */ 293 294 uint32_t head; /* (u) first user slot */ 295 uint32_t cur; /* (u) wakeup point */ 296 uint32_t tail; /* (k) first kernel slot */ 297 298 uint32_t flags; 299 300 struct timeval ts; /* (k) time of last *sync() */ 301 302 /* opaque room for a mutex or similar object */ 303 #if !defined(_WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__) 304 uint8_t __attribute__((__aligned__(NM_CACHE_ALIGN))) sem[128]; 305 #else 306 uint8_t __declspec(align(NM_CACHE_ALIGN)) sem[128]; 307 #endif 308 309 /* the slots follow. This struct has variable size */ 310 struct netmap_slot slot[0]; /* array of slots. */ 311 }; 312 313 314 /* 315 * RING FLAGS 316 */ 317 #define NR_TIMESTAMP 0x0002 /* set timestamp on *sync() */ 318 /* 319 * updates the 'ts' field on each netmap syscall. This saves 320 * saves a separate gettimeofday(), and is not much worse than 321 * software timestamps generated in the interrupt handler. 322 */ 323 324 #define NR_FORWARD 0x0004 /* enable NS_FORWARD for ring */ 325 /* 326 * Enables the NS_FORWARD slot flag for the ring. 327 */ 328 329 330 /* 331 * Netmap representation of an interface and its queue(s). 332 * This is initialized by the kernel when binding a file 333 * descriptor to a port, and should be considered as readonly 334 * by user programs. The kernel never uses it. 335 * 336 * There is one netmap_if for each file descriptor on which we want 337 * to select/poll. 338 * select/poll operates on one or all pairs depending on the value of 339 * nmr_queueid passed on the ioctl. 340 */ 341 struct netmap_if { 342 char ni_name[IFNAMSIZ]; /* name of the interface. */ 343 const uint32_t ni_version; /* API version, currently unused */ 344 const uint32_t ni_flags; /* properties */ 345 #define NI_PRIV_MEM 0x1 /* private memory region */ 346 347 /* 348 * The number of packet rings available in netmap mode. 349 * Physical NICs can have different numbers of tx and rx rings. 350 * Physical NICs also have a 'host' ring pair. 351 * Additionally, clients can request additional ring pairs to 352 * be used for internal communication. 353 */ 354 const uint32_t ni_tx_rings; /* number of HW tx rings */ 355 const uint32_t ni_rx_rings; /* number of HW rx rings */ 356 357 uint32_t ni_bufs_head; /* head index for extra bufs */ 358 uint32_t ni_spare1[5]; 359 /* 360 * The following array contains the offset of each netmap ring 361 * from this structure, in the following order: 362 * NIC tx rings (ni_tx_rings); host tx ring (1); extra tx rings; 363 * NIC rx rings (ni_rx_rings); host tx ring (1); extra rx rings. 364 * 365 * The area is filled up by the kernel on NIOCREGIF, 366 * and then only read by userspace code. 367 */ 368 const ssize_t ring_ofs[0]; 369 }; 370 371 372 #ifndef NIOCREGIF 373 /* 374 * ioctl names and related fields 375 * 376 * NIOCTXSYNC, NIOCRXSYNC synchronize tx or rx queues, 377 * whose identity is set in NIOCREGIF through nr_ringid. 378 * These are non blocking and take no argument. 379 * 380 * NIOCGINFO takes a struct ifreq, the interface name is the input, 381 * the outputs are number of queues and number of descriptor 382 * for each queue (useful to set number of threads etc.). 383 * The info returned is only advisory and may change before 384 * the interface is bound to a file descriptor. 385 * 386 * NIOCREGIF takes an interface name within a struct nmre, 387 * and activates netmap mode on the interface (if possible). 388 * 389 * The argument to NIOCGINFO/NIOCREGIF overlays struct ifreq so we 390 * can pass it down to other NIC-related ioctls. 391 * 392 * The actual argument (struct nmreq) has a number of options to request 393 * different functions. 394 * The following are used in NIOCREGIF when nr_cmd == 0: 395 * 396 * nr_name (in) 397 * The name of the port (em0, valeXXX:YYY, etc.) 398 * limited to IFNAMSIZ for backward compatibility. 399 * 400 * nr_version (in/out) 401 * Must match NETMAP_API as used in the kernel, error otherwise. 402 * Always returns the desired value on output. 403 * 404 * nr_tx_slots, nr_tx_slots, nr_tx_rings, nr_rx_rings (in/out) 405 * On input, non-zero values may be used to reconfigure the port 406 * according to the requested values, but this is not guaranteed. 407 * On output the actual values in use are reported. 408 * 409 * nr_ringid (in) 410 * Indicates how rings should be bound to the file descriptors. 411 * If nr_flags != 0, then the low bits (in NETMAP_RING_MASK) 412 * are used to indicate the ring number, and nr_flags specifies 413 * the actual rings to bind. NETMAP_NO_TX_POLL is unaffected. 414 * 415 * NOTE: THE FOLLOWING (nr_flags == 0) IS DEPRECATED: 416 * If nr_flags == 0, NETMAP_HW_RING and NETMAP_SW_RING control 417 * the binding as follows: 418 * 0 (default) binds all physical rings 419 * NETMAP_HW_RING | ring number binds a single ring pair 420 * NETMAP_SW_RING binds only the host tx/rx rings 421 * 422 * NETMAP_NO_TX_POLL can be OR-ed to make select()/poll() push 423 * packets on tx rings only if POLLOUT is set. 424 * The default is to push any pending packet. 425 * 426 * NETMAP_DO_RX_POLL can be OR-ed to make select()/poll() release 427 * packets on rx rings also when POLLIN is NOT set. 428 * The default is to touch the rx ring only with POLLIN. 429 * Note that this is the opposite of TX because it 430 * reflects the common usage. 431 * 432 * NOTE: NETMAP_PRIV_MEM IS DEPRECATED, use nr_arg2 instead. 433 * NETMAP_PRIV_MEM is set on return for ports that do not use 434 * the global memory allocator. 435 * This information is not significant and applications 436 * should look at the region id in nr_arg2 437 * 438 * nr_flags is the recommended mode to indicate which rings should 439 * be bound to a file descriptor. Values are NR_REG_* 440 * 441 * nr_arg1 (in) The number of extra rings to be reserved. 442 * Especially when allocating a VALE port the system only 443 * allocates the amount of memory needed for the port. 444 * If more shared memory rings are desired (e.g. for pipes), 445 * the first invocation for the same basename/allocator 446 * should specify a suitable number. Memory cannot be 447 * extended after the first allocation without closing 448 * all ports on the same region. 449 * 450 * nr_arg2 (in/out) The identity of the memory region used. 451 * On input, 0 means the system decides autonomously, 452 * other values may try to select a specific region. 453 * On return the actual value is reported. 454 * Region '1' is the global allocator, normally shared 455 * by all interfaces. Other values are private regions. 456 * If two ports the same region zero-copy is possible. 457 * 458 * nr_arg3 (in/out) number of extra buffers to be allocated. 459 * 460 * 461 * 462 * nr_cmd (in) if non-zero indicates a special command: 463 * NETMAP_BDG_ATTACH and nr_name = vale*:ifname 464 * attaches the NIC to the switch; nr_ringid specifies 465 * which rings to use. Used by vale-ctl -a ... 466 * nr_arg1 = NETMAP_BDG_HOST also attaches the host port 467 * as in vale-ctl -h ... 468 * 469 * NETMAP_BDG_DETACH and nr_name = vale*:ifname 470 * disconnects a previously attached NIC. 471 * Used by vale-ctl -d ... 472 * 473 * NETMAP_BDG_LIST 474 * list the configuration of VALE switches. 475 * 476 * NETMAP_BDG_VNET_HDR 477 * Set the virtio-net header length used by the client 478 * of a VALE switch port. 479 * 480 * NETMAP_BDG_NEWIF 481 * create a persistent VALE port with name nr_name. 482 * Used by vale-ctl -n ... 483 * 484 * NETMAP_BDG_DELIF 485 * delete a persistent VALE port. Used by vale-ctl -d ... 486 * 487 * nr_arg1, nr_arg2, nr_arg3 (in/out) command specific 488 * 489 * 490 * 491 */ 492 493 494 /* 495 * struct nmreq overlays a struct ifreq (just the name) 496 */ 497 struct nmreq { 498 char nr_name[IFNAMSIZ]; 499 uint32_t nr_version; /* API version */ 500 uint32_t nr_offset; /* nifp offset in the shared region */ 501 uint32_t nr_memsize; /* size of the shared region */ 502 uint32_t nr_tx_slots; /* slots in tx rings */ 503 uint32_t nr_rx_slots; /* slots in rx rings */ 504 uint16_t nr_tx_rings; /* number of tx rings */ 505 uint16_t nr_rx_rings; /* number of rx rings */ 506 507 uint16_t nr_ringid; /* ring(s) we care about */ 508 #define NETMAP_HW_RING 0x4000 /* single NIC ring pair */ 509 #define NETMAP_SW_RING 0x2000 /* only host ring pair */ 510 511 #define NETMAP_RING_MASK 0x0fff /* the ring number */ 512 513 #define NETMAP_NO_TX_POLL 0x1000 /* no automatic txsync on poll */ 514 515 #define NETMAP_DO_RX_POLL 0x8000 /* DO automatic rxsync on poll */ 516 517 uint16_t nr_cmd; 518 #define NETMAP_BDG_ATTACH 1 /* attach the NIC */ 519 #define NETMAP_BDG_DETACH 2 /* detach the NIC */ 520 #define NETMAP_BDG_REGOPS 3 /* register bridge callbacks */ 521 #define NETMAP_BDG_LIST 4 /* get bridge's info */ 522 #define NETMAP_BDG_VNET_HDR 5 /* set the port virtio-net-hdr length */ 523 #define NETMAP_BDG_OFFSET NETMAP_BDG_VNET_HDR /* deprecated alias */ 524 #define NETMAP_BDG_NEWIF 6 /* create a virtual port */ 525 #define NETMAP_BDG_DELIF 7 /* destroy a virtual port */ 526 #define NETMAP_PT_HOST_CREATE 8 /* create ptnetmap kthreads */ 527 #define NETMAP_PT_HOST_DELETE 9 /* delete ptnetmap kthreads */ 528 #define NETMAP_BDG_POLLING_ON 10 /* delete polling kthread */ 529 #define NETMAP_BDG_POLLING_OFF 11 /* delete polling kthread */ 530 #define NETMAP_VNET_HDR_GET 12 /* get the port virtio-net-hdr length */ 531 #define NETMAP_POOLS_INFO_GET 13 /* get memory allocator pools info */ 532 #define NETMAP_POOLS_CREATE 14 /* create a new memory allocator */ 533 uint16_t nr_arg1; /* reserve extra rings in NIOCREGIF */ 534 #define NETMAP_BDG_HOST 1 /* attach the host stack on ATTACH */ 535 536 uint16_t nr_arg2; 537 uint32_t nr_arg3; /* req. extra buffers in NIOCREGIF */ 538 uint32_t nr_flags; 539 /* various modes, extends nr_ringid */ 540 uint32_t spare2[1]; 541 }; 542 543 #define NR_REG_MASK 0xf /* values for nr_flags */ 544 enum { NR_REG_DEFAULT = 0, /* backward compat, should not be used. */ 545 NR_REG_ALL_NIC = 1, 546 NR_REG_SW = 2, 547 NR_REG_NIC_SW = 3, 548 NR_REG_ONE_NIC = 4, 549 NR_REG_PIPE_MASTER = 5, 550 NR_REG_PIPE_SLAVE = 6, 551 }; 552 /* monitor uses the NR_REG to select the rings to monitor */ 553 #define NR_MONITOR_TX 0x100 554 #define NR_MONITOR_RX 0x200 555 #define NR_ZCOPY_MON 0x400 556 /* request exclusive access to the selected rings */ 557 #define NR_EXCLUSIVE 0x800 558 /* request ptnetmap host support */ 559 #define NR_PASSTHROUGH_HOST NR_PTNETMAP_HOST /* deprecated */ 560 #define NR_PTNETMAP_HOST 0x1000 561 #define NR_RX_RINGS_ONLY 0x2000 562 #define NR_TX_RINGS_ONLY 0x4000 563 /* Applications set this flag if they are able to deal with virtio-net headers, 564 * that is send/receive frames that start with a virtio-net header. 565 * If not set, NIOCREGIF will fail with netmap ports that require applications 566 * to use those headers. If the flag is set, the application can use the 567 * NETMAP_VNET_HDR_GET command to figure out the header length. */ 568 #define NR_ACCEPT_VNET_HDR 0x8000 569 570 #define NM_BDG_NAME "vale" /* prefix for bridge port name */ 571 572 #ifdef _WIN32 573 /* 574 * Windows does not have _IOWR(). _IO(), _IOW() and _IOR() are defined 575 * in ws2def.h but not sure if they are in the form we need. 576 * We therefore redefine them in a convenient way to use for DeviceIoControl 577 * signatures. 578 */ 579 #undef _IO // ws2def.h 580 #define _WIN_NM_IOCTL_TYPE 40000 581 #define _IO(_c, _n) CTL_CODE(_WIN_NM_IOCTL_TYPE, ((_n) + 0x800) , \ 582 METHOD_BUFFERED, FILE_ANY_ACCESS ) 583 #define _IO_direct(_c, _n) CTL_CODE(_WIN_NM_IOCTL_TYPE, ((_n) + 0x800) , \ 584 METHOD_OUT_DIRECT, FILE_ANY_ACCESS ) 585 586 #define _IOWR(_c, _n, _s) _IO(_c, _n) 587 588 /* We havesome internal sysctl in addition to the externally visible ones */ 589 #define NETMAP_MMAP _IO_direct('i', 160) // note METHOD_OUT_DIRECT 590 #define NETMAP_POLL _IO('i', 162) 591 592 /* and also two setsockopt for sysctl emulation */ 593 #define NETMAP_SETSOCKOPT _IO('i', 140) 594 #define NETMAP_GETSOCKOPT _IO('i', 141) 595 596 597 //These linknames are for the Netmap Core Driver 598 #define NETMAP_NT_DEVICE_NAME L"\\Device\\NETMAP" 599 #define NETMAP_DOS_DEVICE_NAME L"\\DosDevices\\netmap" 600 601 //Definition of a structure used to pass a virtual address within an IOCTL 602 typedef struct _MEMORY_ENTRY { 603 PVOID pUsermodeVirtualAddress; 604 } MEMORY_ENTRY, *PMEMORY_ENTRY; 605 606 typedef struct _POLL_REQUEST_DATA { 607 int events; 608 int timeout; 609 int revents; 610 } POLL_REQUEST_DATA; 611 612 #endif /* _WIN32 */ 613 614 /* 615 * FreeBSD uses the size value embedded in the _IOWR to determine 616 * how much to copy in/out. So we need it to match the actual 617 * data structure we pass. We put some spares in the structure 618 * to ease compatibility with other versions 619 */ 620 #define NIOCGINFO _IOWR('i', 145, struct nmreq) /* return IF info */ 621 #define NIOCREGIF _IOWR('i', 146, struct nmreq) /* interface register */ 622 #define NIOCTXSYNC _IO('i', 148) /* sync tx queues */ 623 #define NIOCRXSYNC _IO('i', 149) /* sync rx queues */ 624 #define NIOCCONFIG _IOWR('i',150, struct nm_ifreq) /* for ext. modules */ 625 #endif /* !NIOCREGIF */ 626 627 628 /* 629 * Helper functions for kernel and userspace 630 */ 631 632 /* 633 * check if space is available in the ring. 634 */ 635 static inline int 636 nm_ring_empty(struct netmap_ring *ring) 637 { 638 return (ring->cur == ring->tail); 639 } 640 641 /* 642 * Opaque structure that is passed to an external kernel 643 * module via ioctl(fd, NIOCCONFIG, req) for a user-owned 644 * bridge port (at this point ephemeral VALE interface). 645 */ 646 #define NM_IFRDATA_LEN 256 647 struct nm_ifreq { 648 char nifr_name[IFNAMSIZ]; 649 char data[NM_IFRDATA_LEN]; 650 }; 651 652 #endif /* _NET_NETMAP_H_ */ 653