This patch adds description for performance reporting support for Device Feature List (DFL) based FPGA. Signed-off-by: Xu Yilun <yilun.xu@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Wu Hao <hao.wu@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/1587949583-12058-2-git-send-email-hao.wu@intel.com Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
		
			
				
	
	
		
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| =================================================
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| FPGA Device Feature List (DFL) Framework Overview
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| =================================================
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| 
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| Authors:
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| 
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| - Enno Luebbers <enno.luebbers@intel.com>
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| - Xiao Guangrong <guangrong.xiao@linux.intel.com>
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| - Wu Hao <hao.wu@intel.com>
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| 
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| The Device Feature List (DFL) FPGA framework (and drivers according to this
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| this framework) hides the very details of low layer hardwares and provides
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| unified interfaces to userspace. Applications could use these interfaces to
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| configure, enumerate, open and access FPGA accelerators on platforms which
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| implement the DFL in the device memory. Besides this, the DFL framework
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| enables system level management functions such as FPGA reconfiguration.
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| 
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| 
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| Device Feature List (DFL) Overview
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| ==================================
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| Device Feature List (DFL) defines a linked list of feature headers within the
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| device MMIO space to provide an extensible way of adding features. Software can
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| walk through these predefined data structures to enumerate FPGA features:
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| FPGA Interface Unit (FIU), Accelerated Function Unit (AFU) and Private Features,
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| as illustrated below::
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| 
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|     Header            Header            Header            Header
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|  +----------+  +-->+----------+  +-->+----------+  +-->+----------+
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|  |   Type   |  |   |  Type    |  |   |  Type    |  |   |  Type    |
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|  |   FIU    |  |   | Private  |  |   | Private  |  |   | Private  |
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|  +----------+  |   | Feature  |  |   | Feature  |  |   | Feature  |
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|  | Next_DFH |--+   +----------+  |   +----------+  |   +----------+
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|  +----------+      | Next_DFH |--+   | Next_DFH |--+   | Next_DFH |--> NULL
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|  |    ID    |      +----------+      +----------+      +----------+
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|  +----------+      |    ID    |      |    ID    |      |    ID    |
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|  | Next_AFU |--+   +----------+      +----------+      +----------+
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|  +----------+  |   | Feature  |      | Feature  |      | Feature  |
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|  |  Header  |  |   | Register |      | Register |      | Register |
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|  | Register |  |   |   Set    |      |   Set    |      |   Set    |
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|  |   Set    |  |   +----------+      +----------+      +----------+
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|  +----------+  |      Header
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|                +-->+----------+
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|                    |   Type   |
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|                    |   AFU    |
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|                    +----------+
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|                    | Next_DFH |--> NULL
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|                    +----------+
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|                    |   GUID   |
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|                    +----------+
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|                    |  Header  |
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|                    | Register |
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|                    |   Set    |
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|                    +----------+
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| 
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| FPGA Interface Unit (FIU) represents a standalone functional unit for the
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| interface to FPGA, e.g. the FPGA Management Engine (FME) and Port (more
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| descriptions on FME and Port in later sections).
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| 
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| Accelerated Function Unit (AFU) represents a FPGA programmable region and
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| always connects to a FIU (e.g. a Port) as its child as illustrated above.
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| 
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| Private Features represent sub features of the FIU and AFU. They could be
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| various function blocks with different IDs, but all private features which
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| belong to the same FIU or AFU, must be linked to one list via the Next Device
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| Feature Header (Next_DFH) pointer.
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| 
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| Each FIU, AFU and Private Feature could implement its own functional registers.
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| The functional register set for FIU and AFU, is named as Header Register Set,
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| e.g. FME Header Register Set, and the one for Private Feature, is named as
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| Feature Register Set, e.g. FME Partial Reconfiguration Feature Register Set.
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| 
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| This Device Feature List provides a way of linking features together, it's
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| convenient for software to locate each feature by walking through this list,
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| and can be implemented in register regions of any FPGA device.
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| 
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| 
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| FIU - FME (FPGA Management Engine)
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| ==================================
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| The FPGA Management Engine performs reconfiguration and other infrastructure
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| functions. Each FPGA device only has one FME.
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| 
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| User-space applications can acquire exclusive access to the FME using open(),
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| and release it using close().
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| 
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| The following functions are exposed through ioctls:
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| 
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| - Get driver API version (DFL_FPGA_GET_API_VERSION)
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| - Check for extensions (DFL_FPGA_CHECK_EXTENSION)
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| - Program bitstream (DFL_FPGA_FME_PORT_PR)
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| - Assign port to PF (DFL_FPGA_FME_PORT_ASSIGN)
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| - Release port from PF (DFL_FPGA_FME_PORT_RELEASE)
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| 
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| More functions are exposed through sysfs
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| (/sys/class/fpga_region/regionX/dfl-fme.n/):
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| 
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|  Read bitstream ID (bitstream_id)
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|      bitstream_id indicates version of the static FPGA region.
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| 
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|  Read bitstream metadata (bitstream_metadata)
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|      bitstream_metadata includes detailed information of static FPGA region,
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|      e.g. synthesis date and seed.
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| 
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|  Read number of ports (ports_num)
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|      one FPGA device may have more than one port, this sysfs interface indicates
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|      how many ports the FPGA device has.
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| 
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|  Global error reporting management (errors/)
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|      error reporting sysfs interfaces allow user to read errors detected by the
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|      hardware, and clear the logged errors.
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| 
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|  Power management (dfl_fme_power hwmon)
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|      power management hwmon sysfs interfaces allow user to read power management
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|      information (power consumption, thresholds, threshold status, limits, etc.)
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|      and configure power thresholds for different throttling levels.
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| 
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|  Thermal management (dfl_fme_thermal hwmon)
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|      thermal management hwmon sysfs interfaces allow user to read thermal
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|      management information (current temperature, thresholds, threshold status,
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|      etc.).
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| 
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|  Performance reporting
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|      performance counters are exposed through perf PMU APIs. Standard perf tool
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|      can be used to monitor all available perf events. Please see performance
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|      counter section below for more detailed information.
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| 
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| 
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| FIU - PORT
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| ==========
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| A port represents the interface between the static FPGA fabric and a partially
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| reconfigurable region containing an AFU. It controls the communication from SW
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| to the accelerator and exposes features such as reset and debug. Each FPGA
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| device may have more than one port, but always one AFU per port.
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| 
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| 
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| AFU
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| ===
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| An AFU is attached to a port FIU and exposes a fixed length MMIO region to be
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| used for accelerator-specific control registers.
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| 
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| User-space applications can acquire exclusive access to an AFU attached to a
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| port by using open() on the port device node and release it using close().
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| 
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| The following functions are exposed through ioctls:
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| 
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| - Get driver API version (DFL_FPGA_GET_API_VERSION)
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| - Check for extensions (DFL_FPGA_CHECK_EXTENSION)
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| - Get port info (DFL_FPGA_PORT_GET_INFO)
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| - Get MMIO region info (DFL_FPGA_PORT_GET_REGION_INFO)
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| - Map DMA buffer (DFL_FPGA_PORT_DMA_MAP)
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| - Unmap DMA buffer (DFL_FPGA_PORT_DMA_UNMAP)
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| - Reset AFU (DFL_FPGA_PORT_RESET)
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| 
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| DFL_FPGA_PORT_RESET:
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|   reset the FPGA Port and its AFU. Userspace can do Port
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|   reset at any time, e.g. during DMA or Partial Reconfiguration. But it should
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|   never cause any system level issue, only functional failure (e.g. DMA or PR
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|   operation failure) and be recoverable from the failure.
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| 
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| User-space applications can also mmap() accelerator MMIO regions.
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| 
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| More functions are exposed through sysfs:
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| (/sys/class/fpga_region/<regionX>/<dfl-port.m>/):
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| 
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|  Read Accelerator GUID (afu_id)
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|      afu_id indicates which PR bitstream is programmed to this AFU.
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| 
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|  Error reporting (errors/)
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|      error reporting sysfs interfaces allow user to read port/afu errors
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|      detected by the hardware, and clear the logged errors.
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| 
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| 
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| DFL Framework Overview
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| ======================
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| 
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| ::
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| 
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|          +----------+    +--------+ +--------+ +--------+
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|          |   FME    |    |  AFU   | |  AFU   | |  AFU   |
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|          |  Module  |    | Module | | Module | | Module |
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|          +----------+    +--------+ +--------+ +--------+
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|                  +-----------------------+
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|                  | FPGA Container Device |    Device Feature List
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|                  |  (FPGA Base Region)   |         Framework
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|                  +-----------------------+
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|   ------------------------------------------------------------------
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|                +----------------------------+
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|                |   FPGA DFL Device Module   |
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|                | (e.g. PCIE/Platform Device)|
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|                +----------------------------+
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|                  +------------------------+
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|                  |  FPGA Hardware Device  |
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|                  +------------------------+
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| 
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| DFL framework in kernel provides common interfaces to create container device
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| (FPGA base region), discover feature devices and their private features from the
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| given Device Feature Lists and create platform devices for feature devices
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| (e.g. FME, Port and AFU) with related resources under the container device. It
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| also abstracts operations for the private features and exposes common ops to
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| feature device drivers.
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| 
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| The FPGA DFL Device could be different hardwares, e.g. PCIe device, platform
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| device and etc. Its driver module is always loaded first once the device is
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| created by the system. This driver plays an infrastructural role in the
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| driver architecture. It locates the DFLs in the device memory, handles them
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| and related resources to common interfaces from DFL framework for enumeration.
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| (Please refer to drivers/fpga/dfl.c for detailed enumeration APIs).
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| 
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| The FPGA Management Engine (FME) driver is a platform driver which is loaded
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| automatically after FME platform device creation from the DFL device module. It
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| provides the key features for FPGA management, including:
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| 
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| 	a) Expose static FPGA region information, e.g. version and metadata.
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| 	   Users can read related information via sysfs interfaces exposed
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| 	   by FME driver.
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| 
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| 	b) Partial Reconfiguration. The FME driver creates FPGA manager, FPGA
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| 	   bridges and FPGA regions during PR sub feature initialization. Once
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| 	   it receives a DFL_FPGA_FME_PORT_PR ioctl from user, it invokes the
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| 	   common interface function from FPGA Region to complete the partial
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| 	   reconfiguration of the PR bitstream to the given port.
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| 
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| Similar to the FME driver, the FPGA Accelerated Function Unit (AFU) driver is
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| probed once the AFU platform device is created. The main function of this module
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| is to provide an interface for userspace applications to access the individual
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| accelerators, including basic reset control on port, AFU MMIO region export, dma
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| buffer mapping service functions.
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| 
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| After feature platform devices creation, matched platform drivers will be loaded
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| automatically to handle different functionalities. Please refer to next sections
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| for detailed information on functional units which have been already implemented
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| under this DFL framework.
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| 
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| 
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| Partial Reconfiguration
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| =======================
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| As mentioned above, accelerators can be reconfigured through partial
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| reconfiguration of a PR bitstream file. The PR bitstream file must have been
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| generated for the exact static FPGA region and targeted reconfigurable region
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| (port) of the FPGA, otherwise, the reconfiguration operation will fail and
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| possibly cause system instability. This compatibility can be checked by
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| comparing the compatibility ID noted in the header of PR bitstream file against
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| the compat_id exposed by the target FPGA region. This check is usually done by
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| userspace before calling the reconfiguration IOCTL.
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| 
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| 
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| FPGA virtualization - PCIe SRIOV
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| ================================
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| This section describes the virtualization support on DFL based FPGA device to
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| enable accessing an accelerator from applications running in a virtual machine
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| (VM). This section only describes the PCIe based FPGA device with SRIOV support.
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| 
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| Features supported by the particular FPGA device are exposed through Device
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| Feature Lists, as illustrated below:
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| 
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| ::
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| 
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|     +-------------------------------+  +-------------+
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|     |              PF               |  |     VF      |
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|     +-------------------------------+  +-------------+
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|         ^            ^         ^              ^
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|         |            |         |              |
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|   +-----|------------|---------|--------------|-------+
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|   |     |            |         |              |       |
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|   |  +-----+     +-------+ +-------+      +-------+   |
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|   |  | FME |     | Port0 | | Port1 |      | Port2 |   |
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|   |  +-----+     +-------+ +-------+      +-------+   |
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|   |                  ^         ^              ^       |
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|   |                  |         |              |       |
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|   |              +-------+ +------+       +-------+   |
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|   |              |  AFU  | |  AFU |       |  AFU  |   |
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|   |              +-------+ +------+       +-------+   |
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|   |                                                   |
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|   |            DFL based FPGA PCIe Device             |
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|   +---------------------------------------------------+
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| 
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| FME is always accessed through the physical function (PF).
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| 
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| Ports (and related AFUs) are accessed via PF by default, but could be exposed
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| through virtual function (VF) devices via PCIe SRIOV. Each VF only contains
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| 1 Port and 1 AFU for isolation. Users could assign individual VFs (accelerators)
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| created via PCIe SRIOV interface, to virtual machines.
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| 
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| The driver organization in virtualization case is illustrated below:
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| ::
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| 
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|     +-------++------++------+             |
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|     | FME   || FME  || FME  |             |
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|     | FPGA  || FPGA || FPGA |             |
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|     |Manager||Bridge||Region|             |
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|     +-------++------++------+             |
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|     +-----------------------+  +--------+ |             +--------+
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|     |          FME          |  |  AFU   | |             |  AFU   |
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|     |         Module        |  | Module | |             | Module |
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|     +-----------------------+  +--------+ |             +--------+
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|           +-----------------------+       |       +-----------------------+
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|           | FPGA Container Device |       |       | FPGA Container Device |
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|           |  (FPGA Base Region)   |       |       |  (FPGA Base Region)   |
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|           +-----------------------+       |       +-----------------------+
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|             +------------------+          |         +------------------+
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|             | FPGA PCIE Module |          | Virtual | FPGA PCIE Module |
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|             +------------------+   Host   | Machine +------------------+
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|    -------------------------------------- | ------------------------------
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|              +---------------+            |          +---------------+
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|              | PCI PF Device |            |          | PCI VF Device |
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|              +---------------+            |          +---------------+
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| 
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| FPGA PCIe device driver is always loaded first once a FPGA PCIe PF or VF device
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| is detected. It:
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| 
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| * Finishes enumeration on both FPGA PCIe PF and VF device using common
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|   interfaces from DFL framework.
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| * Supports SRIOV.
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| 
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| The FME device driver plays a management role in this driver architecture, it
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| provides ioctls to release Port from PF and assign Port to PF. After release
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| a port from PF, then it's safe to expose this port through a VF via PCIe SRIOV
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| sysfs interface.
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| 
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| To enable accessing an accelerator from applications running in a VM, the
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| respective AFU's port needs to be assigned to a VF using the following steps:
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| 
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| #. The PF owns all AFU ports by default. Any port that needs to be
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|    reassigned to a VF must first be released through the
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|    DFL_FPGA_FME_PORT_RELEASE ioctl on the FME device.
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| 
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| #. Once N ports are released from PF, then user can use command below
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|    to enable SRIOV and VFs. Each VF owns only one Port with AFU.
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| 
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|    ::
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| 
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|       echo N > $PCI_DEVICE_PATH/sriov_numvfs
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| 
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| #. Pass through the VFs to VMs
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| 
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| #. The AFU under VF is accessible from applications in VM (using the
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|    same driver inside the VF).
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| 
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| Note that an FME can't be assigned to a VF, thus PR and other management
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| functions are only available via the PF.
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| 
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| Device enumeration
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| ==================
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| This section introduces how applications enumerate the fpga device from
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| the sysfs hierarchy under /sys/class/fpga_region.
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| 
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| In the example below, two DFL based FPGA devices are installed in the host. Each
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| fpga device has one FME and two ports (AFUs).
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| 
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| FPGA regions are created under /sys/class/fpga_region/::
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| 
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/region0
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/region1
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/region2
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| 	...
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| 
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| Application needs to search each regionX folder, if feature device is found,
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| (e.g. "dfl-port.n" or "dfl-fme.m" is found), then it's the base
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| fpga region which represents the FPGA device.
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| 
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| Each base region has one FME and two ports (AFUs) as child devices::
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| 
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/region0/dfl-fme.0
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/region0/dfl-port.0
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/region0/dfl-port.1
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| 	...
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| 
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/region3/dfl-fme.1
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/region3/dfl-port.2
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/region3/dfl-port.3
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| 	...
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| 
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| In general, the FME/AFU sysfs interfaces are named as follows::
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| 
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/<regionX>/<dfl-fme.n>/
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/<regionX>/<dfl-port.m>/
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| 
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| with 'n' consecutively numbering all FMEs and 'm' consecutively numbering all
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| ports.
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| 
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| The device nodes used for ioctl() or mmap() can be referenced through::
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| 
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/<regionX>/<dfl-fme.n>/dev
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| 	/sys/class/fpga_region/<regionX>/<dfl-port.n>/dev
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| 
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| 
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| Performance Counters
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| ====================
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| Performance reporting is one private feature implemented in FME. It could
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| supports several independent, system-wide, device counter sets in hardware to
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| monitor and count for performance events, including "basic", "cache", "fabric",
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| "vtd" and "vtd_sip" counters. Users could use standard perf tool to monitor
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| FPGA cache hit/miss rate, transaction number, interface clock counter of AFU
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| and other FPGA performance events.
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| 
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| Different FPGA devices may have different counter sets, depending on hardware
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| implementation. E.g., some discrete FPGA cards don't have any cache. User could
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| use "perf list" to check which perf events are supported by target hardware.
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| 
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| In order to allow user to use standard perf API to access these performance
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| counters, driver creates a perf PMU, and related sysfs interfaces in
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| /sys/bus/event_source/devices/dfl_fme* to describe available perf events and
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| configuration options.
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| 
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| The "format" directory describes the format of the config field of struct
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| perf_event_attr. There are 3 bitfields for config: "evtype" defines which type
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| the perf event belongs to; "event" is the identity of the event within its
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| category; "portid" is introduced to decide counters set to monitor on FPGA
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| overall data or a specific port.
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| 
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| The "events" directory describes the configuration templates for all available
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| events which can be used with perf tool directly. For example, fab_mmio_read
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| has the configuration "event=0x06,evtype=0x02,portid=0xff", which shows this
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| event belongs to fabric type (0x02), the local event id is 0x06 and it is for
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| overall monitoring (portid=0xff).
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| 
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| Example usage of perf::
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| 
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|   $# perf list |grep dfl_fme
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| 
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|   dfl_fme0/fab_mmio_read/                              [Kernel PMU event]
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|   <...>
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|   dfl_fme0/fab_port_mmio_read,portid=?/                [Kernel PMU event]
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|   <...>
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| 
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|   $# perf stat -a -e dfl_fme0/fab_mmio_read/ <command>
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|   or
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|   $# perf stat -a -e dfl_fme0/event=0x06,evtype=0x02,portid=0xff/ <command>
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|   or
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|   $# perf stat -a -e dfl_fme0/config=0xff2006/ <command>
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| 
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| Another example, fab_port_mmio_read monitors mmio read of a specific port. So
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| its configuration template is "event=0x06,evtype=0x01,portid=?". The portid
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| should be explicitly set.
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| 
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| Its usage of perf::
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| 
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|   $# perf stat -a -e dfl_fme0/fab_port_mmio_read,portid=0x0/ <command>
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|   or
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|   $# perf stat -a -e dfl_fme0/event=0x06,evtype=0x02,portid=0x0/ <command>
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|   or
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|   $# perf stat -a -e dfl_fme0/config=0x2006/ <command>
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| 
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| Please note for fabric counters, overall perf events (fab_*) and port perf
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| events (fab_port_*) actually share one set of counters in hardware, so it can't
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| monitor both at the same time. If this set of counters is configured to monitor
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| overall data, then per port perf data is not supported. See below example::
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| 
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|   $# perf stat -e dfl_fme0/fab_mmio_read/,dfl_fme0/fab_port_mmio_write,\
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|                                                     portid=0/ sleep 1
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| 
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|   Performance counter stats for 'system wide':
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| 
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|                  3      dfl_fme0/fab_mmio_read/
 | |
|    <not supported>      dfl_fme0/fab_port_mmio_write,portid=0x0/
 | |
| 
 | |
|        1.001750904 seconds time elapsed
 | |
| 
 | |
| The driver also provides a "cpumask" sysfs attribute, which contains only one
 | |
| CPU id used to access these perf events. Counting on multiple CPU is not allowed
 | |
| since they are system-wide counters on FPGA device.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The current driver does not support sampling. So "perf record" is unsupported.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Add new FIUs support
 | |
| ====================
 | |
| It's possible that developers made some new function blocks (FIUs) under this
 | |
| DFL framework, then new platform device driver needs to be developed for the
 | |
| new feature dev (FIU) following the same way as existing feature dev drivers
 | |
| (e.g. FME and Port/AFU platform device driver). Besides that, it requires
 | |
| modification on DFL framework enumeration code too, for new FIU type detection
 | |
| and related platform devices creation.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Add new private features support
 | |
| ================================
 | |
| In some cases, we may need to add some new private features to existing FIUs
 | |
| (e.g. FME or Port). Developers don't need to touch enumeration code in DFL
 | |
| framework, as each private feature will be parsed automatically and related
 | |
| mmio resources can be found under FIU platform device created by DFL framework.
 | |
| Developer only needs to provide a sub feature driver with matched feature id.
 | |
| FME Partial Reconfiguration Sub Feature driver (see drivers/fpga/dfl-fme-pr.c)
 | |
| could be a reference.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Open discussion
 | |
| ===============
 | |
| FME driver exports one ioctl (DFL_FPGA_FME_PORT_PR) for partial reconfiguration
 | |
| to user now. In the future, if unified user interfaces for reconfiguration are
 | |
| added, FME driver should switch to them from ioctl interface.
 |