All of lore.kernel.org
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
From: Timothy McDaniel <timothy.mcdaniel@intel.com>
To: Bruce Richardson <bruce.richardson@intel.com>,
	John McNamara <john.mcnamara@intel.com>,
	Marko Kovacevic <marko.kovacevic@intel.com>,
	Ray Kinsella <mdr@ashroe.eu>, Neil Horman <nhorman@tuxdriver.com>
Cc: dev@dpdk.org, erik.g.carrillo@intel.com, gage.eads@intel.com,
	harry.van.haaren@intel.com, jerinj@marvell.com
Subject: [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 01/22] event/dlb: add documentation and meson infrastructure
Date: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 14:18:19 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <1599851920-16802-2-git-send-email-timothy.mcdaniel@intel.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1599851920-16802-1-git-send-email-timothy.mcdaniel@intel.com>

Increased RTE_EVENT_MAX_QUEUES_PER_DEV config option
from 64 to 255.

Note that config/rte_config.h contains several configuration
switches, providing for fine control of the PMD's
runtime behaviour.

The meson infrastructure is expanded as additional files are
added to this patchset.

Signed-off-by: Timothy McDaniel <timothy.mcdaniel@intel.com>
---
 config/rte_config.h                             |   8 +-
 doc/guides/eventdevs/dlb.rst                    | 340 ++++++++++++++++++++++++
 drivers/event/dlb/meson.build                   |   7 +
 drivers/event/dlb/rte_pmd_dlb_event_version.map |   3 +
 drivers/event/meson.build                       |   4 +
 5 files changed, 361 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
 create mode 100644 doc/guides/eventdevs/dlb.rst
 create mode 100644 drivers/event/dlb/meson.build
 create mode 100644 drivers/event/dlb/rte_pmd_dlb_event_version.map

diff --git a/config/rte_config.h b/config/rte_config.h
index 0bae630..4262339 100644
--- a/config/rte_config.h
+++ b/config/rte_config.h
@@ -70,7 +70,7 @@
 
 /* eventdev defines */
 #define RTE_EVENT_MAX_DEVS 16
-#define RTE_EVENT_MAX_QUEUES_PER_DEV 64
+#define RTE_EVENT_MAX_QUEUES_PER_DEV 255
 #define RTE_EVENT_TIMER_ADAPTER_NUM_MAX 32
 #define RTE_EVENT_ETH_INTR_RING_SIZE 1024
 #define RTE_EVENT_CRYPTO_ADAPTER_MAX_INSTANCE 32
@@ -131,4 +131,10 @@
 /* QEDE PMD defines */
 #define RTE_LIBRTE_QEDE_FW ""
 
+/* DLB PMD defines */
+#define RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_DLB_POLL_INTERVAL 1000
+#define RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_DLB_UMWAIT_CTL_STATE  0
+#undef RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_DLB_QUELL_STATS
+#define RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_DLB_SW_CREDIT_QUANTA 32
+
 #endif /* _RTE_CONFIG_H_ */
diff --git a/doc/guides/eventdevs/dlb.rst b/doc/guides/eventdevs/dlb.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e5759c0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/guides/eventdevs/dlb.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,340 @@
+..  SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
+    Copyright(c) 2020 Intel Corporation.
+
+Driver for the Intel® Dynamic Load Balancer (DLB)
+==================================================
+
+The DPDK dlb poll mode driver supports the Intel® Dynamic Load Balancer.
+
+Prerequisites
+-------------
+
+- Follow the DPDK :ref:`Getting Started Guide for Linux <linux_gsg>` to setup
+  the basic DPDK environment.
+
+Configuration
+-------------
+
+* The DLB PF PMD is a user-space PMD that uses VFIO to gain direct
+  device access. To use this operation mode, the PCIe PF device must be bound
+  to a DPDK-compatible VFIO driver, such as vfio-pci.
+
+Eventdev API Notes
+------------------
+
+The DLB provides the functions of a DPDK event device; specifically, it
+supports atomic, ordered, and parallel scheduling events from queues to ports.
+However, the DLB hardware is not a perfect match to the eventdev API. Some DLB
+features are abstracted by the PMD (e.g. directed ports), some are only
+accessible as vdev command-line parameters, and certain eventdev features are
+not supported (e.g. the event flow ID is not maintained during scheduling).
+
+In general the dlb PMD is designed for ease-of-use and does not require a
+detailed understanding of the hardware, but these details are important when
+writing high-performance code. This section describes the places where the
+eventdev API and DLB misalign.
+
+Scheduling Domain Configuration
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+There are 32 scheduling domainis the DLB.
+When one is configured, it allocates load-balanced and
+directed queues, ports, credits, and other hardware resources. Some
+resource allocations are user-controlled -- the number of queues, for example
+-- and others, like credit pools (one directed and one load-balanced pool per
+scheduling domain), are not.
+
+The DLB is a closed system eventdev, and as such the ``nb_events_limit`` device
+setup argument and the per-port ``new_event_threshold`` argument apply as
+defined in the eventdev header file. The limit is applied to all enqueues,
+regardless of whether it will consume a directed or load-balanced credit.
+
+Load-balanced and Directed Ports
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+DLB ports come in two flavors: load-balanced and directed. The eventdev API
+does not have the same concept, but it has a similar one: ports and queues that
+are singly-linked (i.e. linked to a single queue or port, respectively).
+
+The ``rte_event_dev_info_get()`` function reports the number of available
+event ports and queues (among other things). For the DLB PMD, max_event_ports
+and max_event_queues report the number of available load-balanced ports and
+queues, and max_single_link_event_port_queue_pairs reports the number of
+available directed ports and queues.
+
+When a scheduling domain is created in ``rte_event_dev_configure()``, the user
+specifies ``nb_event_ports`` and ``nb_single_link_event_port_queues``, which
+control the total number of ports (load-balanced and directed) and the number
+of directed ports. Hence, the number of requested load-balanced ports is
+``nb_event_ports - nb_single_link_event_ports``. The ``nb_event_queues`` field
+specifies the total number of queues (load-balanced and directed). The number
+of directed queues comes from ``nb_single_link_event_port_queues``, since
+directed ports and queues come in pairs.
+
+When a port is setup, the ``RTE_EVENT_PORT_CFG_SINGLE_LINK`` flag determines
+whether it should be configured as a directed (the flag is set) or a
+load-balanced (the flag is unset) port. Similarly, the
+``RTE_EVENT_QUEUE_CFG_SINGLE_LINK`` queue configuration flag controls
+whether it is a directed or load-balanced queue.
+
+Load-balanced ports can only be linked to load-balanced queues, and directed
+ports can only be linked to directed queues. Furthermore, directed ports can
+only be linked to a single directed queue (and vice versa), and that link
+cannot change after the eventdev is started.
+
+The eventdev API does not have a directed scheduling type. To support directed
+traffic, the dlb PMD detects when an event is being sent to a directed queue
+and overrides its scheduling type. Note that the originally selected scheduling
+type (atomic, ordered, or parallel) is not preserved, and an event's sched_type
+will be set to ``RTE_SCHED_TYPE_ATOMIC`` when it is dequeued from a directed
+port.
+
+Flow ID
+~~~~~~~
+
+The flow ID field is not preserved in the event when it is scheduled in the
+DLB, because the DLB hardware control word format does not have sufficient
+space to preserve every event field. As a result, the flow ID specified with
+the enqueued event will not be in the dequeued event. If this field is
+required, the application should pass it through an out-of-band path (for
+example in the mbuf's udata64 field, if the event points to an mbuf) or
+reconstruct the flow ID after receiving the event.
+
+Also, the DLB hardware control word supports a 16-bit flow ID. Since struct
+rte_event's flow_id field is 20 bits, the DLB PMD drops the most significant
+four bits from the event's flow ID.
+
+Hardware Credits
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+DLB uses a hardware credit scheme to prevent software from overflowing hardware
+event storage, with each unit of storage represented by a credit. A port spends
+a credit to enqueue an event, and hardware refills the ports with credits as the
+events are scheduled to ports. Refills come from credit pools, and each port is
+a member of a load-balanced credit pool and a directed credit pool. The
+load-balanced credits are used to enqueue to load-balanced queues, and directed
+credits are used for directed queues.
+
+A DLB eventdev contains one load-balanced and one directed credit pool. These
+pools' sizes are controlled by the nb_events_limit field in struct
+rte_event_dev_config. The load-balanced pool is sized to contain
+nb_events_limit credits, and the directed pool is sized to contain
+nb_events_limit/4 credits. The directed pool size can be overridden with the
+num_dir_credits vdev argument, like so:
+
+    .. code-block:: console
+
+       --vdev=dlb1_event,num_dir_credits=<value>
+
+This can be used if the default allocation is too low or too high for the
+specific application needs. The PMD also supports a vdev arg that limits the
+max_num_events reported by rte_event_dev_info_get():
+
+    .. code-block:: console
+
+       --vdev=dlb1_event,max_num_events=<value>
+
+By default, max_num_events is reported as the total available load-balanced
+credits. If multiple DLB-based applications are being used, it may be desirable
+to control how many load-balanced credits each application uses, particularly
+when application(s) are written to configure nb_events_limit equal to the
+reported max_num_events.
+
+Each port is a member of both credit pools. A port's credit allocation is
+defined by its low watermark, high watermark, and refill quanta. These three
+parameters are calculated by the dlb PMD like so:
+
+- The load-balanced high watermark is set to the port's enqueue_depth.
+  The directed high watermark is set to the minimum of the enqueue_depth and
+  the directed pool size divided by the total number of ports.
+- The refill quanta is set to half the high watermark.
+- The low watermark is set to the minimum of 16 and the refill quanta.
+
+When the eventdev is started, each port is pre-allocated a high watermark's
+worth of credits. For example, if an eventdev contains four ports with enqueue
+depths of 32 and a load-balanced credit pool size of 4096, each port will start
+with 32 load-balanced credits, and there will be 3968 credits available to
+replenish the ports. Thus, a single port is not capable of enqueueing up to the
+nb_events_limit (without any events being dequeued), since the other ports are
+retaining their initial credit allocation; in short, all ports must enqueue in
+order to reach the limit.
+
+If a port attempts to enqueue and has no credits available, the enqueue
+operation will fail and the application must retry the enqueue. Credits are
+replenished asynchronously by the DLB hardware.
+
+Software Credits
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The DLB is a "closed system" event dev, and the DLB PMD layers a software
+credit scheme on top of the hardware credit scheme in order to comply with
+the per-port backpressure described in the eventdev API.
+
+The DLB's hardware scheme is local to a queue/pipeline stage: a port spends a
+credit when it enqueues to a queue, and credits are later replenished after the
+events are dequeued and released.
+
+In the software credit scheme, a credit is consumed when a new (.op =
+RTE_EVENT_OP_NEW) event is injected into the system, and the credit is
+replenished when the event is released from the system (either explicitly with
+RTE_EVENT_OP_RELEASE or implicitly in dequeue_burst()).
+
+In this model, an event is "in the system" from its first enqueue into eventdev
+until it is last dequeued. If the event goes through multiple event queues, it
+is still considered "in the system" while a worker thread is processing it.
+
+A port will fail to enqueue if the number of events in the system exceeds its
+``new_event_threshold`` (specified at port setup time). A port will also fail
+to enqueue if it lacks enough hardware credits to enqueue; load-balanced
+credits are used to enqueue to a load-balanced queue, and directed credits are
+used to enqueue to a directed queue.
+
+The out-of-credit situations are typically transient, and an eventdev
+application using the DLB ought to retry its enqueues if they fail.
+If enqueue fails, DLB PMD sets rte_errno as follows:
+
+- -ENOSPC: Credit exhaustion (either hardware or software)
+- -EINVAL: Invalid argument, such as port ID, queue ID, or sched_type.
+
+Depending on the pipeline the application has constructed, it's possible to
+enter a credit deadlock scenario wherein the worker thread lacks the credit
+to enqueue an event, and it must dequeue an event before it can recover the
+credit. If the worker thread retries its enqueue indefinitely, it will not
+make forward progress. Such deadlock is possible if the application has event
+"loops", in which an event in dequeued from queue A and later enqueued back to
+queue A.
+
+Due to this, workers should stop retrying after a time, release the events it
+is attempting to enqueue, and dequeue more events. It is important that the
+worker release the events and don't simply set them aside to retry the enqueue
+again later, because the port has limited history list size (by default, twice
+the port's dequeue_depth).
+
+Priority
+~~~~~~~~
+
+The DLB supports event priority and per-port queue service priority, as
+described in the eventdev header file. The DLB does not support 'global' event
+queue priority established at queue creation time.
+
+DLB supports 8 event and queue service priority levels. For both priority
+types, the PMD uses the upper three bits of the priority field to determine the
+DLB priority, discarding the 5 least significant bits. The 5 least significant
+event priority bits are not preserved when an event is enqueued.
+
+Load-Balanced Queues
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+A load-balanced queue can support atomic and ordered scheduling, or atomic and
+unordered scheduling, but not atomic and unordered and ordered scheduling. A
+queue's scheduling types are controlled by the event queue configuration.
+
+If the user sets the ``RTE_EVENT_QUEUE_CFG_ALL_TYPES`` flag, the
+``nb_atomic_order_sequences`` determines the supported scheduling types.
+With non-zero ``nb_atomic_order_sequences``, the queue is configured for atomic
+and ordered scheduling. In this case, ``RTE_SCHED_TYPE_PARALLEL`` scheduling is
+supported by scheduling those events as ordered events.  Note that when the
+event is dequeued, its sched_type will be ``RTE_SCHED_TYPE_ORDERED``. Else if
+``nb_atomic_order_sequences`` is zero, the queue is configured for atomic and
+unordered scheduling. In this case, ``RTE_SCHED_TYPE_ORDERED`` is unsupported.
+
+If the ``RTE_EVENT_QUEUE_CFG_ALL_TYPES`` flag is not set, schedule_type
+dictates the queue's scheduling type.
+
+The ``nb_atomic_order_sequences`` queue configuration field sets the ordered
+queue's reorder buffer size.  DLB has 4 groups of ordered queues, where each
+group is configured to contain either 1 queue with 1024 reorder entries, 2
+queues with 512 reorder entries, and so on down to 32 queues with 32 entries.
+
+When a load-balanced queue is created, the PMD will configure a new sequence
+number group on-demand if num_sequence_numbers does not match a pre-existing
+group with available reorder buffer entries. If all sequence number groups are
+in use, no new group will be created and queue configuration will fail. (Note
+that when the PMD is used with a virtual DLB device, it cannot change the
+sequence number configuration.)
+
+The queue's ``nb_atomic_flows`` parameter is ignored by the DLB PMD, because
+the DLB does not limit the number of flows a queue can track. In the DLB, all
+load-balanced queues can use the full 16-bit flow ID range.
+
+Reconfiguration
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The Eventdev API allows one to reconfigure a device, its ports, and its queues
+by first stopping the device, calling the configuration function(s), then
+restarting the device. The DLB does not support configuring an individual queue
+or port without first reconfiguring the entire device, however, so there are
+certain reconfiguration sequences that are valid in the eventdev API but not
+supported by the PMD.
+
+Specifically, the PMD supports the following configuration sequence:
+1. Configure and start the device
+2. Stop the device
+3. (Optional) Reconfigure the device
+4. (Optional) If step 3 is run:
+
+   a. Setup queue(s). The reconfigured queue(s) lose their previous port links.
+   b. The reconfigured port(s) lose their previous queue links.
+
+5. (Optional, only if steps 4a and 4b are run) Link port(s) to queue(s)
+6. Restart the device. If the device is reconfigured in step 3 but one or more
+   of its ports or queues are not, the PMD will apply their previous
+   configuration (including port->queue links) at this time.
+
+The PMD does not support the following configuration sequences:
+1. Configure and start the device
+2. Stop the device
+3. Setup queue or setup port
+4. Start the device
+
+This sequence is not supported because the event device must be reconfigured
+before its ports or queues can be.
+
+Deferred Scheduling
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The DLB PMD's default behavior for managing a CQ is to "pop" the CQ once per
+dequeued event before returning from rte_event_dequeue_burst(). This frees the
+corresponding entries in the CQ, which enables the DLB to schedule more events
+to it.
+
+To support applications seeking finer-grained scheduling control -- for example
+deferring scheduling to get the best possible priority scheduling and
+load-balancing -- the PMD supports a deferred scheduling mode. In this mode,
+the CQ entry is not popped until the *subsequent* rte_event_dequeue_burst()
+call. This mode only applies to load-balanced event ports with dequeue depth of
+1.
+
+To enable deferred scheduling, use the defer_sched vdev argument like so:
+
+    .. code-block:: console
+
+       --vdev=dlb1_event,defer_sched=on
+
+Atomic Inflights Allocation
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+In the last stage prior to scheduling an atomic event to a CQ, DLB holds the
+inflight event in a temporary buffer that is divided among load-balanced
+queues. If a queue's atomic buffer storage fills up, this can result in
+head-of-line-blocking. For example:
+- An LDB queue allocated N atomic buffer entries
+- All N entries are filled with events from flow X, which is pinned to CQ 0.
+
+Until CQ 0 releases 1+ events, no other atomic flows for that LDB queue can be
+scheduled. The likelihood of this case depends on the eventdev configuration,
+traffic behavior, event processing latency, potential for a worker to be
+interrupted or otherwise delayed, etc.
+
+By default, the PMD allocates 16 buffer entries for each load-balanced queue,
+which provides an even division across all 128 queues but potentially wastes
+buffer space (e.g. if not all queues are used, or aren't used for atomic
+scheduling).
+
+The PMD provides a dev arg to override the default per-queue allocation. To
+increase a vdev's per-queue atomic-inflight allocation to (for example) 64:
+
+    .. code-block:: console
+
+       --vdev=dlb1_event,atm_inflights=64
+
diff --git a/drivers/event/dlb/meson.build b/drivers/event/dlb/meson.build
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..54ba2c8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/drivers/event/dlb/meson.build
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
+# SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
+# Copyright(c) 2019-2020 Intel Corporation
+
+sources = files(
+)
+
+deps += ['mbuf', 'mempool', 'ring', 'pci', 'bus_pci']
diff --git a/drivers/event/dlb/rte_pmd_dlb_event_version.map b/drivers/event/dlb/rte_pmd_dlb_event_version.map
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..299ae63
--- /dev/null
+++ b/drivers/event/dlb/rte_pmd_dlb_event_version.map
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+DPDK_21.0 {
+	local: *;
+};
diff --git a/drivers/event/meson.build b/drivers/event/meson.build
index ebe76a7..35060c6 100644
--- a/drivers/event/meson.build
+++ b/drivers/event/meson.build
@@ -10,6 +10,10 @@ if not (toolchain == 'gcc' and cc.version().version_compare('<4.8.6') and
 	dpdk_conf.has('RTE_ARCH_ARM64'))
 	drivers += 'octeontx'
 endif
+if ((dpdk_conf.has('RTE_ARCH_X86_64') or dpdk_conf.has('RTE_ARCH_X86')) and
+	is_linux)
+	drivers += 'dlb'
+endif
 std_deps = ['eventdev', 'kvargs']
 config_flag_fmt = 'RTE_LIBRTE_@0@_EVENTDEV_PMD'
 driver_name_fmt = 'rte_pmd_@0@_event'
-- 
2.6.4


  reply	other threads:[~2020-09-11 19:22 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 47+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2020-09-11 19:18 [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 00/22] Add DLB PMD Timothy McDaniel
2020-09-11 19:18 ` Timothy McDaniel [this message]
2020-09-14 20:56   ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 01/22] event/dlb: add documentation and meson infrastructure Eads, Gage
2020-09-16 21:05     ` McDaniel, Timothy
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 02/22] event/dlb: add dynamic logging Timothy McDaniel
2020-09-14 21:00   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 03/22] event/dlb: add private data structures and constants Timothy McDaniel
2020-09-14 22:08   ` Eads, Gage
2020-10-08 18:14   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 04/22] event/dlb: add definitions shared with LKM or shared code Timothy McDaniel
2020-09-15 18:20   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 05/22] event/dlb: add inline functions Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 18:22   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 06/22] event/dlb: add probe Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 18:51   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 07/22] event/dlb: add xstats Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 20:53   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 08/22] event/dlb: add infos get and configure Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:01   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 09/22] event/dlb: add queue and port default conf Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:02   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 10/22] event/dlb: add queue setup Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:15   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 11/22] event/dlb: add port setup Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:28   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 12/22] event/dlb: add port link Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:31   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 13/22] event/dlb: add port unlink and port unlinks in progress Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:38   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 14/22] event/dlb: add eventdev start Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:41   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 15/22] event/dlb: add enqueue and its burst variants Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:43   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 16/22] event/dlb: add dequeue " Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:48   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 17/22] event/dlb: add eventdev stop and close Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:49   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 18/22] event/dlb: add PMD's token pop public interface Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:50   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 19/22] event/dlb: add PMD self-tests Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:56   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 20/22] event/dlb: add queue and port release Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 21:57   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 21/22] event/dlb: add timeout ticks entry point Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 22:01   ` Eads, Gage
2020-09-11 19:18 ` [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 22/22] doc: Add new DLB eventdev driver to relnotes Timothy McDaniel
2020-10-08 22:03   ` Eads, Gage

Reply instructions:

You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:

* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
  and reply-to-all from there: mbox

  Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style

* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
  switches of git-send-email(1):

  git send-email \
    --in-reply-to=1599851920-16802-2-git-send-email-timothy.mcdaniel@intel.com \
    --to=timothy.mcdaniel@intel.com \
    --cc=bruce.richardson@intel.com \
    --cc=dev@dpdk.org \
    --cc=erik.g.carrillo@intel.com \
    --cc=gage.eads@intel.com \
    --cc=harry.van.haaren@intel.com \
    --cc=jerinj@marvell.com \
    --cc=john.mcnamara@intel.com \
    --cc=marko.kovacevic@intel.com \
    --cc=mdr@ashroe.eu \
    --cc=nhorman@tuxdriver.com \
    /path/to/YOUR_REPLY

  https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html

* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
  via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line before the message body.
This is an external index of several public inboxes,
see mirroring instructions on how to clone and mirror
all data and code used by this external index.