[dpdk-dev] [PATCH] net/pcap: fix registration of timestamp dynamic field

Ferruh Yigit ferruh.yigit at intel.com
Fri Nov 13 15:02:38 CET 2020


On 11/13/2020 1:13 PM, Olivier Matz wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 11:39:57AM +0100, Olivier Matz wrote:
>> In pcap pmd, the timestamp mbuf dynamic field is mandatory. When the
>> pcap pmd is created in a secondary process (this is the case for pdump),
>> it cannot be registered because this is not allowed from a secondary
>> process.
>>
>> To ensure that the field is properly registered, do it from probe()
>> instead of configure(). Indeed, probe() is invoked on the primary
>> process when a device is created in a secondary.
>>

probe() invoked first in the primary, later in the secondary, both process calls 
the driver probe(). But for this case probe(), and dynfield register, being 
called first in primary seems solving the problem.
Would you be OK to change last sentences as:
"Indeed, probe() is first invoked on the primary process when a device is 
created in a secondary, this enables registering dynfield from secondary process."

>> Bugzilla ID: 571
>> Fixes: d23d73d088c1 ("net/pcap: switch Rx timestamp to dynamic mbuf field")
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Olivier Matz <olivier.matz at 6wind.com>

Reviewed-by: Ferruh Yigit <ferruh.yigit at intel.com>

>> ---
> 
> One additional comment about this patch.
> 
> While it solves the issue described in the bug report, there may still
> be a gap when it is needed to register a dynamic field/flag from a
> secondary process. This happens when registering and configuring devices
> from a secondary process (is it supported?). It happens if the secondary
> process initializes a library which is not initialized in primary, and
> which requires a dynamic field.
> 
>  From afar, it does not look too difficult to implement dynamic field
> registration from secondary processes. The only thing missing is a way
> to allocate the shared memory in the primary process at initialization.
> Currently, there is no init callback that is invoked when eal init is
> done.
> 

I was checking this, it seems what prevents to register dnyfield from the 
secondary process is 'init_shared_mem()', so if primary process registers any 
dynfield first, secondary process can register dynfields too.
Do you think should this limitation documented?

> This is the exact same problem than for this issue:
> http://inbox.dpdk.org/dev/20200504074227.GA6327@platinum/#t
> 

<...>



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