Thank you, I will take a look and get back to you. -john From: Kevin Traynor Date: Wednesday, March 15, 2023 at 10:47 AM To: John Daley (johndale) , Hyong Youb Kim (hyonkim) Cc: Luca Boccassi , David Marchand , dev@dpdk.org Subject: Fwd: [Bug 1185] enic: no longer accepting 2048 descriptor size in 20.11.6 Hi John/Hyong Youb, Not sure if you are monitoring dpdk bugzilla, but wanted to draw your attention to https://bugs.dpdk.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1185 Maybe you have some clues about it and if we need to backport the mentioned commit? thanks, Kevin. -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: [Bug 1185] enic: no longer accepting 2048 descriptor size in 20.11.6 Date: Wed, 15 Mar 2023 17:33:52 +0000 From: bugzilla@dpdk.org To: dev@dpdk.org https://bugs.dpdk.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1185 Bug ID: 1185 Summary: enic: no longer accepting 2048 descriptor size in 20.11.6 Product: DPDK Version: 20.11 Hardware: All OS: All Status: UNCONFIRMED Severity: normal Priority: Normal Component: core Assignee: dev@dpdk.org Reporter: ktraynor@redhat.com Target Milestone: --- Hi enic maintainers, With openvswitch 2.15 using dpdk 20.11.6, enic driver is reporting that it cannot accept setup with default OVS number of tx descriptors (2048). 2022-08-19T16:29:38.555Z|00204|dpdk|ERR|Invalid value for nb_tx_desc(=2048), should be: <= 256, >= 64, and a product of 32 OVS has used 2048 as default for many years and the code in 20.11.6 does not look like it changed much from previous releases either. The commit below [0] on dpdk main branch (but not on 20.11 branch), changes how max descriptor values are calculated. So any idea why the 2048 can no longer be used with 20.11.6 ? some commit I missed? different firmware? or is it an incorrect calculation and the commit [0] is needed on stable branches to correct this? Thanks. Reference: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2119876 [0] commit 22572e84fbda2c195707ffbb0dd6af4433d7a219 Author: John Daley Date: Fri Jan 28 09:58:13 2022 -0800 net/enic: support max descriptors allowed by adapter Newer VIC adapters have the max number of supported RX and TX descriptors in their configuration. Use these values as the maximums. Signed-off-by: John Daley Reviewed-by: Hyong Youb Kim -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.