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authorJohannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>2012-04-03 16:28:50 +0200
committerAndy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>2012-06-13 21:39:34 +0800
commitfc5d9a8964c8bba50ae58b7b7012bbe33c9840da (patch)
tree7181dd3adb5848d54568f44bb7fa38d972c8525f /include
parentfe01b73f771f68a6b1c1c22895989be732398141 (diff)
mac80211: add improved HW queue control
mac80211 currently only supports one hardware queue per AC. This is already problematic for off-channel uses since if we go off channel while the BE queue is full and then try to send an off-channel frame the frame will never go out. This will become worse when we support multi-channel since then a queue on one channel might be full, but we have to stop the software queue for all channels. That is obviously not desirable. To address this problem allow drivers to register more hardware queues, and allow them to map them to virtual interfaces. When they stop a hardware queue the corresponding AC software queues on the correct interfaces will be stopped as well. Additionally, there's an off-channel queue to solve that problem and a per-interface after-DTIM beacon queue. This allows drivers to manage software queues closer to how the hardware works. Currently, there's a limit of 16 hardware queues. This may or may not be sufficient, we can adjust it as needed. Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'include')
-rw-r--r--include/net/mac80211.h81
1 files changed, 77 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/include/net/mac80211.h b/include/net/mac80211.h
index 63d5a0715580..56c2f106b696 100644
--- a/include/net/mac80211.h
+++ b/include/net/mac80211.h
@@ -95,9 +95,11 @@ struct device;
* @IEEE80211_MAX_QUEUES: Maximum number of regular device queues.
*/
enum ieee80211_max_queues {
- IEEE80211_MAX_QUEUES = 4,
+ IEEE80211_MAX_QUEUES = 16,
};
+#define IEEE80211_INVAL_HW_QUEUE 0xff
+
/**
* enum ieee80211_ac_numbers - AC numbers as used in mac80211
* @IEEE80211_AC_VO: voice
@@ -522,7 +524,7 @@ struct ieee80211_tx_rate {
*
* @flags: transmit info flags, defined above
* @band: the band to transmit on (use for checking for races)
- * @reserved: reserved for future use
+ * @hw_queue: HW queue to put the frame on, skb_get_queue_mapping() gives the AC
* @ack_frame_id: internal frame ID for TX status, used internally
* @control: union for control data
* @status: union for status data
@@ -538,7 +540,7 @@ struct ieee80211_tx_info {
u32 flags;
u8 band;
- u8 reserved;
+ u8 hw_queue;
u16 ack_frame_id;
@@ -889,6 +891,8 @@ enum ieee80211_vif_flags {
* these need to be set (or cleared) when the interface is added
* or, if supported by the driver, the interface type is changed
* at runtime, mac80211 will never touch this field
+ * @hw_queue: hardware queue for each AC
+ * @cab_queue: content-after-beacon (DTIM beacon really) queue, AP mode only
* @drv_priv: data area for driver use, will always be aligned to
* sizeof(void *).
*/
@@ -897,7 +901,12 @@ struct ieee80211_vif {
struct ieee80211_bss_conf bss_conf;
u8 addr[ETH_ALEN];
bool p2p;
+
+ u8 cab_queue;
+ u8 hw_queue[IEEE80211_NUM_ACS];
+
u32 driver_flags;
+
/* must be last */
u8 drv_priv[0] __attribute__((__aligned__(sizeof(void *))));
};
@@ -1179,6 +1188,11 @@ enum sta_notify_cmd {
* @IEEE80211_HW_WANT_MONITOR_VIF: The driver would like to be informed of
* a virtual monitor interface when monitor interfaces are the only
* active interfaces.
+ *
+ * @IEEE80211_HW_QUEUE_CONTROL: The driver wants to control per-interface
+ * queue mapping in order to use different queues (not just one per AC)
+ * for different virtual interfaces. See the doc section on HW queue
+ * control for more details.
*/
enum ieee80211_hw_flags {
IEEE80211_HW_HAS_RATE_CONTROL = 1<<0,
@@ -1201,7 +1215,7 @@ enum ieee80211_hw_flags {
IEEE80211_HW_SUPPORTS_UAPSD = 1<<17,
IEEE80211_HW_REPORTS_TX_ACK_STATUS = 1<<18,
IEEE80211_HW_CONNECTION_MONITOR = 1<<19,
- /* reuse bit 20 */
+ IEEE80211_HW_QUEUE_CONTROL = 1<<20,
IEEE80211_HW_SUPPORTS_PER_STA_GTK = 1<<21,
IEEE80211_HW_AP_LINK_PS = 1<<22,
IEEE80211_HW_TX_AMPDU_SETUP_IN_HW = 1<<23,
@@ -1271,6 +1285,9 @@ enum ieee80211_hw_flags {
* @max_tx_aggregation_subframes: maximum number of subframes in an
* aggregate an HT driver will transmit, used by the peer as a
* hint to size its reorder buffer.
+ *
+ * @offchannel_tx_hw_queue: HW queue ID to use for offchannel TX
+ * (if %IEEE80211_HW_QUEUE_CONTROL is set)
*/
struct ieee80211_hw {
struct ieee80211_conf conf;
@@ -1291,6 +1308,7 @@ struct ieee80211_hw {
u8 max_rate_tries;
u8 max_rx_aggregation_subframes;
u8 max_tx_aggregation_subframes;
+ u8 offchannel_tx_hw_queue;
};
/**
@@ -1699,6 +1717,61 @@ void ieee80211_free_txskb(struct ieee80211_hw *hw, struct sk_buff *skb);
*/
/**
+ * DOC: HW queue control
+ *
+ * Before HW queue control was introduced, mac80211 only had a single static
+ * assignment of per-interface AC software queues to hardware queues. This
+ * was problematic for a few reasons:
+ * 1) off-channel transmissions might get stuck behind other frames
+ * 2) multiple virtual interfaces couldn't be handled correctly
+ * 3) after-DTIM frames could get stuck behind other frames
+ *
+ * To solve this, hardware typically uses multiple different queues for all
+ * the different usages, and this needs to be propagated into mac80211 so it
+ * won't have the same problem with the software queues.
+ *
+ * Therefore, mac80211 now offers the %IEEE80211_HW_QUEUE_CONTROL capability
+ * flag that tells it that the driver implements its own queue control. To do
+ * so, the driver will set up the various queues in each &struct ieee80211_vif
+ * and the offchannel queue in &struct ieee80211_hw. In response, mac80211 will
+ * use those queue IDs in the hw_queue field of &struct ieee80211_tx_info and
+ * if necessary will queue the frame on the right software queue that mirrors
+ * the hardware queue.
+ * Additionally, the driver has to then use these HW queue IDs for the queue
+ * management functions (ieee80211_stop_queue() et al.)
+ *
+ * The driver is free to set up the queue mappings as needed, multiple virtual
+ * interfaces may map to the same hardware queues if needed. The setup has to
+ * happen during add_interface or change_interface callbacks. For example, a
+ * driver supporting station+station and station+AP modes might decide to have
+ * 10 hardware queues to handle different scenarios:
+ *
+ * 4 AC HW queues for 1st vif: 0, 1, 2, 3
+ * 4 AC HW queues for 2nd vif: 4, 5, 6, 7
+ * after-DTIM queue for AP: 8
+ * off-channel queue: 9
+ *
+ * It would then set up the hardware like this:
+ * hw.offchannel_tx_hw_queue = 9
+ *
+ * and the first virtual interface that is added as follows:
+ * vif.hw_queue[IEEE80211_AC_VO] = 0
+ * vif.hw_queue[IEEE80211_AC_VI] = 1
+ * vif.hw_queue[IEEE80211_AC_BE] = 2
+ * vif.hw_queue[IEEE80211_AC_BK] = 3
+ * vif.cab_queue = 8 // if AP mode, otherwise %IEEE80211_INVAL_HW_QUEUE
+ * and the second virtual interface with 4-7.
+ *
+ * If queue 6 gets full, for example, mac80211 would only stop the second
+ * virtual interface's BE queue since virtual interface queues are per AC.
+ *
+ * Note that the vif.cab_queue value should be set to %IEEE80211_INVAL_HW_QUEUE
+ * whenever the queue is not used (i.e. the interface is not in AP mode) if the
+ * queue could potentially be shared since mac80211 will look at cab_queue when
+ * a queue is stopped/woken even if the interface is not in AP mode.
+ */
+
+/**
* enum ieee80211_filter_flags - hardware filter flags
*
* These flags determine what the filter in hardware should be