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/**
 * @file
 *
 * This header file defines the work queue entry (wqe) data structure.
 * Since this is a commonly used structure that depends on structures
 * from several hardware blocks, those definitions have been placed
 * in this file to create a single point of definition of the wqe
 * format.
 * Data structures are still named according to the block that they
 * relate to.
 *
 * This file must not depend on any other header files, except for cvmx.h!!!
 *
 *
 * <hr>$Revision: 49448 $<hr>
 *
 *
 */

#ifndef __CVMX_WQE_H__
#define __CVMX_WQE_H__

#ifdef	__cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif

#define OCT_TAG_TYPE_STRING(x) (((x) == CVMX_POW_TAG_TYPE_ORDERED) ?  "ORDERED" : \
                                (((x) == CVMX_POW_TAG_TYPE_ATOMIC) ?  "ATOMIC" : \
                                (((x) == CVMX_POW_TAG_TYPE_NULL) ?  "NULL" : \
                                "NULL_NULL")))


/**
 * HW decode / err_code in work queue entry
 */
typedef union
{
    uint64_t                 u64;

    /** Use this struct if the hardware determines that the packet is IP */
    struct
    {
        uint64_t               bufs          : 8; /**< HW sets this to the number of buffers used by this packet */
        uint64_t               ip_offset     : 8; /**< HW sets to the number of L2 bytes prior to the IP */
        uint64_t               vlan_valid    : 1; /**< set to 1 if we found DSA/VLAN in the L2 */
        uint64_t               vlan_stacked  : 1; /**< Set to 1 if the DSA/VLAN tag is stacked */
        uint64_t               unassigned    : 1;
        uint64_t               vlan_cfi      : 1; /**< HW sets to the DSA/VLAN CFI flag (valid when vlan_valid) */
        uint64_t               vlan_id       :12; /**< HW sets to the DSA/VLAN_ID field (valid when vlan_valid) */
        uint64_t               pr            : 4; /**< Ring Identifier (if PCIe). Requires PIP_GBL_CTL[RING_EN]=1 */
        uint64_t               unassigned2   : 8;
        uint64_t               dec_ipcomp    : 1; /**< the packet needs to be decompressed */
        uint64_t               tcp_or_udp    : 1; /**< the packet is either TCP or UDP */
        uint64_t               dec_ipsec     : 1; /**< the packet needs to be decrypted (ESP or AH) */
        uint64_t               is_v6         : 1; /**< the packet is IPv6 */

      /* (rcv_error, not_IP, IP_exc, is_frag, L4_error, software, etc.) */

        uint64_t               software      : 1; /**< reserved for software use, hardware will clear on packet creation */
      /* exceptional conditions below */
        uint64_t               L4_error      : 1; /**< the receive interface hardware detected an L4 error (only applies if !is_frag)
                                                    (only applies if !rcv_error && !not_IP && !IP_exc && !is_frag)
                                                    failure indicated in err_code below, decode:
                                                    - 1 = Malformed L4
                                                    - 2 = L4 Checksum Error: the L4 checksum value is
                                                    - 3 = UDP Length Error: The UDP length field would make the UDP data longer than what
                                                        remains in the IP packet (as defined by the IP header length field).
                                                    - 4 = Bad L4 Port: either the source or destination TCP/UDP port is 0.
                                                    - 8 = TCP FIN Only: the packet is TCP and only the FIN flag set.
                                                    - 9 = TCP No Flags: the packet is TCP and no flags are set.
                                                    - 10 = TCP FIN RST: the packet is TCP and both FIN and RST are set.
                                                    - 11 = TCP SYN URG: the packet is TCP and both SYN and URG are set.
                                                    - 12 = TCP SYN RST: the packet is TCP and both SYN and RST are set.
                                                    - 13 = TCP SYN FIN: the packet is TCP and both SYN and FIN are set. */



        uint64_t               is_frag       : 1; /**< set if the packet is a fragment */
        uint64_t               IP_exc        : 1; /**< the receive interface hardware detected an IP error / exception
                                                    (only applies if !rcv_error && !not_IP) failure indicated in err_code below, decode:
                                                    - 1 = Not IP: the IP version field is neither 4 nor 6.
                                                    - 2 = IPv4 Header Checksum Error: the IPv4 header has a checksum violation.
                                                    - 3 = IP Malformed Header: the packet is not long enough to contain the IP header.
                                                    - 4 = IP Malformed: the packet is not long enough to contain the bytes indicated by the IP
                                                        header. Pad is allowed.
                                                    - 5 = IP TTL Hop: the IPv4 TTL field or the IPv6 Hop Count field are zero.
                                                    - 6 = IP Options */

        uint64_t               is_bcast      : 1; /**< set if the hardware determined that the packet is a broadcast */
        uint64_t               is_mcast      : 1; /**< set if the hardware determined that the packet is a multi-cast */
        uint64_t               not_IP        : 1; /**< set if the packet may not be IP (must be zero in this case) */
        uint64_t               rcv_error     : 1; /**< the receive interface hardware detected a receive error (must be zero in this case) */
        /* lower err_code = first-level descriptor of the work */
        /* zero for packet submitted by hardware that isn't on the slow path */

        uint64_t               err_code      : 8; /**< type is cvmx_pip_err_t */
    } s;

    /**< use this to get at the 16 vlan bits */
    struct
    {
        uint64_t               unused1       :16;
        uint64_t               vlan          :16;
        uint64_t               unused2       :32;
    } svlan;

    /**< use this struct if the hardware could not determine that the packet is ip */
    struct
    {
        uint64_t               bufs          : 8; /**< HW sets this to the number of buffers used by this packet */
        uint64_t               unused        : 8;
        uint64_t               vlan_valid    : 1; /**< set to 1 if we found DSA/VLAN in the L2 */
        uint64_t               vlan_stacked  : 1; /**< Set to 1 if the DSA/VLAN tag is stacked */
        uint64_t               unassigned    : 1;
        uint64_t               vlan_cfi      : 1; /**< HW sets to the DSA/VLAN CFI flag (valid when vlan_valid) */
        uint64_t               vlan_id       :12; /**< HW sets to the DSA/VLAN_ID field (valid when vlan_valid) */
        uint64_t               pr            : 4; /**< Ring Identifier (if PCIe). Requires PIP_GBL_CTL[RING_EN]=1 */
        uint64_t               unassigned2   :12;
        uint64_t               software      : 1; /**< reserved for software use, hardware will clear on packet creation */
        uint64_t               unassigned3   : 1;
        uint64_t               is_rarp       : 1; /**< set if the hardware determined that the packet is rarp */
        uint64_t               is_arp        : 1; /**< set if the hardware determined that the packet is arp */
        uint64_t               is_bcast      : 1; /**< set if the hardware determined that the packet is a broadcast */
        uint64_t               is_mcast      : 1; /**< set if the hardware determined that the packet is a multi-cast */
        uint64_t               not_IP        : 1; /**< set if the packet may not be IP (must be one in this case) */
        uint64_t               rcv_error     : 1; /**< the receive interface hardware detected a receive error.
                                                    Failure indicated in err_code below, decode:
                                                    - 1 = partial error: a packet was partially received, but internal
                                                        buffering / bandwidth was not adequate to receive the entire packet.
                                                    - 2 = jabber error: the RGMII packet was too large and is truncated.
                                                    - 3 = overrun error: the RGMII packet is longer than allowed and had
                                                        an FCS error.
                                                    - 4 = oversize error: the RGMII packet is longer than allowed.
                                                    - 5 = alignment error: the RGMII packet is not an integer number of bytes
                                                        and had an FCS error (100M and 10M only).
                                                    - 6 = fragment error: the RGMII packet is shorter than allowed and had an
                                                        FCS error.
                                                    - 7 = GMX FCS error: the RGMII packet had an FCS error.
                                                    - 8 = undersize error: the RGMII packet is shorter than allowed.
                                                    - 9 = extend error: the RGMII packet had an extend error.
                                                    - 10 = length mismatch error: the RGMII packet had a length that did not
                                                        match the length field in the L2 HDR.
                                                    - 11 = RGMII RX error/SPI4 DIP4 Error: the RGMII packet had one or more
                                                        data reception errors (RXERR) or the SPI4 packet had one or more DIP4
                                                        errors.
                                                    - 12 = RGMII skip error/SPI4 Abort Error: the RGMII packet was not large
                                                        enough to cover the skipped bytes or the SPI4 packet was terminated
                                                        with an About EOPS.
                                                    - 13 = RGMII nibble error/SPI4 Port NXA Error: the RGMII packet had a
                                                        studder error (data not repeated - 10/100M only) or the SPI4 packet
                                                        was sent to an NXA.
                                                    - 16 = FCS error: a SPI4.2 packet had an FCS error.
                                                    - 17 = Skip error: a packet was not large enough to cover the skipped bytes.
                                                    - 18 = L2 header malformed: the packet is not long enough to contain the L2 */


        /* lower err_code = first-level descriptor of the work */
        /* zero for packet submitted by hardware that isn't on the slow path */
      uint64_t               err_code       : 8; /* type is cvmx_pip_err_t (union, so can't use directly */
    } snoip;

} cvmx_pip_wqe_word2;

/**
 * Work queue entry format
 *
 * must be 8-byte aligned
 */
typedef struct
{

    /*****************************************************************
     * WORD 0
     *  HW WRITE: the following 64 bits are filled by HW when a packet arrives
     */

    /**
     * raw chksum result generated by the HW
     */
    uint16_t                   hw_chksum;
    /**
     * Field unused by hardware - available for software
     */
    uint8_t                    unused;
    /**
     * Next pointer used by hardware for list maintenance.
     * May be written/read by HW before the work queue
     *           entry is scheduled to a PP
     * (Only 36 bits used in Octeon 1)
     */
    uint64_t                   next_ptr      : 40;


    /*****************************************************************
     * WORD 1
     *  HW WRITE: the following 64 bits are filled by HW when a packet arrives
     */

    /**
     * HW sets to the total number of bytes in the packet
     */
    uint64_t                   len           :16;
    /**
     * HW sets this to input physical port
     */
    uint64_t                   ipprt         : 6;

    /**
     * HW sets this to what it thought the priority of the input packet was
     */
    uint64_t                   qos           : 3;

    /**
     * the group that the work queue entry will be scheduled to
     */
    uint64_t                   grp           : 4;
    /**
     * the type of the tag (ORDERED, ATOMIC, NULL)
     */
    cvmx_pow_tag_type_t        tag_type      : 3;
    /**
     * the synchronization/ordering tag
     */
    uint64_t                   tag           :32;

    /**
     * WORD 2
     *   HW WRITE: the following 64-bits are filled in by hardware when a packet arrives
     *   This indicates a variety of status and error conditions.
     */
    cvmx_pip_wqe_word2       word2;

    /**
     * Pointer to the first segment of the packet.
     */
    cvmx_buf_ptr_t             packet_ptr;

    /**
     *   HW WRITE: octeon will fill in a programmable amount from the
     *             packet, up to (at most, but perhaps less) the amount
     *             needed to fill the work queue entry to 128 bytes
     *   If the packet is recognized to be IP, the hardware starts (except that
     *   the IPv4 header is padded for appropriate alignment) writing here where
     *   the IP header starts.
     *   If the packet is not recognized to be IP, the hardware starts writing
     *   the beginning of the packet here.
     */
    uint8_t packet_data[96];


    /**
     * If desired, SW can make the work Q entry any length. For the
     * purposes of discussion here, Assume 128B always, as this is all that
     * the hardware deals with.
     *
     */

}  CVMX_CACHE_LINE_ALIGNED cvmx_wqe_t;

#ifdef	__cplusplus
}
#endif

#endif /* __CVMX_WQE_H__ */

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