hssi_loopback - Software utility to run HSSI loopback tests on FPGA
hssi_loopback [[--bus|-b <bus number>] [--device | -d <device number>] [--function | -f <function number>]]|[--socket-id <socket-id>]
[--mode|-m auto|e40|e10]
[send [<source port> [<destination port>] [--packet-count|-c <count>] [--packet-delay|-d <delay>] [--packet-length|-l <length>]] |status [clear] | stop | readmacs
The hssi_loopback
utility works in conjunction with a packet generator accelerator function unit (AFU)
to test high-speed serial interface (HSSI) cards. The hssi_loopback
utility tests both external and internal loopbacks.
hssi_loopback
runs an external loopback test when the command line arguments include both source and destination ports.
hssi_loopback
runs an internal loopback test when command line arguments include a single port. hssi_loopback
only runs on the Intel Xeon with Arria 10 FPGA. You cannot run it on the Intel PAC (programmable accelerator card).
NOTE: The following limitations apply to the current version of hssi_loopback:
hssi_loopback
test supports only the e40 and e10 E2E AFUs. The e10 E2E AFU tests HSSI with a retimer card.hssi_loopback
test uses the control and status registers (CSRs) defined in the AFU.-S SOCKET_ID, --socket-id SOCKET_ID
Socket ID FPGA resource.
-B BUS, --bus BUS
Bus ID of FPGA resource.
-D DEVICE, --device DEVICE
Device ID of FPGA resource.
-F FUNCTION, --function FUNCTION
Function ID of FPGA resource.
-G, --guid
Specifies guid for the resource enumeration.
-m, --mode
One of the following: [auto
, e40
, e10
]
auto
is the default and indicates that the software runs the mode based on the first accelerator functional
unit it identifies.
-t, --timeout
Timeout (in seconds) before the application terminates in continuous mode. Continuous mode is the default when you do not specify the number of packets.
-y, --delay
Delay (in seconds) between printing out a simple status line. Default is 0.100 seconds (100 milliseconds).
-c, --packet-count
The number of packets to send.
-d, --packet-delay
The delay in between packets. This delay is the number of 100 MHz clock cycles, roughly 10 nanoseconds.
-s, --packet-size
The packet size to send. The minimum is 46 bytes and the maximum is 1500 bytes. The default is 46 bytes.
send <source port> [<destination port>] [--packet-count|-c <count>] [--packet-delay|-d <delay>] [--packet-length|-l <length>]
Send packets from one port to the other. If the command line does not specify a destination port, the test runs an internal loopback. Otherwise, the test runs an external loopback from the source port to the destination port.
status [clear]
Read and interpret the status registers and print to the screen. clear
clears the status registers.
stop
Issue a stop command to all Ethernet controllers in the AFU.
readmacs
Read and display the port MAC addresses. An EEPROM stores the MAC addresses.
0 Success - Number of packets received are equal to the number of packets sent and no errors are reported.
-1 Loopback failure - Either number of packets does not match or the test detected errors.
-2 Errors parsing arguments.
Read the MAC addresses of the AFU loaded on bus 0x5e:
>sudo hssi_loopback readmacs -B 0x5e
Run an external loopback, sending 100 packets from port 0 to port 1. The AFU is on bus 0x5e:
>sudo hssi_loopback -B 0x5e send 0 1 -c 100
Run an internal loopback until a timeout of 5 seconds is reached. The AFU is on bus 0x5e:
>sudo hssi_loopback -B 0x5e send 0 -t 5
Document Version | Intel Acceleration Stack Version | Changes |
---|---|---|
2018.05.21 | 1.1 Beta. (Supported with Intel Quartus Prime Pro Edition 17.1.) |
Corrected typos. |