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NAME

       MQPRIO - Multiqueue Priority Qdisc (Offloaded Hardware QOS)

SYNOPSIS

       tc qdisc ... dev dev ( parent classid | root) [ handle major: ] mqprio
               [ num_tc tcs ] [ map P0 P1 P2... ] [ queues count1@offset1 count2@offset2 ... ]
               [ hw 1|0 ] [ mode dcb|channel ] [ shaper dcb|bw_rlimit ]
               [ min_rate min_rate1 min_rate2 ... ] [ max_rate max_rate1 max_rate2 ... ]
               [ fp FP0 FP1 FP2 ... ]

DESCRIPTION

       The  MQPRIO  qdisc  is  a  simple  queuing discipline that allows mapping traffic flows to hardware queue
       ranges using priorities and a configurable priority to traffic class mapping. A  traffic  class  in  this
       context is a set of contiguous qdisc classes which map 1:1 to a set of hardware exposed queues.

       By  default  the  qdisc  allocates  a pfifo qdisc (packet limited first in, first out queue) per TX queue
       exposed by the lower layer device. Other queuing disciplines  may  be  added  subsequently.  Packets  are
       enqueued  using  the  map  parameter  and hashed across the indicated queues in the offset and count.  By
       default these parameters are configured by the hardware driver to match the hardware QOS structures.

       Channel mode supports full offload of the mqprio options, the traffic classes, the  queue  configurations
       and  QOS  attributes to the hardware. Enabled hardware can provide hardware QOS with the ability to steer
       traffic flows to designated traffic classes provided by this qdisc.  Hardware  based  QOS  is  configured
       using  the  shaper parameter.  bw_rlimit with minimum and maximum bandwidth rates can be used for setting
       transmission rates on each traffic class. Also further qdiscs may be added to the classes  of  MQPRIO  to
       create more complex configurations.

ALGORITHM

       On  creation  with  'tc  qdisc add', eight traffic classes are created mapping priorities 0..7 to traffic
       classes 0..7 and priorities greater than 7 to traffic class 0. This requires base driver support and  the
       creation will fail on devices that do not support hardware QOS schemes.

       These defaults can be overridden using the qdisc parameters. Providing the 'hw 0' flag allows software to
       run without hardware coordination.

       If hardware coordination is being used and arguments are provided that the hardware can not support  then
       an error is returned. For many users hardware defaults should work reasonably well.

       As  one  specific  example  numerous  Ethernet cards support the 802.1Q link strict priority transmission
       selection algorithm (TSA). MQPRIO enabled hardware in conjunction with the classification  methods  below
       can provide hardware offloaded support for this TSA.

CLASSIFICATION

       Multiple methods are available to set the SKB priority which MQPRIO uses to select which traffic class to
       enqueue the packet.

       From user space
              A process with sufficient privileges can encode the destination class directly  with  SO_PRIORITY,
              see socket(7).

       with iptables/nftables
              An iptables/nftables rule can be created to match traffic flows and set the priority.  iptables(8)

       with net_prio cgroups
              The  net_prio  cgroup can be used to set the priority of all sockets belong to an application. See
              kernel and cgroup documentation for details.

QDISC PARAMETERS

       num_tc Number of traffic classes to use. Up to 16 classes supported.  You cannot have more  classes  than
              queues

       map    The priority to traffic class map. Maps priorities 0..15 to a specified traffic class.

       queues Provide  count  and  offset  of  queue  range for each traffic class. In the format, count@offset.
              Queue ranges for each traffic classes cannot overlap and must be a contiguous range of queues.

       hw     Set to 1 to support hardware offload. Set to 0 to configure  user  specified  values  in  software
              only.  The default value of this parameter is 1

       mode   Set  to  channel  for  full  use  of the mqprio options. Use dcb to offload only TC values and use
              hardware QOS defaults. Supported with 'hw' set to 1 only.

       shaper Use bw_rlimit to set bandwidth rate limits for a traffic class. Use dcb for hardware QOS defaults.
              Supported with 'hw' set to 1 only.

       min_rate
              Minimum  value  of  bandwidth  rate  limit  for  a traffic class. Supported only when the 'shaper'
              argument is set to 'bw_rlimit'.

       max_rate
              Maximum value of bandwidth rate limit for a  traffic  class.  Supported  only  when  the  'shaper'
              argument is set to 'bw_rlimit'.

       fp     Selects whether traffic classes are express (deliver packets via the eMAC) or preemptible (deliver
              packets via the pMAC), according to IEEE 802.1Q-2018 clause 6.7.2 Frame preemption. Takes the form
              of  an  array  (one  element  per  traffic  class) with values being 'E' (for express) or 'P' (for
              preemptible).

              Multiple priorities which map to the same traffic class, as well as multiple TXQs which map to the
              same  traffic  class,  must  have the same FP attributes.  To interpret the FP as an attribute per
              priority, the 'map' argument can be used for translation. To interpret FP as an attribute per TXQ,
              the 'queues' argument can be used for translation.

              Traffic  classes  are  express  by  default.  The  argument  is supported only with 'hw' set to 1.
              Preemptible traffic classes are accepted only if the device has a  MAC  Merge  layer  configurable
              through ethtool(8).

SEE ALSO

       ethtool(8)

EXAMPLE

       The  following  example shows how to attach priorities to 4 traffic classes ("num_tc 4"), and then how to
       pair these traffic classes with 4 hardware queues with mqprio, with hardware  coordination  ("hw  1",  or
       does not specified, because 1 is the default value).  Traffic class 0 (tc0) is mapped to hardware queue 0
       (q0), tc1 is mapped to q1, tc2 is mapped to q2, and tc3 is mapped q3.

       # tc qdisc add dev eth0 root mqprio               num_tc 4               map 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3               queues 1@0 1@1 1@2 1@3               hw 1

       The next example shows how to attach priorities to 3 traffic classes ("num_tc 3"), and how to pair  these
       traffic  classes  with 4 queues, without hardware coordination ("hw 0").  Traffic class 0 (tc0) is mapped
       to hardware queue 0 (q0), tc1 is mapped to q1, tc2 and is mapped to q2 and q3, where the queue  selection
       between these two queues is somewhat randomly decided.

       # tc qdisc add dev eth0 root mqprio               num_tc 3               map 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2               queues 1@0 1@1 2@2               hw 0

       In  both cases from above the priority values from 0 to 3 (prio0-3) are mapped to tc0, prio4-7 are mapped
       to tc1, and the prio8-11 are mapped to tc2 ("map" attribute). The last four priority  values  (prio12-15)
       are mapped in different ways in the two examples.  They are mapped to tc3 in the first example and mapped
       to tc2 in the second example.  The values of these two examples are the following:

        ┌────┬────┬───────┐  ┌────┬────┬────────┐
        │Prio│ tc │ queue │  │Prio│ tc │  queue │
        ├────┼────┼───────┤  ├────┼────┼────────┤
        │  0 │  0 │     0 │  │  0 │  0 │      0 │
        │  1 │  0 │     0 │  │  1 │  0 │      0 │
        │  2 │  0 │     0 │  │  2 │  0 │      0 │
        │  3 │  0 │     0 │  │  3 │  0 │      0 │
        │  4 │  1 │     1 │  │  4 │  1 │      1 │
        │  5 │  1 │     1 │  │  5 │  1 │      1 │
        │  6 │  1 │     1 │  │  6 │  1 │      1 │
        │  7 │  1 │     1 │  │  7 │  1 │      1 │
        │  8 │  2 │     2 │  │  8 │  2 │ 2 or 3 │
        │  9 │  2 │     2 │  │  9 │  2 │ 2 or 3 │
        │ 10 │  2 │     2 │  │ 10 │  2 │ 2 or 3 │
        │ 11 │  2 │     2 │  │ 11 │  2 │ 2 or 3 │
        │ 12 │  3 │     3 │  │ 12 │  2 │ 2 or 3 │
        │ 13 │  3 │     3 │  │ 13 │  2 │ 2 or 3 │
        │ 14 │  3 │     3 │  │ 14 │  2 │ 2 or 3 │
        │ 15 │  3 │     3 │  │ 15 │  2 │ 2 or 3 │
        └────┴────┴───────┘  └────┴────┴────────┘
              example1             example2

       Another example of queue mapping is the following.  There are 5 traffic classes, and there are 8 hardware
       queues.

       # tc qdisc add dev eth0 root mqprio               num_tc 5               map 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 4 4 4               queues 1@0 2@1 1@3 1@4 3@5

       The value mapping is the following for this example:

               ┌───────┐
        tc0────┤Queue 0│◄────1@0
               ├───────┤
             ┌─┤Queue 1│◄────2@1
        tc1──┤ ├───────┤
             └─┤Queue 2│
               ├───────┤
        tc2────┤Queue 3│◄────1@3
               ├───────┤
        tc3────┤Queue 4│◄────1@4
               ├───────┤
             ┌─┤Queue 5│◄────3@5
             │ ├───────┤
        tc4──┼─┤Queue 6│
             │ ├───────┤
             └─┤Queue 7│
               └───────┘

AUTHORS

       John Fastabend, <john.r.fastabend@intel.com>