| SK98LIN(4) | Linux Programmer's Manual | SK98LIN(4) |
NAME¶
sk98lin - Marvell/SysKonnect Gigabit Ethernet driver v6.21SYNOPSIS¶
insmod sk98lin.o [Speed_A=i,j,...] [Speed_B=i,j,...] [AutoNeg_A=i,j,...] [AutoNeg_B=i,j,...] [DupCap_A=i,j,...] [DupCap_B=i,j,...] [FlowCtrl_A=i,j,...] [FlowCtrl_B=i,j,...] [Role_A=i,j,...] [Role_B= i,j,...] [ConType=i,j,...] [Moderation=i,j,...] [IntsPerSec=i,j,...] [PrefPort=i,j,...] [RlmtMode=i,j,...]DESCRIPTION¶
Note: This obsolete driver was removed from the kernel in version 2.6.26.insmod sk98lin.o AutoNeg_A=On,Off
ifconfig eth0 10.1.1.1
ifconfig eth0 mtu 9000
ifconfig eth0 10.1.1.1 mtu 9000
ifconfig eth0 mtu 1500
Parameters¶
- Speed_A=i,j,...
- This parameter is used to set the speed capabilities of port A of an adapter card. It is only valid for Yukon copper adapters. Possible values are: 10, 100, 1000 or Auto whereas Auto is the default. Usually, the speed is negotiated between the two ports during link establishment. If this fails, a port can be forced to a specific setting with this parameter.
- Speed_B=i,j,...
- This parameter is used to set the speed capabilities of port B of an adapter card. It is only valid for Yukon copper adapters. Possible values are: 10, 100, 1000 or Auto whereas Auto is the default. Usually, the speed is negotiated between the two ports during link establishment. If this fails, a port can be forced to a specific setting with this parameter.
- AutoNeg_A=i,j,...
- Enables or disables the use of autonegotiation of port A of an adapter card. Possible values are: On, Off or Sense whereas On is the default. The Sense mode automatically detects whether the link partner supports auto-negotiation or not.
- AutoNeg_B=i,j,...
- Enables or disables the use of autonegotiation of port B of an adapter card. Possible values are: On, Off or Sense whereas On is the default. The Sense mode automatically detects whether the link partner supports auto-negotiation or not.
- DupCap_A=i,j,...
- This parameter indicates the duplex mode to be used for port A of an adapter card. Possible values are: Half, Full or Both whereas Both is the default. This parameter is only relevant if AutoNeg_A of port A is not set to Sense. If AutoNeg_A is set to On, all three values of DupCap_A ( Half, Full or Both) might be stated. If AutoNeg_A is set to Off, only DupCap_A values Full and Half are allowed. This DupCap_A parameter is useful if your link partner does not support all possible duplex combinations.
- DupCap_B=i,j,...
- This parameter indicates the duplex mode to be used for port B of an adapter card. Possible values are: Half, Full or Both whereas Both is the default. This parameter is only relevant if AutoNeg_B of port B is not set to Sense. If AutoNeg_B is set to On, all three values of DupCap_B ( Half, Full or Both) might be stated. If AutoNeg_B is set to Off, only DupCap_B values Full and Half are allowed. This DupCap_B parameter is useful if your link partner does not support all possible duplex combinations.
- FlowCtrl_A=i,j,...
- This parameter can be used to set the flow control
capabilities the port reports during auto-negotiation. Possible values
are: Sym, SymOrRem, LocSend or None whereas
SymOrRem is the default. The different modes have the following
meaning:
Sym = Symmetric
both link partners are allowed to send PAUSE framesSymOrRem = SymmetricOrRemote
both or only remote partner are allowed to send PAUSE framesLocSend = LocalSend
only local link partner is allowed to send PAUSE framesNone = None
no link partner is allowed to send PAUSE framesNote that this parameter is ignored if AutoNeg_A is set to Off.
- FlowCtrl_B=i,j,...
- This parameter can be used to set the flow control
capabilities the port reports during auto-negotiation. Possible values
are: Sym, SymOrRem, LocSend or None whereas
SymOrRem is the default. The different modes have the following
meaning:
Sym = Symmetric
both link partners are allowed to send PAUSE framesSymOrRem = SymmetricOrRemote
both or only remote partner are allowed to send PAUSE framesLocSend = LocalSend
only local link partner is allowed to send PAUSE framesNone = None
no link partner is allowed to send PAUSE framesNote that this parameter is ignored if AutoNeg_B is set to Off.
- Role_A=i,j,...
- This parameter is only valid for 1000Base-T adapter cards. For two 1000Base-T ports to communicate, one must take the role of the master (providing timing information), while the other must be the slave. Possible values are: Auto, Master or Slave whereas Auto is the default. Usually, the role of a port is negotiated between two ports during link establishment, but if that fails the port A of an adapter card can be forced to a specific setting with this parameter.
- Role_B=i,j,...
- This parameter is only valid for 1000Base-T adapter cards. For two 1000Base-T ports to communicate, one must take the role of the master (providing timing information), while the other must be the slave. Possible values are: Auto, Master or Slave whereas Auto is the default. Usually, the role of a port is negotiated between two ports during link establishment, but if that fails the port B of an adapter card can be forced to a specific setting with this parameter.
- ConType=i,j,...
- This parameter is a combination of all five per-port
parameters within one single parameter. This simplifies the configuration
of both ports of an adapter card. The different values of this variable
reflect the most meaningful combinations of port parameters. Possible
values and their corresponding combination of per-port parameters:
ConType | DupCap AutoNeg FlowCtrl Role Speed --------+------------------------------------------- Auto | Both On SymOrRem Auto Auto
Stating any other port parameter together with this ConType parameter will result in a merged configuration of those settings. This is due to the fact, that the per-port parameters (e.g., Speed_A) have a higher priority than the combined variable ConType.100FD | Full Off None Auto 100100HD | Half Off None Auto 10010FD | Full Off None Auto 1010HD | Half Off None Auto 10
- Moderation=i,j,...
- Interrupt moderation is employed to limit the maximum
number of interrupts the driver has to serve. That is, one or more
interrupts (which indicate any transmit or receive packet to be processed)
are queued until the driver processes them. When queued interrupts are to
be served, is determined by the IntsPerSec parameter, which is
explained later below. Possible moderation modes are: None,
Static or Dynamic whereas None is the default. The
different modes have the following meaning:
None No interrupt moderation is applied on the adapter card. Therefore, each transmit or receive interrupt is served immediately as soon as it appears on the interrupt line of the adapter card.Static Interrupt moderation is applied on the adapter card. All transmit and receive interrupts are queued until a complete moderation interval ends. If such a moderation interval ends, all queued interrupts are processed in one big bunch without any delay. The term Static reflects the fact, that interrupt moderation is always enabled, regardless how much network load is currently passing via a particular interface. In addition, the duration of the moderation interval has a fixed length that never changes while the driver is operational.Dynamic Interrupt moderation might be applied on the adapter card, depending on the load of the system. If the driver detects that the system load is too high, the driver tries to shield the system against too much network load by enabling interrupt moderation. If—at a later time—the CPU utilization decreases again (or if the network load is negligible) the interrupt moderation will automatically be disabled.Interrupt moderation should be used when the driver has to handle one or more interfaces with a high network load, which—as a consequence—leads also to a high CPU utilization. When moderation is applied in such high network load situations, CPU load might be reduced by 20-30% on slow computers.Note that the drawback of using interrupt moderation is an increase of the round-trip-time (RTT), due to the queuing and serving of interrupts at dedicated moderation times.
- IntsPerSec=i,j,...
- This parameter determines the length of any interrupt
moderation interval. Assuming that static interrupt moderation is to be
used, an IntsPerSec parameter value of 2000 will lead to an
interrupt moderation interval of 500 microseconds. Possible values for
this parameter are in the range of 30...40000 (interrupts per second). The
default value is 2000.
This parameter is only used, if either static or dynamic interrupt moderation is enabled on a network adapter card. This parameter is ignored if no moderation is applied.Note that the duration of the moderation interval is to be chosen with care. At first glance, selecting a very long duration (e.g., only 100 interrupts per second) seems to be meaningful, but the increase of packet-processing delay is tremendous. On the other hand, selecting a very short moderation time might compensate the use of any moderation being applied.
- PrefPort=i,j,...
- This parameter is used to force the preferred port to A or B (on dual-port network adapters). The preferred port is the one that is used if both ports A and B are detected as fully functional. Possible values are: A or B whereas A is the default.
- RlmtMode=i,j,...
- RLMT monitors the status of the port. If the link of the
active port fails, RLMT switches immediately to the standby link. The
virtual link is maintained as long as at least one "physical"
link is up. This parameters states how RLMT should monitor both ports.
Possible values are: CheckLinkState, CheckLocalPort,
CheckSeg or DualNet whereas CheckLinkState is the
default. The different modes have the following meaning:
CheckLinkState Check link state only: RLMT uses the link state reported by the adapter hardware for each individual port to determine whether a port can be used for all network traffic or not.CheckLocalPort In this mode, RLMT monitors the network path between the two ports of an adapter by regularly exchanging packets between them. This mode requires a network configuration in which the two ports are able to "see" each other (i.e., there must not be any router between the ports).CheckSeg Check local port and segmentation: This mode supports the same functions as the CheckLocalPort mode and additionally checks network segmentation between the ports. Therefore, this mode is only to be used if Gigabit Ethernet switches are installed on the network that have been configured to use the Spanning Tree protocol.DualNet In this mode, ports A and B are used as separate devices. If you have a dual port adapter, port A will be configured as eth[x] and port B as eth[x+1]. Both ports can be used independently with distinct IP addresses. The preferred port setting is not used. RLMT is turned off.Note that RLMT modes CheckLocalPort and CheckLinkState are designed to operate in configurations where a network path between the ports on one adapter exists. Moreover, they are not designed to work where adapters are connected back-to-back.
FILES¶
- /proc/net/sk98lin/eth[x]
-
The statistics file of a particular interface of an adapter card. It contains generic information about the adapter card plus a detailed summary of all transmit and receive counters.
- /usr/src/linux/Documentation/networking/sk98lin.txt
-
This is the README file of the sk98lin driver. It contains a detailed installation HOWTO and describes all parameters of the driver. It denotes also common problems and provides the solution to them.
BUGS¶
Report any bugs to linux@syskonnect.deSEE ALSO¶
ifconfig(8), insmod(8), modprobe(8)COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.44 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.| 2012-08-05 | Linux |