Cherry pick of #10072
- Why I did it
Removing DPB breakout modes that require adjacent ports to be disabled as that is not supported by the current DPB infrastructure.
Correspondingly had to remove the hwsku.json file from any SKUs which utilized these removed modes such that the system will fall back to ports_config.ini and DPB will not be supported for those SKUs.
- How I did it
Modified the platform.json files of Mellanox devices.
- How to verify it
Execute show int break [Ethernet] on the affected platforms and ensure there are no modes present that would require an adjacent port to be disabled to function.
This is to backport community PR #8768 to 202106 branch
Why I did it
Support zero buffer profiles
Add buffer profiles and pool definition for zero buffer profiles
Support applying zero profiles on INACTIVE PORTS
Enable dynamic buffer manager to load zero pools and profiles from a JSON file
Signed-off-by: Stephen Sun stephens@nvidia.com
How I did it
Add buffer profiles and pool definition for zero buffer profiles
If the buffer model is static:
- Apply normal buffer profiles to admin-up ports
- Apply zero buffer profiles to admin-down ports
If the buffer model is dynamic:
- Apply normal buffer profiles to all ports
- buffer manager will take care when a port is shut down
- Update buffers_config.j2 to support INACTIVE PORTS by extending the existing macros to generate the various buffer objects, including PGs, queues, ingress/egress profile lists
Originally, all the macros to generate the above buffer objects took active ports only as an argument
Now that buffer items need to be generated on inactive ports as well, an extra argument representing the inactive ports need to be added
To be backward compatible, a new series of macros are introduced to take both active and inactive ports as arguments
The original version (with active ports only) will be checked first. If it is not defined, then the extended version will be called
Only vendors who support zero profiles need to change their buffer templates
Enable buffer manager to load zero pools and profiles from a JSON file:
The JSON file is provided on a per-platform basis
It is copied from platform/<vendor> folder to /usr/share/sonic/temlates folder in compiling time and rendered when the swss container is being created.
To make code clean and reduce redundant code, extract common macros from buffer_defaults_t{0,1}.j2 of all SKUs to two common files:
One in Mellanox-SN2700-D48C8 for single ingress pool mode
The other in ACS-MSN2700 for double ingress pool mode
Those files of all other SKUs will be symbol link to the above files
Update sonic-cfggen test accordingly:
- Adjust example output file of JSON template for unit test
- Add unit test in for Mellanox's new buffer templates.
How to verify it
Regression test.
Unit test in sonic-cfggen
Run regression test and manually test.
- Why I did it
To create SDK dump on Mellanox devices when SDK event has occurred.
- How I did it
Set the SKUs keys needed to initialize the feature in SAI.
- How to verify it
Simulate SDK event and check that dump is created in the expected path.
- Why I did it
Support shared headroom pool
Signed-off-by: Stephen Sun stephens@nvidia.com
- How I did it
Port configurations for SKUs based on 2700/3800 platform from 201911
For SN3800 platform:
C64: 32 100G down links and 32 100G up links.
D112C8: 112 50G down links and 8 100G up links.
D24C52: 24 50G down links, 20 100G down links, and 32 100G up links.
D28C50: 28 50G down links, 18 100G down links, and 32 100G up links.
For SN2700 platform:
D48C8: 48 50G down links and 8 100G up links
C32: 16 100G downlinks and 16 100G uplinks
Add configuration for Mellanox-SN4600C-D112C8
112 50G down links and 8 100G up links.
- How to verify it
Run regression test.
- Why I did it
platform.json and hwsku.json files are required for a feature called Dynamic Port Breakout
- How I did it
Created capability files according to platform specification SN3800
- How to verify it
Full qualification requires bugs fixes reported under sonic-buildimage
Signed-off-by: Vadym Hlushko <vadymh@nvidia.com>
**- Why I did it**
To support dynamic buffer calculation.
This PR also depends on the following PRs for sub modules
- [sonic-swss: [buffermgr/bufferorch] Support dynamic buffer calculation #1338](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-swss/pull/1338)
- [sonic-swss-common: Dynamic buffer calculation #361](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-swss-common/pull/361)
- [sonic-utilities: Support dynamic buffer calculation #973](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-utilities/pull/973)
**- How I did it**
1. Introduce field `buffer_model` in `DEVICE_METADATA|localhost` to represent which buffer model is running in the system currently:
- `dynamic` for the dynamic buffer calculation model
- `traditional` for the traditional model in which the `pg_profile_lookup.ini` is used
2. Add the tables required for the feature:
- ASIC_TABLE in platform/\<vendor\>/asic_table.j2
- PERIPHERAL_TABLE in platform/\<vendor\>/peripheral_table.j2
- PORT_PERIPHERAL_TABLE on a per-platform basis in device/\<vendor\>/\<platform\>/port_peripheral_config.j2 for each platform with gearbox installed.
- DEFAULT_LOSSLESS_BUFFER_PARAMETER and LOSSLESS_TRAFFIC_PATTERN in files/build_templates/buffers_config.j2
- Add lossless PGs (3-4) for each port in files/build_templates/buffers_config.j2
3. Copy the newly introduced j2 files into the image and rendering them when the system starts
4. Update the CLI options for buffermgrd so that it can start with dynamic mode
5. Fetches the ASIC vendor name in orchagent:
- fetch the vendor name when creates the docker and pass it as a docker environment variable
- `buffermgrd` can use this passed-in variable
6. Clear buffer related tables from STATE_DB when swss docker starts
7. Update the src/sonic-config-engine/tests/sample_output/buffers-dell6100.json according to the buffer_config.j2
8. Remove buffer pool sizes for ingress pools and egress_lossy_pool
Update the buffer settings for dynamic buffer calculation
C64: 32 100G down links and 32 100G up links.
D112C8: 112 50G down links and 8 100G up links.
D24C52: 24 50G down links, 20 100G down links, and 32 100G up links.
D28C50: 28 50G down links, 18 100G down links, and 32 100G up links.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Sun <stephens@nvidia.com>
Calculate pool size in t1 as 24 * downlink port + 8 * uplink port
- Take both port and peer MTU into account when calculating headroom
- Worst case factor is decreased to 50%
- Mellanox-SN2700-C28D8 t0, assume 48 * 50G/5m + 8 * 100G/40m ports
- Mellanox-SN2700 (C32)
- t0: 16 * 100G/5m + 16 * 100G/40m
- t1: 16 * 100G/40m + 16 * 100G/300m
Signed-off-by: Stephen Sun <stephens@mellanox.com>
Co-authored-by: Stephen Sun <stephens@mellanox.com>
* Change port index in port_config.ini to 1-based
* Add default port index to port_config.ini, change platform plugins to accept 1-based port index
* fix port index in sfp_event.py