The Linux Kernel
5.14.0
  • The Linux kernel user’s and administrator’s guide
  • Kernel Build System
  • The Linux kernel firmware guide
  • Open Firmware and Devicetree
  • The Linux kernel user-space API guide
  • Working with the kernel development community
  • Development tools for the kernel
  • How to write kernel documentation
  • Kernel Hacking Guides
  • Linux Tracing Technologies
  • Kernel Maintainer Handbook
  • fault-injection
  • Kernel Livepatching
  • Rust
  • The Linux driver implementer’s API guide
  • Core API Documentation
  • locking
  • Accounting
  • Block
  • cdrom
  • Linux CPUFreq - CPU frequency and voltage scaling code in the Linux(TM) kernel
  • Integrated Drive Electronics (IDE)
  • Frame Buffer
  • fpga
  • Human Interface Devices (HID)
  • I2C/SMBus Subsystem
  • Industrial I/O
  • ISDN
  • InfiniBand
  • LEDs
  • NetLabel
  • Linux Networking Documentation
    • netdev FAQ
    • AF_XDP
    • Bare UDP Tunnelling Module Documentation
    • batman-adv
    • SocketCAN - Controller Area Network
    • The UCAN Protocol
    • Hardware Device Drivers
    • Distributed Switch Architecture
    • Linux Devlink Documentation
    • CAIF
    • Netlink interface for ethtool
    • IEEE 802.15.4 Developer’s Guide
    • J1939 Documentation
    • Linux Networking and Network Devices APIs
    • MSG_ZEROCOPY
    • FAILOVER
    • Net DIM - Generic Network Dynamic Interrupt Moderation
    • NET_FAILOVER
    • Page Pool API
    • PHY Abstraction Layer
    • phylink
    • IP-Aliasing
    • Ethernet Bridging
    • SNMP counter
    • Checksum Offloads
    • Segmentation Offloads
    • Scaling in the Linux Networking Stack
    • Kernel TLS
    • Kernel TLS offload
    • In-Kernel TLS Handshake
    • Linux NFC subsystem
    • Netdev private dataroom for 6lowpan interfaces
    • 6pack Protocol
    • ARCnet Hardware
    • ARCnet
    • ATM
    • AX.25
    • Linux Ethernet Bonding Driver HOWTO
    • cdc_mbim - Driver for CDC MBIM Mobile Broadband modems
    • DCCP protocol
    • DCTCP (DataCenter TCP)
    • Linux DECnet Networking Layer Information
    • DNS Resolver Module
    • Softnet Driver Issues
    • EQL Driver: Serial IP Load Balancing HOWTO
    • LC-trie implementation notes
    • Linux Socket Filtering aka Berkeley Packet Filter (BPF)
    • Generic HDLC layer
    • Generic Netlink
    • Netlink Family Specifications
      • Family devlink netlink specification
      • Family dpll netlink specification
      • Family ethtool netlink specification
      • Family fou netlink specification
      • Family handshake netlink specification
      • Family mptcp_pm netlink specification
      • Family net-shaper netlink specification
        • Summary
        • Operations
        • Definitions
        • Attribute sets
      • Family netdev netlink specification
      • Family nfsd netlink specification
      • Family nftables netlink specification
      • Family nlctrl netlink specification
      • Family ovs_datapath netlink specification
      • Family ovs_flow netlink specification
      • Family ovs_vport netlink specification
      • Family rt-addr netlink specification
      • Family rt-link netlink specification
      • Family rt-route netlink specification
      • Family tc netlink specification
      • Family tcp_metrics netlink specification
    • Generic networking statistics for netlink users
    • The Linux kernel GTP tunneling module
    • Identifier Locator Addressing (ILA)
    • AppleTalk-IP Decapsulation and AppleTalk-IP Encapsulation
    • IP dynamic address hack-port v0.03
    • IPsec
    • IP Sysctl
    • IPv6
    • IPVLAN Driver HOWTO
    • IPvs-sysctl
    • Kernel Connection Multiplexor
    • L2TP
    • The Linux LAPB Module Interface
    • How to use packet injection with mac80211
    • MPLS Sysfs variables
    • MPTCP Sysfs variables
    • HOWTO for multiqueue network device support
    • Multi-PF Netdev
    • Common Networking Struct Cachelines
    • Netconsole
    • Netdev features mess and how to get out from it alive
    • Network Devices, the Kernel, and You!
    • Netfilter Sysfs variables
    • NETIF Msg Level
    • Resilient Next-hop Groups
    • Netfilter Conntrack Sysfs variables
    • Netfilter’s flowtable infrastructure
    • Open vSwitch datapath developer documentation
    • Operational States
    • Packet MMAP
    • Linux Phonet protocol family
    • PHY link topology
    • HOWTO for the linux packet generator
    • PLIP: The Parallel Line Internet Protocol Device
    • PPP Generic Driver and Channel Interface
    • The proc/net/tcp and proc/net/tcp6 variables
    • Power Sourcing Equipment (PSE) Documentation
    • How to use radiotap headers
    • Overview
    • RDS Architecture
    • Socket Interface
    • RDMA for RDS
    • Congestion Notifications
    • RDS Protocol
    • RDS Transport Layer
    • RDS Kernel Structures
    • Connection management
    • The send path
    • The recv path
    • Multipath RDS (mprds)
    • Linux wireless regulatory documentation
    • Network Function Representors
    • RxRPC Network Protocol
    • SOCKET OPTIONS
    • SECURITY
    • EXAMPLE CLIENT USAGE
    • Linux Kernel SCTP
    • LSM/SeLinux secid
    • Seg6 Sysfs variables
    • Interface statistics
    • Stream Parser (strparser)
    • Ethernet switch device driver model (switchdev)
    • Sysfs tagging
    • TC Actions - Environmental Rules
    • TC queue based filtering
    • Thin-streams and TCP
    • Team
    • Timestamping
    • Linux Kernel TIPC
    • Transparent proxy support
    • Universal TUN/TAP device driver
    • The UDP-Lite protocol (RFC 3828)
    • Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF)
    • Virtual eXtensible Local Area Networking documentation
    • Packet Layer to Device Driver
    • Device Driver to Packet Layer
    • Requirements for the device driver
    • Linux X.25 Project
    • XFRM device - offloading the IPsec computations
    • XFRM proc - /proc/net/xfrm_* files
    • XFRM
    • XFRM Syscall
    • XDP RX Metadata
    • AF_XDP TX Metadata
  • pcmcia
  • Power Management
  • TCM Virtual Device
  • timers
  • Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)
  • 1-Wire Subsystem
  • Linux Watchdog Support
  • Linux Virtualization Support
  • The Linux Input Documentation
  • Linux Hardware Monitoring
  • Linux GPU Driver Developer’s Guide
  • Security Documentation
  • Sound Subsystem Documentation
  • Linux Kernel Crypto API
  • Filesystems in the Linux kernel
  • Linux Memory Management Documentation
  • BPF Documentation
  • USB support
  • Linux PCI Bus Subsystem
  • Linux SCSI Subsystem
  • Assorted Miscellaneous Devices Documentation
  • Linux Scheduler
  • MHI
  • TTY
  • Assembler Annotations
  • CPU Architectures
  • Kernel tools
  • Unsorted Documentation
  • Atomic Types
  • Atomic bitops
  • Memory Barriers
  • General notification mechanism
  • Translations
The Linux Kernel
  • »
  • Linux Networking Documentation »
  • Netlink Family Specifications »
  • Family net-shaper netlink specification
  • View page source

Family net-shaper netlink specification¶

Contents

  • Family net-shaper netlink specification

    • Summary

    • Operations

      • get

      • set

      • delete

      • group

      • cap-get

    • Definitions

      • scope

      • metric

    • Attribute sets

      • net-shaper

      • handle

      • leaf-info

      • caps

Summary¶

Networking HW rate limiting configuration.

This API allows configuring HW shapers available on the network devices at different levels (queues, network device) and allows arbitrary manipulation of the scheduling tree of the involved shapers.

Each @shaper is identified within the given device, by a @handle, comprising both a @scope and an @id.

Depending on the @scope value, the shapers are attached to specific HW objects (queues, devices) or, for @node scope, represent a scheduling group, that can be placed in an arbitrary location of the scheduling tree.

Shapers can be created with two different operations: the @set operation, to create and update a single “attached” shaper, and the @group operation, to create and update a scheduling group. Only the @group operation can create @node scope shapers.

Existing shapers can be deleted/reset via the @delete operation.

The user can query the running configuration via the @get operation.

Different devices can provide different feature sets, e.g. with no support for complex scheduling hierarchy, or for some shaping parameters. The user can introspect the HW capabilities via the @cap-get operation.

Operations¶

get¶

Get information about a shaper for a given device.

attribute-set

net-shaper

do
pre

net-shaper-nl-pre-doit

post

net-shaper-nl-post-doit

request
attributes

[ifindex, handle]

reply
attributes

[ifindex, parent, handle, metric, bw-min, bw-max, burst, priority, weight]

dump
pre

net-shaper-nl-pre-dumpit

post

net-shaper-nl-post-dumpit

request
attributes

[ifindex]

reply
attributes

[ifindex, parent, handle, metric, bw-min, bw-max, burst, priority, weight]

set¶

Create or update the specified shaper. The set operation can’t be used to create a @node scope shaper, use the @group operation instead.

attribute-set

net-shaper

flags

[admin-perm]

do
pre

net-shaper-nl-pre-doit

post

net-shaper-nl-post-doit

request
attributes

[ifindex, handle, metric, bw-min, bw-max, burst, priority, weight]

delete¶

Clear (remove) the specified shaper. When deleting a @node shaper, reattach all the node’s leaves to the deleted node’s parent. If, after the removal, the parent shaper has no more leaves and the parent shaper scope is @node, the parent node is deleted, recursively. When deleting a @queue shaper or a @netdev shaper, the shaper disappears from the hierarchy, but the queue/device can still send traffic: it has an implicit node with infinite bandwidth. The queue’s implicit node feeds an implicit RR node at the root of the hierarchy.

attribute-set

net-shaper

flags

[admin-perm]

do
pre

net-shaper-nl-pre-doit

post

net-shaper-nl-post-doit

request
attributes

[ifindex, handle]

group¶

Create or update a scheduling group, attaching the specified @leaves shapers under the specified node identified by @handle. The @leaves shapers scope must be @queue and the node shaper scope must be either @node or @netdev. When the node shaper has @node scope, if the @handle @id is not specified, a new shaper of such scope is created, otherwise the specified node must already exist. When updating an existing node shaper, the specified @leaves are added to the existing node; such node will also retain any preexisting leave. The @parent handle for a new node shaper defaults to the parent of all the leaves, provided all the leaves share the same parent. Otherwise @parent handle must be specified. The user can optionally provide shaping attributes for the node shaper. The operation is atomic, on failure no change is applied to the device shaping configuration, otherwise the @node shaper full identifier, comprising @binding and @handle, is provided as the reply.

attribute-set

net-shaper

flags

[admin-perm]

do
pre

net-shaper-nl-pre-doit

post

net-shaper-nl-post-doit

request
attributes

[ifindex, parent, handle, metric, bw-min, bw-max, burst, priority, weight, leaves]

reply
attributes

[ifindex, handle]

cap-get¶

Get the shaper capabilities supported by the given device for the specified scope.

attribute-set

caps

do
pre

net-shaper-nl-cap-pre-doit

post

net-shaper-nl-cap-post-doit

request
attributes

[ifindex, scope]

reply
attributes

[ifindex, scope, support-metric-bps, support-metric-pps, support-nesting, support-bw-min, support-bw-max, support-burst, support-priority, support-weight]

dump
pre

net-shaper-nl-cap-pre-dumpit

post

net-shaper-nl-cap-post-dumpit

request
attributes

[ifindex]

reply
attributes

[ifindex, scope, support-metric-bps, support-metric-pps, support-nesting, support-bw-min, support-bw-max, support-burst, support-priority, support-weight]

Definitions¶

scope¶

type

enum

doc

Defines the shaper @id interpretation.

entries
unspec

The scope is not specified.

netdev

The main shaper for the given network device.

queue

The shaper is attached to the given device queue, the @id represents the queue number.

node

The shaper allows grouping of queues or other node shapers; can be nested in either @netdev shapers or other @node shapers, allowing placement in any location of the scheduling tree, except leaves and root.

metric¶

type

enum

doc

Different metric supported by the shaper.

entries
bps

Shaper operates on a bits per second basis.

pps

Shaper operates on a packets per second basis.

Attribute sets¶

net-shaper¶

handle (nest)¶

nested-attributes

handle

doc

Unique identifier for the given shaper inside the owning device.

metric (u32)¶

enum

metric

doc

Metric used by the given shaper for bw-min, bw-max and burst.

bw-min (uint)¶

doc

Guaranteed bandwidth for the given shaper.

bw-max (uint)¶

doc

Maximum bandwidth for the given shaper or 0 when unlimited.

burst (uint)¶

doc

Maximum burst-size for shaping. Should not be interpreted as a quantum.

priority (u32)¶

doc

Scheduling priority for the given shaper. The priority scheduling is applied to sibling shapers.

weight (u32)¶

doc

Relative weight for round robin scheduling of the given shaper. The scheduling is applied to all sibling shapers with the same priority.

ifindex (u32)¶

doc

Interface index owning the specified shaper.

parent (nest)¶

nested-attributes

handle

doc

Identifier for the parent of the affected shaper. Only needed for @group operation.

leaves (nest)¶

multi-attr

True

nested-attributes

leaf-info

doc

Describes a set of leaves shapers for a @group operation.

handle¶

scope (u32)¶

enum

scope

doc

Defines the shaper @id interpretation.

id (u32)¶

doc

Numeric identifier of a shaper. The id semantic depends on the scope. For @queue scope it’s the queue id and for @node scope it’s the node identifier.

leaf-info¶

handle¶

priority¶

weight¶

caps¶

ifindex (u32)¶

doc

Interface index queried for shapers capabilities.

scope (u32)¶

enum

scope

doc

The scope to which the queried capabilities apply.

support-metric-bps (flag)¶

doc

The device accepts ‘bps’ metric for bw-min, bw-max and burst.

support-metric-pps (flag)¶

doc

The device accepts ‘pps’ metric for bw-min, bw-max and burst.

support-nesting (flag)¶

doc

The device supports nesting shaper belonging to this scope below ‘node’ scoped shapers. Only ‘queue’ and ‘node’ scope can have flag ‘support-nesting’.

support-bw-min (flag)¶

doc

The device supports a minimum guaranteed B/W.

support-bw-max (flag)¶

doc

The device supports maximum B/W shaping.

support-burst (flag)¶

doc

The device supports a maximum burst size.

support-priority (flag)¶

doc

The device supports priority scheduling.

support-weight (flag)¶

doc

The device supports weighted round robin scheduling.

Next Previous

© Copyright The kernel development community.

Built with Sphinx using a theme provided by Read the Docs.