| Hyper-V network driver |
| ====================== |
| |
| Compatibility |
| ============= |
| |
| This driver is compatible with Windows Server 2012 R2, 2016 and |
| Windows 10. |
| |
| Features |
| ======== |
| |
| Checksum offload |
| ---------------- |
| The netvsc driver supports checksum offload as long as the |
| Hyper-V host version does. Windows Server 2016 and Azure |
| support checksum offload for TCP and UDP for both IPv4 and |
| IPv6. Windows Server 2012 only supports checksum offload for TCP. |
| |
| Receive Side Scaling |
| -------------------- |
| Hyper-V supports receive side scaling. For TCP & UDP, packets can |
| be distributed among available queues based on IP address and port |
| number. |
| |
| For TCP & UDP, we can switch hash level between L3 and L4 by ethtool |
| command. TCP/UDP over IPv4 and v6 can be set differently. The default |
| hash level is L4. We currently only allow switching TX hash level |
| from within the guests. |
| |
| On Azure, fragmented UDP packets have high loss rate with L4 |
| hashing. Using L3 hashing is recommended in this case. |
| |
| For example, for UDP over IPv4 on eth0: |
| To include UDP port numbers in hashing: |
| ethtool -N eth0 rx-flow-hash udp4 sdfn |
| To exclude UDP port numbers in hashing: |
| ethtool -N eth0 rx-flow-hash udp4 sd |
| To show UDP hash level: |
| ethtool -n eth0 rx-flow-hash udp4 |
| |
| Generic Receive Offload, aka GRO |
| -------------------------------- |
| The driver supports GRO and it is enabled by default. GRO coalesces |
| like packets and significantly reduces CPU usage under heavy Rx |
| load. |
| |
| SR-IOV support |
| -------------- |
| Hyper-V supports SR-IOV as a hardware acceleration option. If SR-IOV |
| is enabled in both the vSwitch and the guest configuration, then the |
| Virtual Function (VF) device is passed to the guest as a PCI |
| device. In this case, both a synthetic (netvsc) and VF device are |
| visible in the guest OS and both NIC's have the same MAC address. |
| |
| The VF is enslaved by netvsc device. The netvsc driver will transparently |
| switch the data path to the VF when it is available and up. |
| Network state (addresses, firewall, etc) should be applied only to the |
| netvsc device; the slave device should not be accessed directly in |
| most cases. The exceptions are if some special queue discipline or |
| flow direction is desired, these should be applied directly to the |
| VF slave device. |
| |
| Receive Buffer |
| -------------- |
| Packets are received into a receive area which is created when device |
| is probed. The receive area is broken into MTU sized chunks and each may |
| contain one or more packets. The number of receive sections may be changed |
| via ethtool Rx ring parameters. |
| |
| There is a similar send buffer which is used to aggregate packets for sending. |
| The send area is broken into chunks of 6144 bytes, each of section may |
| contain one or more packets. The send buffer is an optimization, the driver |
| will use slower method to handle very large packets or if the send buffer |
| area is exhausted. |