Add unbind_nvme.sh script.

This will rmmod nvme on Linux, and use the DPDK nic_uio driver
to unbind nvme devices from the nvme driver on FreeBSD.

"nic_uio" is actually a misnomer - it is not NIC driver specific,
and can safely be used to bind NVMe devices to an effectively
null driver.

Signed-off-by: Jim Harris <james.r.harris@intel.com>
Change-Id: I8b964a070586166d762d79696385b82eeb2e88bd
This commit is contained in:
Jim Harris 2015-09-25 09:12:59 -07:00
parent ae09ffb720
commit ae2c3152c4

25
scripts/unbind_nvme.sh Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,25 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -e
function configure_linux {
lsmod | grep nvme && rmmod nvme
}
function configure_freebsd {
TMP=`mktemp`
AWK_PROG="{if (count > 0) printf \",\"; printf \"%s:%s:%s\",\$2,\$3,\$4; count++}"
echo $AWK_PROG > $TMP
NVME_PCICONF=`pciconf -l | grep class=0x010802`
BDFS=`echo $NVME_PCICONF | awk -F: -f $TMP`
kenv hw.nic_uio.bdfs=$BDFS
kldload `find . -name nic_uio.ko | head -1`
rm $TMP
}
if [ `uname` = Linux ]; then
configure_linux
else
configure_freebsd
fi