> On Jan 27, 2021, at 1:02 PM, Ferruh Yigit <ferruh.yi...@intel.com> wrote:
>
> On 1/18/2021 8:34 PM, Andrew Boyer wrote:
>> This patch series fixes some transmit issues, adds (better) support for
>> big-endian systems, and improves performance by stripping down some
>> structures and inlining a few functions.
>> The endianness code has been reviewed internally but not really tested -
>> I do not have access to a big-endian system to test on.
>> Signed-off-by: Andrew Boyer <abo...@pensando.io>
>> Andrew Boyer (13):
>> net/ionic: strip out unneeded interrupt code
>> net/ionic: observe endianness in firmware commands
>> net/ionic: observe endianness in Rx filter code
>> net/ionic: add an array-size macro
>> net/ionic: query firmware for supported queue versions
>> net/ionic: clean up Tx queue version support
>> net/ionic: inline queue flush function
>> net/ionic: inline queue space function
>> net/ionic: observe endiannness in ioread/iowrite
>> net/ionic: fix to allow separate L3 and L4 csum offload
>> net/ionic: convert per-queue offloads into queue flags
>> net/ionic: fix up function attribute tags
>> net/ionic: fix address handling in transmit code
>
> I can remove the 4/13 & 6/13 without conflict, and seems there is no
> dependency to them and new version of them can be sent separately, if you
> confirm I can proceed with rest of the set now.
Yes please. Do 4 & 6 become v1 patches that stand alone? Or v2 patches that
reply to their v1 versions?
-Andrew