On 2017-08-21 19:56, Torbjorn Jansson wrote:
On 2017-08-19 07:37, Torbjorn Jansson wrote:
On 2017-08-19 02:34, taii...@gmx.com wrote:
On 08/15/2017 02:12 AM, Torbjorn Jansson wrote:

On 2017-08-15 02:44, taii...@gmx.com wrote:
On 08/14/2017 12:28 AM, Torbjorn Jansson wrote:

yes i noticed that part was missing, but the card i have is an I350-T2 and according to: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/network-and-i-o/ethernet-products/000005722.html

the I350-T2 is supposed to have sr-iov support.
i guess it is possible they sent me the wrong type of card or something, i'll double check what is listed on the card itself.
Some OEM's (ex: dell) shut off the SR-IOV ability on their NIC's because reasons. Please provide an lspci -n and lspci -v -v for that device so we can see what OEM it is.

I would return it and have them send you a real one that isn't nerfed, also FYI most NIC's on ebay are counterfeit so be careful what you buy. https://www.servethehome.com/investigating-fake-intel-i350-network-adapters/ (real intel NIC ASIC and SR-IOV but crappy secondary components)


if i look at the back of the card there is a sticker with: I350T2V2

here is the output:
Weird.
I would say you almost definitely got a fake - either way send it back.


yes very strange.
thing is, i bought it from a well known web shop I've been using forever.
i have opened a support ticket with them about this, hopefully i can return it.

but then question is, how do i find a network card with sr-iov that works?
clearly specs on web shops can't always be trusted.

also strange is that this page:
http://ark.intel.com/products/84804/Intel-Ethernet-Server-Adapter-I350-T2V2
clearly lists sr-iov and this is the model i got.


i did a bit more searching and checking.
found this pdf:
https://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/datasheets/ethernet-controller-i350-datasheet.pdf
section 6.2.25 looks interesting specifically the IOV Enable bit.

i used ethtool to dump the eeprom to file and a hex editor to check the contents and this bit is set to a zero indicating IOV is not exposed.

but i'm definitely no expert on these things so i might be wrong too.
but i wonder if there is a way to flip this bit and see what happens.


i fixed it :)
i figured out how to use ethtool to flip the bit, rebooted and:
-------
03:00.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation I350 Gigabit Network Connection (rev 01)
        Subsystem: Intel Corporation Ethernet Server Adapter I350-T2
        Physical Slot: 6-1
        Flags: bus master, fast devsel, latency 0, IRQ 61, NUMA node 0
        Memory at fad00000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=1M]
        Memory at fae04000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=16K]
        Capabilities: [40] Power Management version 3
        Capabilities: [50] MSI: Enable- Count=1/1 Maskable+ 64bit+
        Capabilities: [70] MSI-X: Enable+ Count=10 Masked-
        Capabilities: [a0] Express Endpoint, MSI 00
        Capabilities: [100] Advanced Error Reporting
        Capabilities: [140] Device Serial Number a0-36-9f-ff-ff-ed-43-b0
        Capabilities: [150] Alternative Routing-ID Interpretation (ARI)
        Capabilities: [160] Single Root I/O Virtualization (SR-IOV)
        Capabilities: [1a0] Transaction Processing Hints
        Capabilities: [1c0] Latency Tolerance Reporting
        Capabilities: [1d0] Access Control Services
        Kernel driver in use: igb
        Kernel modules: igb
-------
as you can see above sr-iov is now listed in lspci, needed sriov entries is now listed under /sys and i can enable the virtual cards. had to blacklist igbvf and libvirt kept complaining until i added the virtual cards to vfio too.

so now i finally got it all working and have a vm with a virtual card.

but i think it is really stupid of the manufacture(s) (intel?) to disable sr-iov in the eeprom and not provide any proper tool or documentation on how to enable it.

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