Q-Logic 8100 SERIES 用户手册

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6–Configuring NIC Functionality in the Converged Network Adapter
Configuring the NIC in a Linux Environment
6-40
FE0254601-00 A
 shows the sample output for the eth0 interface, associating the driver 
with the interface and the location of the adapter hardware on the PCI bus.
Figure 6-30. eth0 Interface Sample Output
Interrupt Support 
The QLogic 8100 Series Adapter does not support interrupt moderation.
Offload Support
The QLogic 8100 Series Adapter offloads common protocol processing onto its 
hardware, which reduces host CPU processing, and increases performance. The 
following types of offload are supported:
Checksum offload—The QLogic adapter supports checksum offloads for IP, 
TCP (IPv4, IPv6), UDP (IPv4, IPv6) packets and the IPv4 header. Checksum 
offload for these protocols is enabled by default and can be disabled using 
ethtool as described in 
. Do 
not disable checksum offload unless you are debugging a checksum 
computation problem. Enabling TCP checksum offload significantly reduces 
host CPU processing when using jumbo frames.
Stateless offload—The QLogic 8100 Series Adapter supports large send 
offloading (LSO), which enables the Linux TCP stack to send one large 
block of data to the QLogic adapter, which then segments this large block 
into multiple TCP packets. 
NIC Bonding (Linux)
You can configure multiple QLogic 8100 Series Adapters to appear as a single 
virtual network interface. This type of configuration is called teaming or trunking. 
Because two or more interfaces are combined, teaming provides advantages 
such as increased bandwidth, load balancing, and high link availability. There are 
two types of NIC bonding: switch independent and switch dependent.
NOTE:
Rebooting or reloading the QLogic FCoE driver (qlge), or adding other 
network interface cards may change the value of the network ID.