On 8/31/2017 10:08 AM, Alejandro Lucero wrote: > > > On Mon, Aug 28, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Ferruh Yigit <ferruh.yi...@intel.com > <mailto:ferruh.yi...@intel.com>> wrote: > > On 8/24/2017 5:20 PM, Alejandro Lucero wrote: > > A NFP PF PCI devices can have PCI ID 4000 or 6000. > > > > Signed-off-by: Alejandro Lucero <alejandro.luc...@netronome.com > <mailto:alejandro.luc...@netronome.com>> > > <...> > > > @@ -2682,6 +2682,10 @@ static int nfp_pf_pci_probe(struct > rte_pci_driver *pci_drv __rte_unused, > > static const struct rte_pci_id pci_id_nfp_pf_net_map[] = { > > { > > RTE_PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_NETRONOME, > > + PCI_DEVICE_ID_NFP4000_PF_NIC) > > I have seen nfp documentation updated with this new device, and I > believe it also worth updating release notes to mention new device > support (doc/guides/rel_notes/release_17_11.rst) > > > Yes, I agree. I should add this as well. > > > Also supported nics web page (http://dpdk.org/doc/nics), needs updating > (http://dpdk.org/browse/tools/dpdk-web/ > <http://dpdk.org/browse/tools/dpdk-web/>) > > > Not sure about this one. I could not find any file in the repo for > changing this. How should I manage it?
Please check [1], currently it lists NFP-6xxx only. [1] http://dpdk.org/browse/tools/dpdk-web/tree/doc/nics.html#n93 > > > > + }, > > + { > > + RTE_PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_NETRONOME, > > PCI_DEVICE_ID_NFP6000_PF_NIC) > <...> > >