On 04/09/2018 03:36 PM, Kevin Traynor wrote:
> On 04/06/2018 04:51 PM, Ilya Maximets wrote:
DPDK mempools are freed when they are no longer needed.
This can happen when a port is removed or a port's mtu is reconfigured so
that a new mempool is used.
It is possible that an m
On 04/09/2018 03:36 PM, Kevin Traynor wrote:
> On 04/06/2018 04:51 PM, Ilya Maximets wrote:
DPDK mempools are freed when they are no longer needed.
This can happen when a port is removed or a port's mtu is reconfigured so
that a new mempool is used.
It is possible that an m
On 04/06/2018 04:51 PM, Ilya Maximets wrote:
>>> DPDK mempools are freed when they are no longer needed.
>>> This can happen when a port is removed or a port's mtu is reconfigured so
>>> that a new mempool is used.
>>>
>>> It is possible that an mbuf is attempted to be returned to a freed mempool
>
>> DPDK mempools are freed when they are no longer needed.
>> This can happen when a port is removed or a port's mtu is reconfigured so
>> that a new mempool is used.
>>
>> It is possible that an mbuf is attempted to be returned to a freed mempool
>> from NIC Tx queues and this can lead to a segfa
> DPDK mempools are freed when they are no longer needed.
> This can happen when a port is removed or a port's mtu is reconfigured so
> that a new mempool is used.
>
> It is possible that an mbuf is attempted to be returned to a freed mempool
> from NIC Tx queues and this can lead to a segfault.
>
DPDK mempools are freed when they are no longer needed.
This can happen when a port is removed or a port's mtu
is reconfigured so that a new mempool is used.
It is possible that an mbuf is attempted to be returned
to a freed mempool from NIC Tx queues and this can lead
to a segfault.
In order to