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author | Maryam Tahhan <maryam.tahhan@intel.com> | 2016-08-14 12:21:34 +0100 |
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committer | Maryam Tahhan <maryam.tahhan@intel.com> | 2016-08-14 12:46:02 +0100 |
commit | 32a7428ae0c68d02db255e42a921445d2d440ff4 (patch) | |
tree | 07b3948469feac7afe65fbaca9ebff8e397b9830 /docs/userguide | |
parent | 87a527a3a62d486e950dbc7a358a4678c0e18b18 (diff) |
docs: add userguide
Add a userguide that describes the SFQM features.
JIRA: DOCS-106
Change-Id: Icd57e7353bc813ed42fa295dee907b3c67f4fb93
Signed-off-by: Maryam Tahhan <maryam.tahhan@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/userguide')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/userguide/collectd.userguide.rst | 202 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/userguide/dpdk_ka.png | bin | 0 -> 100808 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/userguide/index.rst | 19 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/userguide/keepalive.userguide.rst | 128 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/userguide/monitoring_interfaces.png | bin | 0 -> 94097 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/userguide/stats_and_timestamps.png | bin | 0 -> 52193 bytes |
6 files changed, 349 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/userguide/collectd.userguide.rst b/docs/userguide/collectd.userguide.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..0755fdf5 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/userguide/collectd.userguide.rst @@ -0,0 +1,202 @@ +.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. +.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 +.. (c) OPNFV, Intel Corporation and others. + +collectd plugins description +============================ +The SFQM collectd plugins enable the ability to monitor DPDK interfaces by +exposing stats and the relevant events to higher level telemetry and fault +management applications. The following sections will discuss the SFQM features +in detail. + +Measuring Telco Traffic and Performance KPIs +-------------------------------------------- +This section will discuss the SFQM features that enable Measuring Telco Traffic +and Performance KPIs. + +.. Figure:: stats_and_timestamps.png + + Measuring Telco Traffic and Performance KPIs + +* The very first thing SFQM enabled was a call-back API in DPDK and an + associated application that used the API to demonstrate how to timestamp + packets and measure packet latency in DPDK (the sample app is called + rxtx_callbacks). This was upstreamed to DPDK 2.0 and is represented by + the interfaces 1 and 2 in Figure 1.2. + +* The second thing SFQM implemented in DPDK is the extended NIC statistics API, + which exposes NIC stats including error stats to the DPDK user by reading the + registers on the NIC. This is represented by interface 3 in Figure 1.2. + + * For DPDK 2.1 this API was only implemented for the ixgbe (10Gb) NIC driver, + in association with a sample application that runs as a DPDK secondary + process and retrieves the extended NIC stats. + + * For DPDK 2.2 the API was implemented for igb, i40e and all the Virtual + Functions (VFs) for all drivers. + + * For DPDK 16.07 the API migrated from using string value pairs to using id + value pairs, improving the overall performance of the API. + +Monitoring DPDK interfaces +-------------------------- +With the features SFQM enabled in DPDK to enable measuring Telco traffic and +performance KPIs, we can now retrieve NIC statistics including error stats and +relay them to a DPDK user. The next step is to enable monitoring of the DPDK +interfaces based on the stats that we are retrieving from the NICs, by relaying +the information to a higher level Fault Management entity. To enable this SFQM +has been enabling a number of plugins for collectd. + +collectd +~~~~~~~~ +collectd is a daemon which collects system performance statistics periodically +and provides a variety of mechanisms to publish the collected metrics. It +supports more than 90 different input and output plugins. Input plugins retrieve +metrics and publish them to the collectd deamon, while output plugins publish +the data they receive to an end point. collectd also has infrastructure to +support thresholding and notification. + +collectd statistics and Notifications +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Within collectd notifications and performance data are dispatched in the same +way. There are producer plugins (plugins that create notifications/metrics), +and consumer plugins (plugins that receive notifications/metrics and do +something with them). + +Statistics in collectd consist of a value list. A value list includes: + +* Values, can be one of: + + * Derive: used for values where a change in the value since it's last been + read is of interest. Can be used to calculate and store a rate. + + * Counter: similar to derive values, but take the possibility of a counter + wrap around into consideration. + + * Gauge: used for values that are stored as is. + + * Absolute: used for counters that are reset after reading. + +* Value length: the number of values in the data set. + +* Time: timestamp at which the value was collected. + +* Interval: interval at which to expect a new value. + +* Host: used to identify the host. + +* Plugin: used to identify the plugin. + +* Plugin instance (optional): used to group a set of values together. For e.g. + values belonging to a DPDK interface. + +* Type: unit used to measure a value. In other words used to refer to a data + set. + +* Type instance (optional): used to distinguish between values that have an + identical type. + +* meta data: an opaque data structure that enables the passing of additional + information about a value list. "Meta data in the global cache can be used to + store arbitrary information about an identifier" [7]. + +Host, plugin, plugin instance, type and type instance uniquely identify a +collectd value. + +Values lists are often accompanied by data sets that describe the values in more +detail. Data sets consist of: + +* A type: a name which uniquely identifies a data set. + +* One or more data sources (entries in a data set) which include: + + * The name of the data source. If there is only a single data source this is + set to "value". + + * The type of the data source, one of: counter, gauge, absolute or derive. + + * A min and a max value. + +Types in collectd are defined in types.db. Examples of types in types.db: + +.. code-block:: console + + bitrate value:GAUGE:0:4294967295 + counter value:COUNTER:U:U + if_octets rx:COUNTER:0:4294967295, tx:COUNTER:0:4294967295 + +In the example above if_octets has two data sources: tx and rx. + +Notifications in collectd are generic messages containing: + +* An associated severity, which can be one of OKAY, WARNING, and FAILURE. + +* A time. + +* A Message + +* A host. + +* A plugin. + +* A plugin instance (optional). + +* A type. + +* A types instance (optional). + +* Meta-data. + +collectd plugins +---------------- +SFQM has enabled three collectd plugins to date: + +* `dpdkstat plugin`_: A read plugin that retrieve stats from the DPDK extended + NIC stats API. + +* `ceilometer plugin`_: A write plugin that pushes the retrieved stats to + Ceilometer. It's capable of pushing any stats read through collectd to + Ceilometer, not just the DPDK stats. + +* `hugepages plugin`_: A read plugin that retrieves the number of available + and free hugepages on a platform as well as what is available in terms of + hugepages per socket. + +Other plugins in progress: + +* dpdkevents: A read plugin that retrieves DPDK link status and DPDK + forwarding cores liveliness status (DPDK Keep Alive). + +* Open vSwitch stats Plugin: A read plugin that retrieve flow and interface + stats from OVS. + +* Open vSwitch events Plugin: A read plugin that retrieves events from OVS. + + +Monitoring Interfaces and Openstack Support +------------------------------------------- +.. Figure:: monitoring_interfaces.png + + Monitoring Interfaces and Openstack Support + +The figure above shows the DPDK L2 forwarding application running on a compute +node, sending and receiving traffic. collectd is also running on this compute +node retrieving the stats periodically from DPDK through the dpdkstat plugin +and publishing the retrieved stats to Ceilometer through the ceilometer plugin. + +To see this demo in action please checkout: `SFQM OPNFV Summit demo`_ + +References +---------- +[1] https://collectd.org/wiki/index.php/Naming_schema +[2] https://github.com/collectd/collectd/blob/master/src/daemon/plugin.h +[3] https://collectd.org/wiki/index.php/Value_list_t +[4] https://collectd.org/wiki/index.php/Data_set +[5] https://collectd.org/documentation/manpages/types.db.5.shtml +[6] https://collectd.org/wiki/index.php/Data_source +[7] https://collectd.org/wiki/index.php/Meta_Data_Interface + +.. _SFQM OPNFV Summit demo: https://prezi.com/kjv6o8ixs6se/software-fastpath-service-quality-metrics-demo/ +.. _dpdkstat plugin: https://github.com/maryamtahhan/collectd-with-DPDK/tree/dpdkstat +.. _ceilometer plugin: https://github.com/openstack/collectd-ceilometer-plugin/tree/stable/mitaka +.. _hugepages plugin: https://github.com/maryamtahhan/collectd-with-DPDK/tree/hugepages diff --git a/docs/userguide/dpdk_ka.png b/docs/userguide/dpdk_ka.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000..4a45e10c --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/userguide/dpdk_ka.png diff --git a/docs/userguide/index.rst b/docs/userguide/index.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..994f63c8 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/userguide/index.rst @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. + .. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 + .. (c) <optionally add copywriters name> + +==================== +SFQM user guide +==================== + +.. The feature user guide should provide an OPNFV user with enough information to + .. use the features provided by the feature project in the supported scenarios. + .. This guide should walk a user through the usage of the features once a scenario + .. has been deployed and is active according to the installation guide provided + .. by the installer project. + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 3 + + collectd.userguide.rst + keepalive.userguide.rst diff --git a/docs/userguide/keepalive.userguide.rst b/docs/userguide/keepalive.userguide.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..4b6e990d --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/userguide/keepalive.userguide.rst @@ -0,0 +1,128 @@ +.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. +.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 +.. (c) OPNFV, Intel Corporation and others. + +DPDK Keep Alive description +=========================== +SFQM aims to enable fault detection within DPDK, the very first feature to +meet this goal is the DPDK Keep Alive Sample app that is part of DPDK 2.2. + +DPDK Keep Alive or KA is a sample application that acts as a heartbeat/watchdog +for DPDK packet processing cores, to detect application thread failure. The +application supports the detection of ‘failed’ DPDK cores and notification to a +HA/SA middleware. The purpose is to detect Packet Processing Core fails (e.g. +infinite loop) and ensure the failure of the core does not result in a fault +that is not detectable by a management entity. + +.. Figure:: dpdk_ka.png + + DPDK Keep Alive Sample Application + +Essentially the app demonstrates how to detect 'silent outages' on DPDK packet +processing cores. The application can be decomposed into two specific parts: +detection and notification. + +* The detection period is programmable/configurable but defaults to 5ms if no + timeout is specified. +* The Notification support is enabled by simply having a hook function that where this + can be 'call back support' for a fault management application with a compliant + heartbeat mechanism. + +DPDK Keep Alive Sample App Internals +------------------------------------ +This section provides some explanation of the The Keep-Alive/'Liveliness' +conceptual scheme as well as the DPDK Keep Alive App. The initialization and +run-time paths are very similar to those of the L2 forwarding application (see +`L2 Forwarding Sample Application (in Real and Virtualized Environments)`_ for more +information). + +There are two types of cores: a Keep Alive Monitor Agent Core (master DPDK core) +and Worker cores (Tx/Rx/Forwarding cores). The Keep Alive Monitor Agent Core +will supervise worker cores and report any failure (2 successive missed pings). +The Keep-Alive/'Liveliness' conceptual scheme is: + +* DPDK worker cores mark their liveliness as they forward traffic. +* A Keep Alive Monitor Agent Core runs a function every N Milliseconds to + inspect worker core liveliness. +* If keep-alive agent detects time-outs, it notifies the fault management + entity through a call-back function. + +**Note:** Only the worker cores state is monitored. There is no mechanism or agent +to monitor the Keep Alive Monitor Agent Core. + +DPDK Keep Alive Sample App Code Internals +----------------------------------------- +The following section provides some explanation of the code aspects that are +specific to the Keep Alive sample application. + +The heartbeat functionality is initialized with a struct rte_heartbeat and the +callback function to invoke in the case of a timeout. + +.. code:: c + + rte_global_keepalive_info = rte_keepalive_create(&dead_core, NULL); + if (rte_global_hbeat_info == NULL) + rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "keepalive_create() failed"); + +The function that issues the pings hbeat_dispatch_pings() is configured to run +every check_period milliseconds. + +.. code:: c + + if (rte_timer_reset(&hb_timer, + (check_period * rte_get_timer_hz()) / 1000, + PERIODICAL, + rte_lcore_id(), + &hbeat_dispatch_pings, rte_global_keepalive_info + ) != 0 ) + rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Keepalive setup failure.\n"); + +The rest of the initialization and run-time path follows the same paths as the +the L2 forwarding application. The only addition to the main processing loop is +the mark alive functionality and the example random failures. + +.. code:: c + + rte_keepalive_mark_alive(&rte_global_hbeat_info); + cur_tsc = rte_rdtsc(); + + /* Die randomly within 7 secs for demo purposes.. */ + if (cur_tsc - tsc_initial > tsc_lifetime) + break; + +The rte_keepalive_mark_alive() function simply sets the core state to alive. + +.. code:: c + + static inline void + rte_keepalive_mark_alive(struct rte_heartbeat *keepcfg) + { + keepcfg->state_flags[rte_lcore_id()] = 1; + } + +Keep Alive Monitor Agent Core Monitoring Options +The application can run on either a host or a guest. As such there are a number +of options for monitoring the Keep Alive Monitor Agent Core through a Local +Agent on the compute node: + + ====================== ========== ============= + Application Location DPDK KA LOCAL AGENT + ====================== ========== ============= + HOST X HOST/GUEST + GUEST X HOST/GUEST + ====================== ========== ============= + + +For the first implementation of a Local Agent SFQM will enable: + + ====================== ========== ============= + Application Location DPDK KA LOCAL AGENT + ====================== ========== ============= + HOST X HOST + ====================== ========== ============= + +Through extending the dpdkstat plugin for collectd with KA functionality, and +integrating the extended plugin with Monasca for high performing, resilient, +and scalable fault detection. + +.. _L2 Forwarding Sample Application (in Real and Virtualized Environments): http://dpdk.org/doc/guides/sample_app_ug/l2_forward_real_virtual.html diff --git a/docs/userguide/monitoring_interfaces.png b/docs/userguide/monitoring_interfaces.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000..e57c4aa1 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/userguide/monitoring_interfaces.png diff --git a/docs/userguide/stats_and_timestamps.png b/docs/userguide/stats_and_timestamps.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000..84aef726 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/userguide/stats_and_timestamps.png |