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Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/development/design/index.rst | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/development/design/ndrpdr.rst | 51 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/development/design/traffic_desc.rst | 85 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/release/release-notes/release-notes.rst | 24 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/testing/user/userguide/advanced.rst | 86 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/testing/user/userguide/quickstart_docker.rst | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/testing/user/userguide/readme.rst | 25 |
7 files changed, 225 insertions, 49 deletions
diff --git a/docs/development/design/index.rst b/docs/development/design/index.rst index c54888a..0500ca2 100644 --- a/docs/development/design/index.rst +++ b/docs/development/design/index.rst @@ -12,4 +12,5 @@ OPNFV NFVbench Euphrates Design design versioning + traffic_desc ndrpdr diff --git a/docs/development/design/ndrpdr.rst b/docs/development/design/ndrpdr.rst index 5361174..e34e8ba 100644 --- a/docs/development/design/ndrpdr.rst +++ b/docs/development/design/ndrpdr.rst @@ -6,11 +6,15 @@ NDR/PDR Binary Search ===================== +The NDR/PDR binary search algorithm used by NFVbench is based on the algorithm used by the +FD.io CSIT project, with some additional optimizations. + Algorithm Outline ----------------- -The ServiceChain class is responsible for calculating the NDR/PDR for all frame sizes requested in the configuration. -Calculation for 1 frame size is delegated to the TrafficClient class. +The ServiceChain class (nfvbench/service_chain.py) is responsible for calculating the NDR/PDR +or all frame sizes requested in the configuration. +Calculation for 1 frame size is delegated to the TrafficClient class (nfvbench/traffic_client.py) Call chain for calculating the NDR-PDR for a list of frame sizes: @@ -22,23 +26,58 @@ Call chain for calculating the NDR-PDR for a list of frame sizes: - TrafficClient.__range_search() recursive binary search The search range is delimited by a left and right rate (expressed as a % of line rate per direction). +The search always start at line rate per port, e.g. in the case of 2x10Gbps, the first iteration +will send 10Gbps of traffic on each port. The load_epsilon configuration parameter defines the accuracy of the result as a % of line rate. The default value of 0.1 indicates for example that the measured NDR and PDR are within 0.1% of line rate of the actual NDR/PDR (e.g. 0.1% of 10Gbps is 10Mbps). It also determines how small the search range must be in the binary search. +Smaller values of load_epsilon will result in more iterations and will take more time but may not +always be beneficial if the absolute value falls below the precision level of the measurement. +For example a value of 0.01% would translate to an absolute value of 1Mbps (for a 10Gbps port) or +around 10kpps (at 64 byte size) which might be too fine grain. The recursion narrows down the range by half and stops when: - the range is smaller than the configured load_epsilon value - or when the search hits 100% or 0% of line rate +Optimization +------------ + +Binary search algorithms assume that the drop rate curve is monotonically increasing with the Tx rate. +To save time, the algorithm used by NFVbench is capable of calculating the optimal Tx rate for an +arbitrary list of target maximum drop rates in one pass instead of the usual 1 pass per target maximum drop rate. +This saves time linearly to the number target drop rates. +For example, a typical NDR/PDR search will have 2 target maximum drop rates: + +- NDR = 0.001% +- PDR = 0.1% + +The binary search will then start with a sorted list of 2 target drop rates: [0.1, 0.001]. +The first part of the binary search will then focus on finding the optimal rate for the first target +drop rate (0.1%). When found, the current target drop rate is removed from the list and +iteration continues with the next target drop rate in the list but this time +starting from the upper/lower range of the previous target drop rate, which saves significant time. +The binary search continues until the target maximum drop rate list is empty. + +Results Granularity +------------------- +The binary search results contain per direction stats (forward and reverse). +In the case of multi-chaining, results contain per chain stats. +The current code only reports aggregated stats (forward + reverse for all chains) but could be enhanced +to report per chain stats. + + +CPU Limitations +--------------- One particularity of using a software traffic generator is that the requested Tx rate may not always be met due to resource limitations (e.g. CPU is not fast enough to generate a very high load). The algorithm should take this into consideration: -- always monitor the actual Tx rate achieved +- always monitor the actual Tx rate achieved as reported back by the traffic generator - actual Tx rate is always <= requested Tx rate - the measured drop rate should always be relative to the actual Tx rate -- if the actual Tx rate is < requested Tx rate and the measured drop rate is already within threshold (<NDR/PDR threshold) then the binary search must stop with proper warning - - +- if the actual Tx rate is < requested Tx rate and the measured drop rate is already within threshold + (<NDR/PDR threshold) then the binary search must stop with proper warning because the actual NDR/PDR + might probably be higher than the reported values diff --git a/docs/development/design/traffic_desc.rst b/docs/development/design/traffic_desc.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2a40b6a --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/development/design/traffic_desc.rst @@ -0,0 +1,85 @@ +.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International +.. License. +.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 +.. (c) Cisco Systems, Inc + +Traffic Description +=================== + +The general packet path model followed by NFVbench requires injecting traffic into an arbitrary +number of service chains, where each service chain is identified by 2 edge networks (left and right). +In the current multi-chaining model: + +- all service chains share the same left and right edge networks +- each port associated to the traffic generator is dedicated to send traffic to one edge network + +In an OpenStack deployment, this corresponds to all chains sharing the same 2 neutron networks. +If VLAN encapsulation is used, all traffic sent to a port will have the same VLAN id. + +Basic Packet Description +------------------------ + +The code to create the UDP packet is located in TRex.create_pkt() (nfvbench/traffic_gen/trex.py). + +NFVbench always generates UDP packets (even when doing L2 forwarding). +The final size of the frame containing each UDP packet will be based on the requested L2 frame size. +When taking into account the minimum payload size requirements from the traffic generator for +the latency streams, the minimum L2 frame size is 64 byte (no vlan tagging) or +68 bytes (with vlan tagging). + +Flows Specification +------------------- + +Mac Addresses +............. +The source MAC address is always the local port MAC address (for each port). +The destination MAC address is based on the configuration and can be: + +- the traffic generator peer port MAC address in the case of L2 loopback at the switch level + or when using a loopback cable +- the dest MAC as specified by the configuration file (EXT chain no ARP) +- the dest MAC as discovered by ARP (EXT chain) +- the VM MAC as dicovered from Neutron API (PVP, PVVP chains) + +NFVbench does not currently range on the MAC addresses. + +IP addresses +............ +The source IP address is fixed per chain. +The destination IP address is variable within a distinct range per chain. + +UDP ports +......... +The source and destination ports are fixed for all packets and can be set in the configuratoon +file (default is 53). + +Payload User Data +................. +The length of the user data is based on the requested L2 frame size and takes into account the +size of the L2 header - including the VLAN tag if applicable. + + +IMIX Support +------------ +In the case of IMIX, each direction is made of 4 streams: +- 1 latency stream +- 1 stream for each IMIX frame size + +The IMIX ratio is encoded into the number of consecutive packets sent by each stream in turn. + +Service Chains and Streams +-------------------------- +A stream identifies one "stream" of packets with same characteristics such as rate and destination address. +NFVbench will create 2 streams per service chain per direction: + +- 1 latency stream set to 1000pps +- 1 main traffic stream set to the requested Tx rate less the latency stream rate (1000pps) + +For example, a benchmark with 1 chain (fixed rate) will result in a total of 4 streams. +A benchmark with 20 chains will results in a total of 80 streams (fixed rate, it is more with IMIX). + +The overall flows are split equally between the number of chains by using the appropriate destination +MAC address. + +For example, in the case of 10 chains, 1M flows and fixed rate, there will be a total of 40 streams. +Each of the 20 non-latency stream will generate packets corresponding to 50,000 flows (unique src/dest address tuples). diff --git a/docs/release/release-notes/release-notes.rst b/docs/release/release-notes/release-notes.rst index a3402cb..7c9cbcb 100644 --- a/docs/release/release-notes/release-notes.rst +++ b/docs/release/release-notes/release-notes.rst @@ -2,6 +2,30 @@ .. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 .. (c) Cisco Systems, Inc +RELEASE NOTES ++++++++++++++ + +OPNFV Fraser Release +==================== + +Over 30 Jira tickets have been addressed in this release (Jira NFVBENCH-55 to NFVBENCH-78) + +The Fraser release adds the following new features: + +- support for benchmarking non-OpenStack environments (with external setup and no OpenStack openrc file) +- PVVP packet path with SRIOV at the edge and vswitch between VMs +- support logging events and results through fluentd + +Enhancements and main bug fixes: + +- end to end connectivity for larger chain count is now much more accurate for large chain count - avoiding excessive drops +- use newer version of TRex (2.32) +- use newer version of testpmd DPDK +- NDR/PDR uses actual TX rate to calculate drops - resulting in more accurate results +- add pylint to unit testing +- add self sufficient and standalone unit testing (without actual testbed) + + OPNFV Euphrates Release ======================= diff --git a/docs/testing/user/userguide/advanced.rst b/docs/testing/user/userguide/advanced.rst index 252cbc9..02c7fce 100644 --- a/docs/testing/user/userguide/advanced.rst +++ b/docs/testing/user/userguide/advanced.rst @@ -314,46 +314,60 @@ NFVbench will dicover the MAC addresses to use for generated frames using: - either OpenStack discovery (find the MAC of an existing VM) in the case of PVP and PVVP service chains - or using dynamic ARP discovery (find MAC from IP) in the case of external chains. -Cleanup Script --------------- +Status and Cleanup of NFVbench Resources +---------------------------------------- + +The --status option will display the status of NFVbench and list any NFVbench resources. You need to pass the OpenStack RC +file in order to connect to OpenStack. + +.. code-block:: none -The nfvbench_cleanup script will cleanup resources created by NFVbench. You need to pass the OpenStack RC file in order to connect to -OpenStack. + # nfvbench --status -r /tmp/nfvbench/openrc + 2018-04-09 17:05:48,682 INFO Version: 1.3.2.dev1 + 2018-04-09 17:05:48,683 INFO Status: idle + 2018-04-09 17:05:48,757 INFO Discovering instances nfvbench-loop-vm... + 2018-04-09 17:05:49,252 INFO Discovering flavor nfvbench.medium... + 2018-04-09 17:05:49,281 INFO Discovering networks... + 2018-04-09 17:05:49,365 INFO No matching NFVbench resources found + # + +The Status can be either "idle" or "busy (run pending)". + +The --cleanup option will first discover resources created by NFVbench and prompt if you want to proceed with cleaning them up. Example of run: .. code-block:: none - # nfvbench_cleanup -r /tmp/nfvbench/openrc - Discovering Storage resources... - Discovering Compute resources... - Discovering Network resources... - Discovering Keystone resources... - - SELECTED RESOURCES: - +-----------+-------------------+--------------------------------------+ - | Type | Name | UUID | - |-----------+-------------------+--------------------------------------| - | flavors | nfvbench.medium | 362b2215-89d1-4f46-8b89-8e58165ff5bc | - | instances | nfvbench-loop-vm0 | f78dfb74-1b8e-4c5c-8d83-652a7571da95 | - | networks | nfvbench-net0 | 57d7e6c9-325f-4c13-9b1b-929344cc9c39 | - | networks | nfvbench-net1 | 2d429bcd-33fa-4aa4-9f2e-299a735177c9 | - +-----------+-------------------+--------------------------------------+ - - Warning: You didn't specify a resource list file as the input. The script will delete all resources shown above. + # nfvbench --cleanup -r /tmp/nfvbench/openrc + 2018-04-09 16:58:00,204 INFO Version: 1.3.2.dev1 + 2018-04-09 16:58:00,205 INFO Status: idle + 2018-04-09 16:58:00,279 INFO Discovering instances nfvbench-loop-vm... + 2018-04-09 16:58:00,829 INFO Discovering flavor nfvbench.medium... + 2018-04-09 16:58:00,876 INFO Discovering networks... + 2018-04-09 16:58:00,960 INFO Discovering ports... + 2018-04-09 16:58:01,012 INFO Discovered 6 NFVbench resources: + +----------+-------------------+--------------------------------------+ + | Type | Name | UUID | + |----------+-------------------+--------------------------------------| + | Instance | nfvbench-loop-vm0 | b039b858-777e-467e-99fb-362f856f4a94 | + | Flavor | nfvbench.medium | a027003c-ad86-4f24-b676-2b05bb06adc0 | + | Network | nfvbench-net0 | bca8d183-538e-4965-880e-fd92d48bfe0d | + | Network | nfvbench-net1 | c582a201-8279-4309-8084-7edd6511092c | + | Port | | 67740862-80ac-4371-b04e-58a0b0f05085 | + | Port | | b5db95b9-e419-4725-951a-9a8f7841e66a | + +----------+-------------------+--------------------------------------+ + 2018-04-09 16:58:01,013 INFO NFVbench will delete all resources shown... Are you sure? (y/n) y - *** STORAGE cleanup - *** COMPUTE cleanup - . Waiting for 1 instances to be fully deleted... - . INSTANCE 1 left to be deleted, retries left=5... - . INSTANCE 1 left to be deleted, retries left=4... - + INSTANCE nfvbench-loop-vm0 is successfully deleted - + FLAVOR nfvbench.medium is successfully deleted - *** NETWORK cleanup - + Network port 075d91f3-fa6a-428c-bd3f-ebd40cd935e1 is successfully deleted - + Network port 3a7ccd8c-53a6-43d0-a823-4b5ca762d06e is successfully deleted - + NETWORK nfvbench-net0 is successfully deleted - + Network port 5b5a75bd-e0b5-4f81-91b9-9e216d194f48 is successfully deleted - + Network port cc2d8f1b-49fe-491e-9e44-6990fc57e891 is successfully deleted - + NETWORK nfvbench-net1 is successfully deleted - *** KEYSTONE cleanup + 2018-04-09 16:58:01,865 INFO Deleting instance nfvbench-loop-vm0... + 2018-04-09 16:58:02,058 INFO Waiting for 1 instances to be fully deleted... + 2018-04-09 16:58:02,182 INFO 1 yet to be deleted by Nova, retries left=6... + 2018-04-09 16:58:04,506 INFO 1 yet to be deleted by Nova, retries left=5... + 2018-04-09 16:58:06,636 INFO 1 yet to be deleted by Nova, retries left=4... + 2018-04-09 16:58:08,701 INFO Deleting flavor nfvbench.medium... + 2018-04-09 16:58:08,729 INFO Deleting port 67740862-80ac-4371-b04e-58a0b0f05085... + 2018-04-09 16:58:09,102 INFO Deleting port b5db95b9-e419-4725-951a-9a8f7841e66a... + 2018-04-09 16:58:09,620 INFO Deleting network nfvbench-net0... + 2018-04-09 16:58:10,357 INFO Deleting network nfvbench-net1... # + +The --force-cleanup option will do the same but without prompting for confirmation. diff --git a/docs/testing/user/userguide/quickstart_docker.rst b/docs/testing/user/userguide/quickstart_docker.rst index c5e5eda..a5152cf 100644 --- a/docs/testing/user/userguide/quickstart_docker.rst +++ b/docs/testing/user/userguide/quickstart_docker.rst @@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ To run NFVBench enabling REST server (mount the configuration json and the path .. code-block:: bash cd ~/nfvbench_ws - docker run --detach --net=host --privileged -e HOST="127.0.0.1" -e PORT=7556 --e CONFIG_FILE="/tmp/nfvbench/nfvbenchconfig.json -v $PWD:/tmp/nfvbench -v /dev:/dev -v /lib/modules/$(uname -r):/lib/modules/$(uname -r) -v /usr/src/kernels:/usr/src/kernels --name nfvbench opnfv/nfvbench start_rest_server + docker run --detach --net=host --privileged -e HOST="127.0.0.1" -e PORT=7556 -e CONFIG_FILE="/tmp/nfvbench/nfvbenchconfig.json -v $PWD:/tmp/nfvbench -v /dev:/dev -v /lib/modules/$(uname -r):/lib/modules/$(uname -r) -v /usr/src/kernels:/usr/src/kernels --name nfvbench opnfv/nfvbench start_rest_server The create an alias to make it easy to execute nfvbench commands directly from the host shell prompt: diff --git a/docs/testing/user/userguide/readme.rst b/docs/testing/user/userguide/readme.rst index 785ffed..b437ff9 100644 --- a/docs/testing/user/userguide/readme.rst +++ b/docs/testing/user/userguide/readme.rst @@ -46,11 +46,21 @@ main purpose is to measure the performance of the NFVi infrastructure which is m External Chains --------------- -NFVbench also supports settings that involve externally staged packet paths with or without OpenStack: +NFVbench supports settings that involve externally staged packet paths with or without OpenStack: - run benchmarks on existing service chains at the L3 level that are staged externally by any other tool (e.g. any VNF capable of L3 routing) - run benchmarks on existing L2 chains that are configured externally (e.g. pure L2 forwarder such as DPDK testpmd) +Direct L2 Loopback (Switch or wire loopback) +-------------------------------------------- +NFVbench supports benchmarking of pure L2 loopbacks (see "--l2-loopback vlan" option) + +- Switch level loopback +- Port to port wire loopback + +In this mode, NFVbench will take a vlan ID and send packets from each port to the other port +(dest MAC set to the other port MAC) using the same VLAN ID on both ports. +This can be useful for example to verify that the connectivity to the switch is working properly. Traffic Generation ------------------ @@ -116,7 +126,8 @@ Multi-Chaining (N*PVP or N*PVVP) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Multiple service chains can be setup by NFVbench without any limit on the concurrency (other than limits imposed by available resources on compute nodes). -In the case of multiple service chains, NFVbench will instruct the traffic generator to use multiple L3 packet streams (frames directed to each path will have a unique destination MAC address). +In the case of multiple service chains, NFVbench will instruct the traffic generator to use multiple L3 packet streams (frames directed to each path will +have a unique destination MAC address). Example of multi-chaining with 2 concurrent PVP service chains: @@ -126,6 +137,8 @@ This innovative feature will allow to measure easily the performance of a fully Multi-chaining is currently limited to 1 compute node (PVP or PVVP intra-node) or 2 compute nodes (for PVVP inter-node). The 2 edge interfaces for all service chains will share the same 2 networks. +The total traffic will be split equally across all chains. + SR-IOV ^^^^^^ @@ -179,7 +192,7 @@ NFVbench is agnostic of the virtual switch implementation and has been tested wi - - - - +Limitations +*********** +NFVbench only supports VLAN with OpenStack. +NFVbench does not support VxLAN overlays. |