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-rw-r--r-- | docs/testing/user/userguide/03-installation.rst | 11 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/testing/user/userguide/04-running_the_test.rst | 207 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/testing/user/userguide/index.rst | 1 |
3 files changed, 217 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/docs/testing/user/userguide/03-installation.rst b/docs/testing/user/userguide/03-installation.rst index 87bd9a9d..661fc7ad 100644 --- a/docs/testing/user/userguide/03-installation.rst +++ b/docs/testing/user/userguide/03-installation.rst @@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ Step 1: Identify a machine on which you will install the containers ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This machine will needs enough resource to install the Xtesting framework and needs to be enabled for containers. -Form a network point of view, it will need to have access to the PROX instances: That means it will need +From a network point of view, it will need to have access to the PROX instances: That means it will need to be able to ssh into these machines and that the network also needs to allow for TCP port 8474 traffic. When using the automation to create the VM through the Heat Stack API, this machine also needs to be able @@ -83,6 +83,7 @@ this will involve some manual file copying. Step 2: Clone the samplevnf project on that machine ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + .. code-block:: console git clone https://git.opnfv.org/samplevnf @@ -97,6 +98,7 @@ will have all information needed to run the actual test. You can do this step ma platforms (OpenStack, VMWare, K8s, bare metal, ...), but the automation tools described in the rest of this paragraph will using OpenStack Heat yaml files. First, a PROX qcow2 image needs to be downloaded. + .. code-block:: console wget http://artifacts.opnfv.org/samplevnf/jerma/prox_jerma.qcow2 @@ -104,12 +106,14 @@ First, a PROX qcow2 image needs to be downloaded. This image can also be created mannualy by following instructions in https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/SAM/Rapid+scripting, in the section "Creating an image" Now upload this image to Openstack: + .. code-block:: console openstack image` create --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare --file prox_jerma.qcow2 rapidVM Now run createrapid.sh to create the stack. This process takes the config_file as input. Details can be found in https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/SAM/Rapid+scripting, in the section "Deploying the VMs" + .. code-block:: console ./createrapid.sh @@ -121,6 +125,7 @@ Step 4: Deploy your own Xtesting toolchain Install Xtesting as described in https://xtesting.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ First goto the xtesting directory in samplevnf/VNFs/DPPD-PROX/helper-scripts/rapid/xtesting (this was cloned in step 2) + .. code-block:: console virtualenv xtesting @@ -136,15 +141,17 @@ Step 5: Build the test container that will drive the TST009 testing Go to the directory samplevnf/VNFs/DPPD-PROX/helper-scripts/rapid/xtesting While building this container, some files will be copied into the container image. Two of these files are generated by Step 3: rapid.env and rapid_key.pem and reside in the samplevnf/VNFs/DPPD-PROX/helper-scripts/rapid/. -PLease copy them into the xtesting directory. +Please copy them into the xtesting directory. The 3rd file that will be copied is testcases.yaml. You might want to modify this file according to the testing you would like to execute. + .. code-block:: console docker build -t 127.0.0.1:5000/rapidxt . Step 6: Publish your container on your local repository ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + .. code-block:: console docker push 127.0.0.1:5000/rapidxt diff --git a/docs/testing/user/userguide/04-running_the_test.rst b/docs/testing/user/userguide/04-running_the_test.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..35404c89 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/testing/user/userguide/04-running_the_test.rst @@ -0,0 +1,207 @@ +.. 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. + +================ +Running the test +================ +.. _NFV-TST009: https://docbox.etsi.org/ISG/NFV/open/Publications_pdf/Specs-Reports/NFV-TST%20009v3.2.1%20-%20GS%20-%20NFVI_Benchmarks.pdf +.. _TST009_Throughput_64B_64F.test: https://github.com/opnfv/samplevnf/blob/master/VNFs/DPPD-PROX/helper-scripts/rapid/TST009_Throughput_64B_64F.test +.. _rapid_location: https://github.com/opnfv/samplevnf/blob/master/VNFs/DPPD-PROX/helper-scripts/rapid/ + +Overview +-------- +A default test will be run automatically when you launch the testing. The +details and definition of that test is defined in file +TST009_Throughput_64B_64F.test_. + +We will discuss the sections of such a test file and how this can be changed to +accomodate the testing you want to execute. This will be done by creating your +own test file and making sure it becomes part of your testcases.yaml, as will +be shown below. + +Test File Description +--------------------- +The test file has multiple sections. The first section is a generic section +called TestParameters. Then there are 1 or more sections desribing the test +machines we will be using in the test. The sections are named TestMx, where x +is a number (starting with 1). The tests to be executed are described in a +section called testy, where y is the number of the test to be executed, +starting with 1. In this automated testing driven by Xtesting, we will +typically only run 1 test. + +TestParameters +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +In this section, the name of the test is specified. This is only used in the +reporting and has no influence on the actual testing. + +.. code-block:: console + + name = Rapid_ETSINFV_TST009 + +The number of test that will be executed by this run and that will be described +in the [testy] sections, is defined by the number_of_tests parameter. In the +Xtesting framework that we are using here, this will typically be set to 1. + +.. code-block:: console + + number_of_tests = 1 + +The total number of machines to be used in this testing will be defined by the +parameter total_number_of_test_machines. The function that these machines have +in this test will be described in the [TestMx] section. Typically, this number +will be set to 2, but many more machines can particiapte in a test. + +.. code-block:: console + + total_number_of_test_machines = 2 + +lat_percentile is a variable that is setting which percentile to use during the +course of this test. This will be used to report the percentile round trip +latency and is a better measurement for the high latencies during this test than +the maximum latency which will also be reported. Note that we also report the +total round trip latency histogram. + +.. code-block:: console + + lat_percentile = 99 + + +TestMx +^^^^^^ +In the TestMx sections, where x denotes the index of the machine, the function +of the machine in the testing, will be described. The machine can be defined as +a generator, or as a packet reflector (swap function). The machines can be any +machine that is created upfront (See step 3 of the installation steps). Other +functions can also be executed by the test machines and examples of test files +can be found in rapid_location_. + +The first parameter is the name of the machine and is only used for referencing +the machine. This will be the name of the PROX instance and will be shown in +case you run the PROX UI. In this automated testing, this will be not be +visible. + +The PROX config file is used by the PROX program and defines what PROX will be +doing. For a generator, this will typically be gen.cfg. Multiple cfg files +exist in the rapid_location_. dest_vm is used by a generator to find out to +which VM he needs to send the packets. Int e example below, the packets will be +sent to TestM2. gencores is a list of cores to be used for the generator tasks. +Note that if you specify more than 1 core, the interface will need to support as +many tx queues as there are generator cores. The latcores field specifies a +list of cores to be used by the latency measurement tasks. You need as many rx +queueus on the interface as the number of latcores. The default value for the +bucket_size_exp parameter is 12. It is also its minimum value. In case most of +the latency measurements in the histogram are falling in the last bucket, this +number needs to be increased. Every time you increase this number by 1, the +bucket size for the latency histogram is multiplied by 2. There are 128 buckets +in the histogram. +cores is a parameter that will be used by non-generator configurations that +don't need a disctinction between generator and latency cores (e.g. swap.cfg). + +Changing these parameters requires in depth knowledge of the PROX tool and is +not something to start with. + +.. code-block:: console + + name = Generator + config_file = gen.cfg + dest_vm = 2 + gencores = [1] + latcores = [3] + #bucket_size_exp = 12 +testy +^^^^^ +In the testy sections, where y denotes the index of the test, the test that will +be executed on the machines that were specified in the TestMx sections, will be +described. Using Xtesting, we will typically only use 1 test. +Parameter test is defining which test needs to be run. This is a hardcoded +string and can only be one of the following ['flowsizetest', 'TST009test', +'fixed_rate', 'increment_till_fail', 'corestats', 'portstats', 'impairtest', +'irqtest', 'warmuptest']. In this project, we will use the TST009test testing. +For examples of the other tests, please check out the other test files in +rapid_location_. + +The pass_threshold parameter defines the success criterium for the test. When +this test uses multiple combinations of packet size and flows, all combinations +must be meeting the same threshold. The threshold is expressed in Mpps. + +The imixs parameter defines the pakcet sizes that will be used. Each element in +the imix list will result in a separate test. Each element is on its turn a +list of packet sizes which will be used during one test execution. If you only +want to test 1 imix size, define imixs with only one element. For each element in +the imixs list, the generator will iterate over the packet lengths and send them +out in the order as specified in the list. An example of an imix list is [128, +256, 64, 64, 128]. In this case, 40% of the packets will have a size of 64 +bytes, 40% will have a packet size of 128 and 20% will have a packet size of +256. When using this with Xtesting, we will typically only use 1 imix. When +needing results for more sizes, one should create a specific test file per size +and launch the different tests using Xtesting. + +The flows parameter is a list of flow sizes. For each flow size, a test will be +run with the specified amount of flows. The flow size needs to be powers of 2, +max 2^30. If not a power of 2, we will use the lowest power of 2 that is larger +than the requested number of flows. e.g. 9 will result in 16 flows. +Same remark as for the imixs parameter: we will only use one element in the +flows list. When more flows need to be tested, create a differnt test file and +launch it using Xtesting. + +drop_rate_threshold specifies the ratio of packets than can be dropped and still +consider the test run as succesful. Note that a value of 0 means a zero packet +loss: even if we lose 1 packet during a certain step in a test run, it will be +marked as failed. + +lat_avg_threshold, lat_perc_threshold, lat_max_threshold are threshols to define +the maximal acceptable round trip latency to mark the test step as successful. +You can set this threshold for the average, the percentile and the maximum +latency. Which percentile is being used is define in the TestParameters section. +All these thresholds are expressed in micro-seconds. You can also put the value +to inf, which means the threshold will never be reached and hence the threshold +value is not being used to define if the run is successful or not. + +MAXr, MAXz, MAXFramesPerSecondAllIngress and StepSize are defined in +NFV-TST009_ and are used to control the binary search algorithm. + +ramp_step is a variable that controls the ramping of the generated traffic. When +not specified, the requested traffic for each step in the testing will be +applied immediately. If specified, the generator will slowly go to the requested +speed by increasing the traffic each second with the value specified in this +parameter till it reached the requested speed. This parameter is expressed in +100Mb/s. + +.. code-block:: console + + pass_threshold=0.001 + imixs=[[64]] + flows=[64] + drop_rate_threshold = 0 + lat_avg_threshold = inf + lat_perc_threshold = inf + lat_max_threshold = inf + MAXr = 3 + MAXz = 5000 + MAXFramesPerSecondAllIngress = 12000000 + StepSize = 10000 + #ramp_step = 1 + +Modifying the test +------------------ +In case you want to modify the parameters as specified in +TST009_Throughput_64B_64F.test_, it is best to create your own test file. Your +test file will need to be uploaded to the test container. Hence you will have to +rebuild your container, and add an extra copy command to the Dockerfile so that +your new test file will be avaialble in the container. +Then you will need to modify the testcases.yaml file. One of the args that you +can specify is the test_file. Put your newly created test file as the new value +for this argument. +Now build and publish your test container as specified in steps 5 & 6 of the +installation procedure. + +Note that other arguments than test_file can be specified in testcases.yaml. For +a list of arugments, please check out the test_params dictionary in the +rapid_defaults.py that you can find in rapid_location_. +It is adviced not to change these parameters unless you have an in-depth +knowledge of the code. +The only 2 arguments that van be changed are the test_file which was already +discussed and the runtime argument. This argument defines how long each test run +will take and is expressed in seconds. diff --git a/docs/testing/user/userguide/index.rst b/docs/testing/user/userguide/index.rst index ab4fb8b4..64b01b88 100644 --- a/docs/testing/user/userguide/index.rst +++ b/docs/testing/user/userguide/index.rst @@ -15,3 +15,4 @@ SampleVNF User Guide 01-introduction.rst 02-methodology.rst 03-installation.rst + 04-running_the_test.rst |