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Makefile checks for some coding style rules.
Previous commit introduced trailing white-spaces, which broke
compilation.
Change-Id: Ia57fc9b1428b4a9f8537dce4875e62ac55265fe3
Signed-off-by: Patrice Buriez <patrice.buriez@intel.com>
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Revert back part of commit 9fa316261d7d9
The function abs_diff was erroneously changed to diff_or_zero.
This function was supposed to measure the difference between rx and
tx time; when rx time overflowed and tx time not yet (i.e.
rx time ~= 0 and tx_time ~=UINT32_MAX, this function added UINT32_MAX
to rx_time. The name of the function was confusing and caused the
previous commit. Net effect of previous commit was that every four seconds
the minimum latency was 0
This commit reverse back to the original behavior, with a function name
diff_time.
Change-Id: Ia1b80e48a756cf5df411dcf58ca1cbc835214d13
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Link_speed could be null when prox started with the ports down.
This was potentially causing a crash.
Another task will need to update link speed when the port come
up. Failing to do this results in less accurate latencies
(no extrapolation)
Change-Id: I597b68e30117e6edb9ccb4732c2acedd5eb8ac80
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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- Also changed lat_info.tx_packet_index to uint64_t,
so also did it for task_lat.prev_tx_packet_index and n_loss.
- Adjusted format strings accordingly, and fixed some other formats.
- Adjusted overflow increment to 2^32 (i.e. UINT32_MAX + 1).
- Replaced hard-coded 64 with ACCURACY_BUFFER_SIZE (still hard-coded
in handle_gen.c).
Change-Id: Ia59f36e17c0797a2a958dbe3b2ac420263473524
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Patrice Buriez <patrice.buriez@intel.com>
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When doing latency measurements PROX takes into account the
generation or reception of a bulk of packets. For instance, if
PROX receives at time T 4 packets, it knows that the first
packet was received by te NIC before T (the time to receive the other
3 packets, as they were received at maximum link speed).
So the latency data is decreased by the minimum time to receive those
3 packets.
For this PROX was using a default link speed of 10Gbps. This is wrong
for 1Gbps and 40Gbps networks, and was causing for instance issues
on 40 Gbps networks as extrapolating too much, resulting in either
too low latencies or negative numbers (visible as very high latencies).
Change-Id: I4e0f02e8383dd8d168ac50ecae37a05510ad08bc
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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When doing latency measurements the generator can add a
32 bits signature in the packet at a specific location,
so that the receiver only uses the packets generated by the
generator and ignores packets generated for instance by a switch
The is particuly important for latency measurements as we use
data in the packets as timestamps, and packets generated elsewhere
would result in random latency for those packets.
Change-Id: I8352b35aff76ec8d1344a1e492b9dcc20a53f1ce
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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JIRA: SAMPLEVNF-55
PROX is a DPDK-based application implementing Telco use-cases such as
a simplified BRAS/BNG, light-weight AFTR... It also allows configuring
finer grained network functions like QoS, Routing, load-balancing...
(We are moving PROX version v039 to sampleVNF
https://01.org/intel-data-plane-performance-demonstrators/prox-overview)
Change-Id: Ia3cb02cf0e49ac5596e922c197ff7e010293d033
Signed-off-by: Deepak S <deepak.s@linux.intel.com>
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