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JIRA: SAMPLEVNF-151
link speed is used in gen and lat latency extrapolations.
Using a link_speed value lower than the actual link speed
might result in errors (e.g. negative latencies).
Negotiated link speed might be reported slowly (as reported through irq)
Hence it is better to use the device capability link speed.
In addition, this remove the check for link speed changes in fastpath.
Change-Id: I0f475fe5e139b046012de6cd0b710e4390735078
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Change-Id: I5b550a42b27d697f77c4bafab890ba57279f8d13
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Number of mbufs must at least cover for number of rx descriptors,
number of tx descriptors, number of mbuf cached and number of
mbufs handled by the application.
If this is not the case, a warning is returned.
This ony check for the more basic cases. This will not check for
instance for cases with multiples rings where more mbufs might be
cached.
Change-Id: If2c0c9fc76ed4500849d92cf7586bb0b25d8ab22
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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With this use case, the generator is generating at maximum speed
We measure the forwarding rate.
Throughput, latency, number of packets sent and received are printed
every seconds.
Change-Id: I05eb874d6ecefd58fb0c876bccf6a32872306076
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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* changes:
Prevent dropping ARP packets
Do not add count of non dataplane packets to dropped count
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In L3 submodes, there were two memory leaks
- when a L3 core was restarted, causing around 2MB leak and a
potential issue after 256 start/stop
- a potential mbuf leak when handling arp replies
Those have been fixed
Change-Id: I348478fa5967936297850432e93667e12b0adac4
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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L3 mode supports two timers:
- arp_update_time, defaulted to 1 second, which makes PROX to send
arp request every second for active flows
- arp_timeout, previously defaulted to 30 seconds, which makes PROX
consider a MAC address as invalid if no arp_reply was received
within those 30 seconds.
Those timers values were hardcoded. They can now be configured through
the configuration file (within the core section), using resp.
"arp update time" and "arp timeout" keywords. Unit is milli seconds.
The default becomes respectively 1 second and 2 weeks.
Change-Id: I35e46e97df32ca44c2cdfae85a20ee015de5d6e1
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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RSS was enabled when rss=yes is set in the configuration or
when multiqueue is being used.
But when RSS was enabled the types of packets on which RSS
hashing was applied might not be supported by the PMD, as
almost every PMD supported a different set of packets.
Change-Id: I1d9516da61df7ef18c1d6953879ee15e33fca077
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Change-Id: Ia9df816d522e5db460d9129109525d5d345d997f
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Reworked deploycentos1.sh and deploycentos2.sh which is installing
a PROX version that deals with non data plane packet counting for
improved packet loss measurements. Fixed some issues with the packer
scripts.
Change-Id: I64aab09d364ab5abbbc5fc75c73afcbe11fed681
Signed-off-by: Luc Provoost <luc.provoost@intel.com>
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JIRA: SAMPLEVNF-152
When system is overloaded, ARP packets were sometimes dropped, as any
other packets.
This was causing two issues:
- The count of TX non dataplane packets was wrong
- If many consecutive ARP packets were dropped, the underlying switch might
see its ARP timer expiring, causing performance degradation (packets being
broadcasted).
ARP packets are now always sent as no-drop.
Change-Id: I9a86cbf8c4b56a178f86bc789153f1fa49ddf73f
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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RX packets count = TX count + dropped (handled + discarded) count +
non dataplane packets count.
Hence non dataplane packets such as unexpected packets (e.g. dhcp request)
should not b considerded as handled.
Change-Id: I45cef19fed09bb4f86644d56d689a0959a9038db
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Gen mode requires a tx ring or a tx port. A configuration without those
should gracefully report an error. This was causing a crash.
Change-Id: Ia30d4d4c87a694da1dfed86587f90b9199c493ab
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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When master core was on socket 1, the rings setup to exchange
messages related to arp between dataplane cores and master core
was not properly setup, resulting in arp not working.
Change-Id: Icc08df81f2e39e53de7c212248cdc7b78d7e2618
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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In L3 mode, prox is extracting IP destination address in the packets.
It uses this destination address to find the MAC address.
If the MAC address is not found, it sends a ARP request.
It also sends ARP request when it realizes that some timeout expired.
However, PROX was using the mbuf of the existing packets (to be forwarded)
to send the ARP. This resulted in packet loss.
Now PROX is generating ARP requests using mbuf from an ARP mempool.
Some clean up was also done.
Change-Id: Icb6083a8cdf88789553ad23c32ca12d6b7ba7f08
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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When no arp reply was received in l3 mode, the requesting core
continuously sends ARP requests every seconds (which is correct).
But master core was keeping a list of all requests, while all
those requests are the same, resulting in potential table overflow.
Change-Id: I13aa1ec4ea88404a690a25678fb6ec72df19a9b9
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Print IP address in a.b.c.d format instead of one 32-bit number.
Better align debugging information in log file
Change-Id: Icfab30836ba83d53f700fcfbdfbd7cf238ed7bf8
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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JIRA: SAMPLEVNF-149
VLAN can be enabled on a port by adding "vlan=yes" in the port section.
When VLAN is enabled on a port, then DEV_RX_OFFLOAD_VLAN_STRIP
and DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_VLAN_INSERT are enabled (if device supports it).
This will cause VLAN to be stripped from any packets received with
the proper tag, and VLAN to be added for any packets being transmitted.
The VLAN ID themselves are configured through the physical function
using something like (where ens801f1 isthe PF):
ip link set ens801f1 vf 0 vlan 1111
Change-Id: I945c87b0c18565da479ecaa08e5ffce91232a7ce
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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In some cases, like when using virtual functions, getting device
info return a NULL device, which was potentially causing a crash.
Change-Id: Icc65f35bb54cd7d9bd8d837b3d6ec7ebb48b7c5e
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Improve DPDK 18.05 support introduced by 3e532aca.
Support for DPDK 18.08.
Change-Id: Ide712ee94254b506a0ad88c95a7e01b789f99d48
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Change-Id: I70de6345afc6a696906f006c1b0f44540ae4ecec
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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When performing some zero packet loss performance testing on dataplane, it
is important (not) to count non dataplane packets. For instance, one might
receive uexpected packets from a switch, or ARP packets. Or one might need
to transmit ARP packets. Such packets should not be counted as dataplane
packets as for thse packets there is no 1:1 mapping between transmitted
packets and received packets.
To support this, the counters reporting numbers of transmitted and received
packets remain unchanged but two new counters have been added to PROX,
counting respectively number of received and number of transmitted
non-dataplane packets.
On RX side, packets are counsidered as non-dataplane if being ARP or if
they do not countain the proper signature
On TX side, ARP packets are not considered as dataplane packets.
This feature requires configuration of signature.
"dp core stats" command has been added
Change-Id: I98e113cd02f36d540383d343a433592867ad86a9
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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Updated and corrected the creation of an image containing the PROX
tool with packer.
Test will now only be declared successful when average and maximum
latency are below a certain threshold.
The start speed is now also a parameter of the *.test files.
Change-Id: I1112555c87e7a857e1c699921ae08f61281642e1
Signed-off-by: Luc Provoost <luc.provoost@intel.com>
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JIRA: SAMPLEVNF-128
Improve performance of l3fwd use-case.
L3fwd did not disable TX offload flags, which resulted in
non-vector mode to be used in pmd in some cases like bare-metal.
Note that in some cases such as virtio, vector mode was already
used as OVS reports that it does not support TX-offload, hence
TX-offload was already disabled on virtio.
Using vector mode usually brings higher performance.
Change-Id: I102b846d604a9cf28c6b7dae8bedbe918ccfcf6c
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
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JIRA: SAMPLEVNF-127
PROX was crashing in the VM with vector mode enabled and multiple OVS
queues. This was not really a PROX bug, but a DPDK issue, which has been
fixed by DPDK commit https://git.dpdk.org/dpdk/commit/?id=efc83a1e7fc3
This "net/virtio: fix queue setup consistency" is included in DPDK 17.11
and subsequent versions, and has been backported into:
- DPDK 16.11.4:
https://git.dpdk.org/dpdk-stable/commit/?h=16.11&id=516447a5056c
- DPDK 17.08.1:
https://git.dpdk.org/dpdk-stable/commit/?h=17.08&id=907fe4fc263e
This means the fix is not included into any DPDK 17.02.x used by NSB.
Fortunately, a simple workaround consists of calling
rte_eth_tx_queue_setup() before rte_eth_rx_queue_setup().
This change implements this simple workaround, in order to make PROX
work, even with unfixed DPDK versions.
Change-Id: I818e9bb812babe023c6b7225c8b9769a359d9bec
Signed-off-by: Patrice Buriez <patrice.buriez@intel.com>
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Change-Id: Iccd72f6ab3db68bc093c42d60d225fe86f8fbda7
Signed-off-by: Deepak S <deepak.s@linux.intel.com>
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This patch makes PROX compile with DPDK 18.05.
However some features are disabled or will not work as expected
such as:
"mem info" command
"police" mode
Those will need to be fixed later (see DPDK1805 within code).
Change-Id: Ie7d72f6ab3db68bc093c42d60d125fe86f8fbda7
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Patrice Buriez <patrice.buriez@intel.com>
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Detect, remember and skip bad/unexpected packets:
- too short to hold the latency-related values
- with bad signature
- with invalid generator_id
using a uint64_t-based bitmap.
Also moved variable declarations closer to usage,
added some likely/unlikely hints,
reworked some return statements, and
fixed 32-bit overflow (every ~4s) of rx_time_err computation.
Change-Id: Ib2aadc1af6b7a68601cc080ba66b10d41ff9a64e
Signed-off-by: Patrice Buriez <patrice.buriez@intel.com>
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Based on a CentOS cloud image downloadable from the web, you can now use
packer to create an image that has DPDK and PROX installed in the
proper directories. The VM is also tuned for guest VNFs.
A service is also created to deal with the proper isolated_cpu settings
for tuned. The service will also make sure uio and igb_uio are loaded.
The prox_user_data.sh is not needed any more and hence deleted.
ctrl-c of runrapid.py will now also stop prox in all the VMs so a new
test can be started.
Change-Id: I16cc59878e2d4912757f42e05f98d51dff5feb89
Signed-off-by: Luc Provoost <luc.provoost@intel.com>
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Change-Id: I9a9da79cb4ccb245ccb38b50b561da51a40a359d
Signed-off-by: Deepak S <deepak.s@linux.intel.com>
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JIRA: YARDSTICK-1220
Implemented new "multi port stats <port list>" command, which returns a
semi-colon-separated list of comma-separated values:
- port id
- total (at last_tsc) for rx_pkts, tx_pkts, no_mbufs, ierrors + imissed
- last_tsc
Change-Id: I8a8da79cb4ccb245ccb38b50b561da51a40a359d
Signed-off-by: Patrice Buriez <patrice.buriez@intel.com>
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Change-Id: I924fcac7a65c0d221d5d422f419deb9c0f864172
Signed-off-by: Deepak S <deepak.s@linux.intel.com>
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Change-Id: I324fcac7a65c0d221d5d422f419deb9c0f864172
Signed-off-by: Deepak S <deepak.s@linux.intel.com>
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mbuf size was setup to achieve the best performance i.e.
using the smallest mbuf and not segmenting packets.
However this resulted in complex code, much dependent of the way
the pmd are working e.g. a change(fix) in recent dpdk i40e
implementation caused a 1782 (=1518+8+256) bytes mbuf to be too
small to hold a 1518 bytes packets.
Hence this change simplifies the mbuf size selection at the price
of a potential decreases in performance - as more memory is now used.
Except if jumbo frames are used, the mbuf size will now be the same
for all modes. The packets will not be segmented except if jumbo
frames are enabled.
If jumbo frames are enabled, packets are by default segmented, except
if the mbuf size is configured big enough in the config file.
Change-Id: I222fcac7a65c0d221d5d422f419deb9c0f864172
Signed-off-by: Xavier Simonart <xavier.simonart@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Deepak S <deepak.s@linux.intel.com>
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Change-Id: I6c1a8f6d8e3bc84f7eb8e5780cde98dd9c03c805
Signed-off-by: Igor Shaula <igor.shaula@intel.com>
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