Getting Started with 'vsperf' ============================= Hardware Requirements --------------------- VSPERF requires the following hardware to run tests: IXIA traffic generator (IxNetwork), a machine that runs the IXIA client software and a CentOS Linux release 7.1.1503 (Core) host. vSwitch Requirements -------------------- The vSwitch must support Open Flow 1.3 or greater. Installation ------------ Follow the `installation instructions `__ to install. IXIA Setup ---------- On the CentOS 7 system ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You need to install IxNetworkTclClient$(VER\_NUM)Linux.bin.tgz. On the IXIA client software system ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Find the IxNetwork TCL server app (start -> All Programs -> IXIA -> IxNetwork -> IxNetwork\_$(VER\_NUM) -> IxNetwork TCL Server) Right click on IxNetwork TCL Server, select properties - Under shortcut tab in the Target dialogue box make sure there is the argument "-tclport xxxx" where xxxx is your port number (take note of this port number you will need it for the 10\_custom.conf file). |Alt text| Hit Ok and start the TCL server application Cloning and building src dependencies ------------------------------------- In order to run VSPERF, you will need to download DPDK and OVS. You can do this manually and build them in a preferred location, or you could use vswitchperf/src. The vswitchperf/src directory contains makefiles that will allow you to clone and build the libraries that VSPERF depends on, such as DPDK and OVS. To clone and build simply: .. code-block:: console cd src make VSPERF can be used with OVS without DPDK support. In this case you have to specify path to the kernel sources by WITH\_LINUX parameter: .. code-block:: console cd src make WITH_LINUX=/lib/modules/`uname -r`/build To build DPDK and OVS for PVP testing with vhost_user as the guest access method, use: .. code-block:: console make VHOST_USER=y To delete a src subdirectory and its contents to allow you to re-clone simply use: .. code-block:: console make clobber Configure the ``./conf/10_custom.conf`` file -------------------------------------------- The supplied ``10_custom.conf`` file must be modified, as it contains configuration items for which there are no reasonable default values. The configuration items that can be added is not limited to the initial contents. Any configuration item mentioned in any .conf file in ``./conf`` directory can be added and that item will be overridden by the custom configuration value. Using a custom settings file ---------------------------- Alternatively a custom settings file can be passed to ``vsperf`` via the ``--conf-file`` argument. .. code-block:: console ./vsperf --conf-file ... Note that configuration passed in via the environment (``--load-env``) or via another command line argument will override both the default and your custom configuration files. This "priority hierarchy" can be described like so (1 = max priority): 1. Command line arguments 2. Environment variables 3. Configuration file(s) -------------- Executing tests --------------- Before running any tests make sure you have root permissions by adding the following line to /etc/sudoers: .. code-block:: console username ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL username in the example above should be replaced with a real username. To list the available tests: .. code-block:: console ./vsperf --list-tests To run a group of tests, for example all tests with a name containing 'RFC2544': .. code-block:: console ./vsperf --conf-file=user_settings.py --tests="RFC2544" To run all tests: .. code-block:: console ./vsperf --conf-file=user_settings.py Some tests allow for configurable parameters, including test duration (in seconds) as well as packet sizes (in bytes). .. code:: bash ./vsperf --conf-file user_settings.py --tests RFC2544Tput --test-param "rfc2544_duration=10;packet_sizes=128" For all available options, check out the help dialog: .. code-block:: console ./vsperf --help -------------- .. |Alt text| image:: images/TCLServerProperties.png