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.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
.. (c) OPNFV, Intel Corporation, AT&T and others.
vSwitchPerf test suites userguide
---------------------------------
General
^^^^^^^
VSPERF requires a traffic generators to run tests, automated traffic gen
support in VSPERF includes:
- IXIA traffic generator (IxNetwork hardware) and a machine that runs the IXIA
client software.
- Spirent traffic generator (TestCenter hardware chassis or TestCenter virtual
in a VM) and a VM to run the Spirent Virtual Deployment Service image,
formerly known as "Spirent LabServer".
If you want to use another traffic generator, please select the Dummy generator
option as shown in `Traffic generator instructions
<http://artifacts.opnfv.org/vswitchperf/docs/configguide/trafficgen.html>`__
VSPERF Installation
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
To see the supported Operating Systems, vSwitches and system requirements,
please follow the `installation instructions
<http://artifacts.opnfv.org/vswitchperf/docs/configguide/installation.html>`__ to
install.
Traffic Generator Setup
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Follow the `Traffic generator instructions
<http://artifacts.opnfv.org/vswitchperf/docs/configguide/trafficgen.html>`__ to
install and configure a suitable traffic generator.
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 stock OVS (without DPDK support). When build
is finished, the libraries are stored in src_vanilla directory.
The 'make' builds all options in src:
* Vanilla OVS
* OVS with vhost_user as the guest access method (with DPDK support)
* OVS with vhost_cuse s the guest access method (with DPDK support)
The vhost_user build will reside in src/ovs/
The vhost_cuse build will reside in vswitchperf/src_cuse
The Vanilla OVS build will reside in vswitchperf/src_vanilla
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 ``10_custom.conf`` file is the configuration file that overrides
default configurations in all the other configuration files in ``./conf``
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
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
If your ``10_custom.conf`` doesn't reside in the ``./conf`` directory
of if you want to use an alternative configuration file, the file can
be passed to ``vsperf`` via the ``--conf-file`` argument.
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --conf-file <path_to_custom_conf> ...
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)
vloop_vnf
^^^^^^^^^
vsperf uses a VM called vloop_vnf for looping traffic in the PVP and PVVP
deployment scenarios. The image can be downloaded from
`<http://artifacts.opnfv.org/>`__.
.. code-block:: console
$ wget http://artifacts.opnfv.org/vswitchperf/vloop-vnf-ubuntu-14.04_20151216.qcow2
vloop_vnf forwards traffic through a VM using one of:
* DPDK testpmd
* Linux Bridge
* l2fwd kernel Module.
Alternatively you can use your own QEMU image.
l2fwd Kernel Module
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
A Kernel Module that provides OSI Layer 2 Ipv4 termination or forwarding with
support for Destination Network Address Translation (DNAT) for both the MAC and
IP addresses. l2fwd can be found in <vswitchperf_dir>/src/l2fwd
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
To run a single test:
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf $TESTNAME
Where $TESTNAME is the name of the vsperf test you would like to run.
To run a group of tests, for example all tests with a name containing
'RFC2544':
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --conf-file=<path_to_custom_conf>/10_custom.conf --tests="RFC2544"
To run all tests:
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --conf-file=<path_to_custom_conf>/10_custom.conf
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 "duration=10;pkt_sizes=128"
For all available options, check out the help dialog:
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --help
Executing Vanilla OVS tests
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1. If needed, recompile src for all OVS variants
.. code-block:: console
$ cd src
$ make distclean
$ make
2. Update your ''10_custom.conf'' file to use the appropriate variables
for Vanilla OVS:
.. code-block:: console
VSWITCH = 'OvsVanilla'
VSWITCH_VANILLA_PHY_PORT_NAMES = ['$PORT1', '$PORT1']
Where $PORT1 and $PORT2 are the Linux interfaces you'd like to bind
to the vswitch.
3. Run test:
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --conf-file=<path_to_custom_conf>
Please note if you don't want to configure Vanilla OVS through the
configuration file, you can pass it as a CLI argument; BUT you must
set the ports.
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --vswitch OvsVanilla
Executing PVP and PVVP tests
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
To run tests using vhost-user as guest access method:
1. Set VHOST_METHOD and VNF of your settings file to:
.. code-block:: console
VHOST_METHOD='user'
VNF = 'QemuDpdkVhost'
2. If needed, recompile src for all OVS variants
.. code-block:: console
$ cd src
$ make distclean
$ make
3. Run test:
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --conf-file=<path_to_custom_conf>/10_custom.conf
To run tests using vhost-cuse as guest access method:
1. Set VHOST_METHOD and VNF of your settings file to:
.. code-block:: console
VHOST_METHOD='cuse'
VNF = 'QemuDpdkVhostCuse'
2. If needed, recompile src for all OVS variants
.. code-block:: console
$ cd src
$ make distclean
$ make
3. Run test:
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --conf-file=<path_to_custom_conf>/10_custom.conf
Executing PVP tests using Vanilla OVS
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
To run tests using Vanilla OVS:
1. Set the following variables:
.. code-block:: console
VSWITCH = 'OvsVanilla'
VNF = 'QemuVirtioNet'
VANILLA_TGEN_PORT1_IP = n.n.n.n
VANILLA_TGEN_PORT1_MAC = nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn
VANILLA_TGEN_PORT2_IP = n.n.n.n
VANILLA_TGEN_PORT2_MAC = nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn
VANILLA_BRIDGE_IP = n.n.n.n
or use --test-param
$ ./vsperf --conf-file=<path_to_custom_conf>/10_custom.conf
--test-param "vanilla_tgen_tx_ip=n.n.n.n;
vanilla_tgen_tx_mac=nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn"
2. If needed, recompile src for all OVS variants
.. code-block:: console
$ cd src
$ make distclean
$ make
3. Run test:
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --conf-file<path_to_custom_conf>/10_custom.conf
Selection of loopback application for PVP and PVVP tests
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
To select loopback application, which will perform traffic forwarding
inside VM, following configuration parameter should be configured:
.. code-block:: console
GUEST_LOOPBACK = ['testpmd', 'testpmd']
or use --test-param
.. code-block:: console
$ ./vsperf --conf-file=<path_to_custom_conf>/10_custom.conf
--test-param "guest_loopback=testpmd"
Supported loopback applications are:
.. code-block:: console
'testpmd' - testpmd from dpdk will be built and used
'l2fwd' - l2fwd module provided by Huawei will be built and used
'linux_bridge' - linux bridge will be configured
'buildin' - nothing will be configured by vsperf; VM image must
ensure traffic forwarding between its interfaces
Guest loopback application must be configured, otherwise traffic
will not be forwarded by VM and testcases with PVP and PVVP deployments
will fail. Guest loopback application is set to 'testpmd' by default.
Code change verification by pylint
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Every developer participating in VSPERF project should run
pylint before his python code is submitted for review. Project
specific configuration for pylint is available at 'pylint.rc'.
Example of manual pylint invocation:
.. code-block:: console
$ pylint --rcfile ./pylintrc ./vsperf
GOTCHAs:
^^^^^^^^
OVS with DPDK and QEMU
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you encounter the following error: "before (last 100 chars):
'-path=/dev/hugepages,share=on: unable to map backing store for
hugepages: Cannot allocate memory\r\n\r\n" with the PVP or PVVP
deployment scenario, check the amount of hugepages on your system:
.. code-block:: console
$ cat /proc/meminfo | grep HugePages
By default the vswitchd is launched with 1Gb of memory, to change
this, modify --socket-mem parameter in conf/02_vswitch.conf to allocate
an appropriate amount of memory:
.. code-block:: console
VSWITCHD_DPDK_ARGS = ['-c', '0x4', '-n', '4', '--socket-mem 1024,0']
More information
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For more information and details refer to the vSwitchPerf user guide at:
http://artifacts.opnfv.org/vswitchperf/brahmaputra/userguide/index.html
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