diff options
author | kubi <jean.gaoliang@huawei.com> | 2016-02-23 15:06:46 -0500 |
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committer | Ana Cunha <ana.cunha@ericsson.com> | 2016-02-25 09:50:54 +0000 |
commit | b4f8aabb1f81889effb5aa02e6a7352ef49051d0 (patch) | |
tree | b9dae5eb6b7dc3179902f981664acbf3808c9088 /docs/results/compass-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst | |
parent | 150c038458c717031041c2312c90b20fdb4bf0e6 (diff) |
add test result: compass_os_nosdn_nofeature_ha
Reference to PerH's patch, modify the real value of
every test case, and add two more test cases about ipv6 and parser.
All scenario TCs included, except TC011 which has had an InfluxDB
population problem. this is now solved but too late to run with scenario
in R2 release time frame
JIRA:-
Signed-off-by: kubi <jean.gaoliang@huawei.com>
Change-Id: Ic58613b6bdf45de449ca3f0c381d716f0c03a736
Signed-off-by: kubi <jean.gaoliang@huawei.com>
(cherry picked from commit 19155bef2e194d93efb0fb30929335afbedbaa8d)
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/results/compass-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/results/compass-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst | 109 |
1 files changed, 102 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/docs/results/compass-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst b/docs/results/compass-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst index 3c3359bf5..bc75a2c10 100644 --- a/docs/results/compass-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst +++ b/docs/results/compass-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst @@ -14,25 +14,120 @@ Test Results for compass-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha Details ======= -.. after this doc is filled, remove all comments and include the scenario in -.. results.rst by removing the comment on the file name. - +.. _Grafana: http://130.211.154.108/grafana/dashboard/db/yardstick-main +.. _SC_POD: https://wiki.opnfv.org/pharos?&#community_test_labs Overview of test results ------------------------ -.. general on metrics collected, number of iterations +See Grafana_ for viewing test result metrics for each respective test case. It +is possible to chose which specific scenarios to look at, and then to zoom in +on the details of each run test scenario as well. + +All of the test case results below are based on 5 consecutive scenario test +runs, each run on the Huawei SC_POD_ between February 13 and 18 in 2016. The +best would be to have more runs to draw better conclusions from, but these are +the only runs available at the time of OPNFV R2 release + +TC002 +----- +The round-trip-time (RTT) between 2 VMs on different blades is measured using +ping. The measurements are on average varying between 1.95 and 2.23 ms +with a first 2 - 3.27 ms RTT spike in the beginning of each run (This could be +because of normal ARP handling).SLA set to 10 ms. The SLA value is used as a +reference, it has not been defined by OPNFV. + +TC005 +----- +The IO read bandwidth look similar between different test runs, with an +average at approx. 145-162 MB/s. Within each run the results vary much, +minimum 2MB/s and maximum 712MB/s on the totality. +SLA set to 400KB/s. The SLA value is used as a reference, it has not been +defined by OPNFV. + +TC010 +----- +The measurements for memory latency are consistent among test runs and results +in approx. 1.2 ns. The variations between runs are similar, between +1.215 and 1.278 ns. SLA set to 30 ns. The SLA value is used as +a reference, it has not been defined by OPNFV. + +TC011 +----- +For this scenario no results are available to report on. Probable reason is +an integer/floating point issue regarding how InfluxDB is populated with +result data from the test runs. + +TC012 +----- +The average measurements for memory bandwidth are consistent among most of the +different test runs at 12.98 - 16.73 GB/s. The last test run averages at +16.67 GB/s. Within each run the results vary, with minimal BW of 16.59 +GB/s and maximum of 16.71 GB/s of the totality. +SLA set to 15 GB/s. The SLA value is used as a reference, it has not been +defined by OPNFV. + +TC014 +----- +The Unixbench processor single and parallel speed scores show similar results +at approx. 3000. The runs vary between scores 2499 and 3105. +No SLA set. + +TC027 +----- +The round-trip-time (RTT) between VM1 with ipv6 router on different blades is +measured using ping6. The measurements are consistent at approx. 4 ms. +SLA set to 30 ms.The SLA value is used as a reference, it has not been +defined by OPNFV. + +TC037 +----- +The amount of packets per second (PPS) and round trip times (RTT) between 2 VMs +on different blades are measured when increasing the amount of UDP flows sent +between the VMs using pktgen as packet generator tool. + +Round trip times and packet throughput between VMs are typically affected by +the amount of flows set up and result in higher RTT and less PPS +throughput. + +When running with less than 10000 flows the results are flat and consistent. +RTT is then approx. 30 ms and the number of PPS remains flat at approx. +230000 PPS. Beyond approx. 10000 flows and up to 1000000 (one million) there +is an even drop in RTT and PPS performance, eventually ending up at approx. +105-113 ms and 100000 PPS respectively. + +TC040 +----- +test purpose is to verify the function of Yang-to-Tosca in Parse, and this test +case is a weekly task, so it was triggered by manually, the result whether the +output is same with expected outcome is success +No SLA set. Detailed test results --------------------- -.. info on lab, installer, scenario +The scenario was run on Huawei SC_POD_ with: +Compass 1.0 +OpenStack Liberty +OVS 2.4.0 + +No SDN controller installed Rationale for decisions ----------------------- -.. result analysis, pass/fail +Pass + +Tests were successfully executed and metrics collects (apart from TC011_). +No SLA was verified. To be decided on in next release of OPNFV. Conclusions and recommendations ------------------------------- -.. did the expected behavior occured? +The pktgen test configuration has a relatively large base effect on RTT in +TC037 compared to TC002, where there is no background load at all (30 ms +compared to 1 ms or less, which is more than a 3000 percentage different +in RTT results). The larger amounts of flows in TC037 generate worse +RTT results, in the magnitude of several hundreds of milliseconds. It would +be interesting to also make and compare all these measurements to completely +(optimized) bare metal machines running native Linux with all other relevant +tools available, e.g. lmbench, pktgen etc. |