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diff --git a/docs/release/results/os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst b/docs/release/results/os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9e52731d5 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/release/results/os-nosdn-nofeature-ha.rst @@ -0,0 +1,492 @@ +.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International +.. License. +.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 + + +====================================== +Test Results for os-nosdn-nofeature-ha +====================================== + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 2 + + +apex +==== + +.. _Grafana: http://testresults.opnfv.org/grafana/dashboard/db/yardstick-main +.. _POD1: https://wiki.opnfv.org/pharos?&#community_test_labs + + +Overview of test results +------------------------ + +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 4 scenario test +runs, each run on the LF POD1_ between August 25 and 28 in +2016. + +TC002 +----- +The round-trip-time (RTT) between 2 VMs on different blades is measured using +ping. Most test run measurements result on average between 0.74 and 1.08 ms. +A few runs start with a 0.99 - 1.07 ms RTT spike (This could be because of +normal ARP handling). One test run has a greater RTT spike of 1.35 ms. +To be able to draw conclusions more runs should be made. 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 looks similar between different dates, with an +average between approx. 128 and 136 MB/s. Within each test run the results +vary, with a minimum 5 MB/s and maximum 446 MB/s on the totality. Most runs +have a minimum BW of 5 MB/s (one run at 6 MB/s). The maximum BW varies more in +absolute numbers between the dates, between 416 and 446 MB/s. +SLA set to 400 MB/s. The SLA value is used as a reference, it has not been +defined by OPNFV. + +TC010 +----- +The measurements for memory latency are similar between test dates and result +in approx. 1.09 ns. The variations within each test run are similar, between +1.0860 and 1.0880 ns. +SLA set to 30 ns. The SLA value is used as a reference, it has not been defined +by OPNFV. + +TC011 +----- +Packet delay variation between 2 VMs on different blades is measured using +Iperf3. The reported packet delay variation varies between 0.0025 and 0.0148 ms, +with an average delay variation between 0.0056 ms and 0.0157 ms. + +TC012 +----- +Between test dates, the average measurements for memory bandwidth result in +approx. 19.70 GB/s. Within each test run the results vary more, with a minimal +BW of 18.16 GB/s and maximum of 20.13 GB/s on 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 test run results vary between scores 3224.4 and 3842.8, +one result each date. The average score on the total is 3659.5. +No SLA set. + +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 can typically be affected by +the amount of flows set up and result in higher RTT and less PPS throughput. + +The RTT results are similar throughout the different test dates and runs at +approx. 15 ms. Some test runs show an increase with many flows, in the range +towards 16 to 17 ms. One exception standing out is Feb. 15 where the average +RTT is stable at approx. 13 ms. The PPS results are not as consistent as the +RTT results. +In some test runs when running with less than approx. 10000 flows the PPS +throughput is normally flatter compared to when running with more flows, after +which the PPS throughput decreases. Around 20 percent decrease in the worst +case. For the other test runs there is however no significant change to the PPS +throughput when the number of flows are increased. In some test runs the PPS +is also greater with 1000000 flows compared to other test runs where the PPS +result is less with only 2 flows. + +The average PPS throughput in the different runs varies between 414000 and +452000 PPS. The total amount of packets in each test run is approx. 7500000 to +8200000 packets. One test run Feb. 15 sticks out with a PPS average of +558000 and approx. 1100000 packets in total (same as the on mentioned earlier +for RTT results). + +There are lost packets reported in most of the test runs. There is no observed +correlation between the amount of flows and the amount of lost packets. +The lost amount of packets normally range between 100 and 1000 per test run, +but there are spikes in the range of 10000 lost packets as well, and even +more in a rare cases. + +CPU utilization statistics are collected during UDP flows sent between the VMs +using pktgen as packet generator tool. The average measurements for CPU +utilization ratio vary between 1% to 2%. The peak of CPU utilization ratio +appears around 7%. + +TC069 +----- +Between test dates, the average measurements for memory bandwidth vary between +22.6 and 29.1 GB/s. Within each test run the results vary more, with a minimal +BW of 20.0 GB/s and maximum of 29.5 GB/s on the totality. +SLA set to 6 GB/s. The SLA value is used as a reference, it has not been +defined by OPNFV. + +TC070 +----- +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 can typically be affected by +the amount of flows set up and result in higher RTT and less PPS throughput. + +The RTT results are similar throughout the different test dates and runs at +approx. 15 ms. Some test runs show an increase with many flows, in the range +towards 16 to 17 ms. One exception standing out is Feb. 15 where the average +RTT is stable at approx. 13 ms. The PPS results are not as consistent as the +RTT results. +In some test runs when running with less than approx. 10000 flows the PPS +throughput is normally flatter compared to when running with more flows, after +which the PPS throughput decreases. Around 20 percent decrease in the worst +case. For the other test runs there is however no significant change to the PPS +throughput when the number of flows are increased. In some test runs the PPS +is also greater with 1000000 flows compared to other test runs where the PPS +result is less with only 2 flows. + +The average PPS throughput in the different runs varies between 414000 and +452000 PPS. The total amount of packets in each test run is approx. 7500000 to +8200000 packets. One test run Feb. 15 sticks out with a PPS average of +558000 and approx. 1100000 packets in total (same as the on mentioned earlier +for RTT results). + +There are lost packets reported in most of the test runs. There is no observed +correlation between the amount of flows and the amount of lost packets. +The lost amount of packets normally range between 100 and 1000 per test run, +but there are spikes in the range of 10000 lost packets as well, and even +more in a rare cases. + +Memory utilization statistics are collected during UDP flows sent between the +VMs using pktgen as packet generator tool. The average measurements for memory +utilization vary between 225MB to 246MB. The peak of memory utilization appears +around 340MB. + +TC071 +----- +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 can typically be affected by +the amount of flows set up and result in higher RTT and less PPS throughput. + +The RTT results are similar throughout the different test dates and runs at +approx. 15 ms. Some test runs show an increase with many flows, in the range +towards 16 to 17 ms. One exception standing out is Feb. 15 where the average +RTT is stable at approx. 13 ms. The PPS results are not as consistent as the +RTT results. +In some test runs when running with less than approx. 10000 flows the PPS +throughput is normally flatter compared to when running with more flows, after +which the PPS throughput decreases. Around 20 percent decrease in the worst +case. For the other test runs there is however no significant change to the PPS +throughput when the number of flows are increased. In some test runs the PPS +is also greater with 1000000 flows compared to other test runs where the PPS +result is less with only 2 flows. + +The average PPS throughput in the different runs varies between 414000 and +452000 PPS. The total amount of packets in each test run is approx. 7500000 to +8200000 packets. One test run Feb. 15 sticks out with a PPS average of +558000 and approx. 1100000 packets in total (same as the on mentioned earlier +for RTT results). + +There are lost packets reported in most of the test runs. There is no observed +correlation between the amount of flows and the amount of lost packets. +The lost amount of packets normally range between 100 and 1000 per test run, +but there are spikes in the range of 10000 lost packets as well, and even +more in a rare cases. + +Cache utilization statistics are collected during UDP flows sent between the +VMs using pktgen as packet generator tool. The average measurements for cache +utilization vary between 205MB to 212MB. + +TC072 +----- +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 can typically be affected by +the amount of flows set up and result in higher RTT and less PPS throughput. + +The RTT results are similar throughout the different test dates and runs at +approx. 15 ms. Some test runs show an increase with many flows, in the range +towards 16 to 17 ms. One exception standing out is Feb. 15 where the average +RTT is stable at approx. 13 ms. The PPS results are not as consistent as the +RTT results. +In some test runs when running with less than approx. 10000 flows the PPS +throughput is normally flatter compared to when running with more flows, after +which the PPS throughput decreases. Around 20 percent decrease in the worst +case. For the other test runs there is however no significant change to the PPS +throughput when the number of flows are increased. In some test runs the PPS +is also greater with 1000000 flows compared to other test runs where the PPS +result is less with only 2 flows. + +The average PPS throughput in the different runs varies between 414000 and +452000 PPS. The total amount of packets in each test run is approx. 7500000 to +8200000 packets. One test run Feb. 15 sticks out with a PPS average of +558000 and approx. 1100000 packets in total (same as the on mentioned earlier +for RTT results). + +There are lost packets reported in most of the test runs. There is no observed +correlation between the amount of flows and the amount of lost packets. +The lost amount of packets normally range between 100 and 1000 per test run, +but there are spikes in the range of 10000 lost packets as well, and even +more in a rare cases. + +Network utilization statistics are collected during UDP flows sent between the +VMs using pktgen as packet generator tool. Total number of packets received per +second was average on 200 kpps and total number of packets transmitted per +second was average on 600 kpps. + +Detailed test results +--------------------- +The scenario was run on LF POD1_ with: +Apex +OpenStack Mitaka +OpenVirtualSwitch 2.5.90 +OpenDayLight Beryllium + +Rationale for decisions +----------------------- +Pass + +Tests were successfully executed and metrics collected. +No SLA was verified. To be decided on in next release of OPNFV. + + +Joid +==== + +.. _Grafana: http://testresults.opnfv.org/grafana/dashboard/db/yardstick-main +.. _POD5: https://wiki.opnfv.org/pharos?&#community_test_labs + + +Overview of test results +------------------------ + +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 4 scenario test runs, each run +on the Intel POD5_ between September 11 and 14 in 2016. + +TC002 +----- +The round-trip-time (RTT) between 2 VMs on different blades is measured using +ping. Most test run measurements result on average between 1.59 and 1.70 ms. +Two test runs have reached the same greater RTT spike of 3.06 ms, which are +1.66 and 1.70 ms average, but only one has the lower RTT of 1.35 ms. The other +two runs have no similar spike at all. To be able to draw conclusions more runs +should be made. SLA set to be 10 ms. The SLA value is used as a reference, it +has not been defined by OPNFV. + +TC005 +----- +The IO read bandwidth actually refers to the storage throughput and the +greatest IO read bandwidth of the four runs is 173.3 MB/s. The IO read +bandwidth of the four runs looks similar on different four days, with an +average between 32.7 and 60.4 MB/s. One of the runs has a minimum BW of 429 +KM/s and other has a maximum BW of 173.3 MB/s. The SLA of read bandwidth sets +to be 400 MB/s, which is used as a reference, and it has not been defined by +OPNFV. + +TC010 +----- +The tool we use to measure memory read latency is lmbench, which is a series of +micro benchmarks intended to measure basic operating system and hardware system +metrics. The memory read latency of the four runs is 1.1 ns on average. The +variations within each test run are different, some vary from a large range and +others have a small change. For example, the largest change is on September 14, +the memory read latency of which is ranging from 1.12 ns to 1.22 ns. However, +the results on September 12 change very little, which range from 1.14 ns to +1.17 ns. The SLA sets to be 30 ns. The SLA value is used as a reference, it has +not been defined by OPNFV. + +TC011 +----- +Iperf3 is a tool for evaluating the pocket delay variation between 2 VMs on +different blades. The reported pocket delay variations of the four test runs +differ from each other. The results on September 13 within the date look +similar and the values are between 0.0087 and 0.0190 ms, which is 0.0126 ms on +average. However, on the fourth day, the pocket delay variation has a large +wide change within the date, which ranges from 0.0032 ms to 0.0121 ms and has +the minimum average value. The pocket delay variations of other two test runs +look relatively similar, which are 0.0076 ms and 0.0152 ms on average. The SLA +value sets to be 10 ms. The SLA value is used as a reference, it has not been +defined by OPNFV. + +TC012 +----- +Lmbench is also used to measure the memory read and write bandwidth, in which +we use bw_mem to obtain the results. Among the four test runs, the memory +bandwidth within the second day almost keep stable, which is 11.58 GB/s on +average. And the memory bandwidth of the fourth day look similar as that of the +second day, both of which remain stable. The other two test runs relatively +change from a large wide range, in which the minimum memory bandwidth is 11.22 +GB/s and the maximum bandwidth is 16.65 GB/s with an average bandwidth of about +12.20 GB/s. Here SLA set to be 15 GB/s. The SLA value is used as a reference, +it has not been defined by OPNFV. + +TC014 +----- +The Unixbench is used to measure processing speed, that is instructions per +second. It can be seen from the dashboard that the processing test results +vary from scores 3272 to 3444, and there is only one result one date. The +overall average score is 3371. No SLA set. + +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 can typically be affected by +the amount of flows set up and result in higher RTT and less PPS throughput. + +The mean packet throughput of the four test runs is 119.85, 128.02, 121.40 and +126.08 kpps, of which the result of the second is the highest. The RTT results +of all the test runs keep flat at approx. 37 ms. It is obvious that the PPS +results are not as consistent as the RTT results. + +The No. flows of the four test runs are 240 k on average and the PPS results +look a little waved since the largest packet throughput is 184 kpps and the +minimum throughput is 49 K respectively. + +There are no errors of packets received in the four runs, but there are still +lost packets in all the test runs. The RTT values obtained by ping of the four +runs have the similar average vaue, that is 38 ms, of which the worest RTT is +93 ms on Sep. 14th. + +CPU load of the four test runs have a large change, since the minimum value and +the peak of CPU load is 0 percent and 51 percent respectively. And the best +result is obtained on Sep. 14th. + +TC069 +----- +With the block size changing from 1 kb to 512 kb, the memory write bandwidth +tends to become larger first and then smaller within every run test, which +rangs from 22.3 GB/s to 26.8 GB/s and then to 18.5 GB/s on average. Since the +test id is one, it is that only the INT memory write bandwidth is tested. On +the whole, when the block size is 8 kb and 16 kb, the memory write bandwidth +look similar with a minimal BW of 22.5 GB/s and peak value of 28.7 GB/s. SLA +sets to be 7 GB/s. The SLA value is used as a a reference, it has not been +defined by OPNFV. + +TC070 +----- +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 can typically be affected by +the amount of flows set up and result in higher RTT and less PPS throughput. + +The network latency is measured by ping, and the results of the four test runs +look similar with each other. Within each test run, the maximum RTT can reach +more than 80 ms and the average RTT is usually approx. 38 ms. On the whole, the +average RTTs of the four runs keep flat. + +Memory utilization is measured by free, which can display amount of free and +used memory in the system. The largest amount of used memory is 268 MiB on Sep +14, which also has the largest minimum memory. Besides, the rest three test +runs have the similar used memory. On the other hand, the free memory of the +four runs have the same smallest minimum value, that is about 223 MiB, and the +maximum free memory of three runs have the similar result, that is 337 MiB, +except that on Sep. 14th, whose maximum free memory is 254 MiB. On the whole, +all the test runs have similar average free memory. + +Network throughput and packet loss can be measured by pktgen, which is a tool +in the network for generating traffic loads for network experiments. The mean +network throughput of the four test runs seem quite different, ranging from +119.85 kpps to 128.02 kpps. The average number of flows in these tests is +24000, and each run has a minimum number of flows of 2 and a maximum number +of flows of 1.001 Mil. At the same time, the corresponding packet throughput +differ between 49.4k and 193.3k with an average packet throughput of approx. +125k. On the whole, the PPS results seem consistent. Within each test run of +the four runs, when number of flows becomes larger, the packet throughput seems +not larger in the meantime. + +TC071 +----- +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 can typically be affected by +the amount of flows set up and result in higher RTT and less PPS throughput. + +The network latency is measured by ping, and the results of the four test runs +look similar with each other. Within each test run, the maximum RTT can reach +more than 94 ms and the average RTT is usually approx. 35 ms. On the whole, the +average RTTs of the four runs keep flat. + +Cache utilization is measured by cachestat, which can display size of cache and +buffer in the system. Cache utilization statistics are collected during UDP +flows sent between the VMs using pktgen as packet generator tool.The largest +cache size is 212 MiB in the four runs, and the smallest cache size is 75 MiB. +On the whole, the average cache size of the four runs is approx. 208 MiB. +Meanwhile, the tread of the buffer size looks similar with each other. + +Packet throughput can be measured by pktgen, which is a tool in the network for +generating traffic loads for network experiments. The mean packet throughput of +the four test runs seem quite different, ranging from 119.85 kpps to 128.02 +kpps. The average number of flows in these tests is 239.7k, and each run has a +minimum number of flows of 2 and a maximum number of flows of 1.001 Mil. At the +same time, the corresponding packet throughput differ between 49.4k and 193.3k +with an average packet throughput of approx. 125k. On the whole, the PPS results +seem consistent. Within each test run of the four runs, when number of flows +becomes larger, the packet throughput seems not larger in the meantime. + +TC072 +----- +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 can typically be affected by +the amount of flows set up and result in higher RTT and less PPS throughput. + +The RTT results are similar throughout the different test dates and runs at +approx. 32 ms. The PPS results are not as consistent as the RTT results. + +Network utilization is measured by sar, that is system activity reporter, which +can display the average statistics for the time since the system was started. +Network utilization statistics are collected during UDP flows sent between the +VMs using pktgen as packet generator tool. The largest total number of packets +transmitted per second differs from each other, in which the smallest number of +packets transmitted per second is 6 pps on Sep. 12ed and the largest of that is +210.8 kpps. Meanwhile, the largest total number of packets received per second +differs from each other, in which the smallest number of packets received per +second is 2 pps on Sep. 13rd and the largest of that is 250.2 kpps. + +In some test runs when running with less than approx. 90000 flows the PPS +throughput is normally flatter compared to when running with more flows, after +which the PPS throughput decreases. For the other test runs there is however no +significant change to the PPS throughput when the number of flows are +increased. In some test runs the PPS is also greater with 1000000 flows +compared to other test runs where the PPS result is less with only 2 flows. + +There are lost packets reported in most of the test runs. There is no observed +correlation between the amount of flows and the amount of lost packets. +The lost amount of packets normally differs a lot per test run. + +Detailed test results +--------------------- +The scenario was run on Intel POD5_ with: +Joid +OpenStack Mitaka +OpenVirtualSwitch 2.5.90 +OpenDayLight Beryllium + +Rationale for decisions +----------------------- +Pass + +Conclusions and recommendations +------------------------------- +Tests were successfully executed and metrics collected. +No SLA was verified. To be decided on in next release of OPNFV. + + |