1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause 2 Copyright(c) 2010-2014 Intel Corporation. 3 4System Requirements 5=================== 6 7This chapter describes the packages required to compile the DPDK. 8 9.. note:: 10 11 If the DPDK is being used on an Intel® Communications Chipset 89xx Series platform, 12 please consult the *Intel® Communications Chipset 89xx Series Software for Linux Getting Started Guide*. 13 14BIOS Setting Prerequisite on x86 15-------------------------------- 16 17For the majority of platforms, no special BIOS settings are needed to use basic DPDK functionality. 18However, for additional HPET timer and power management functionality, 19and high performance of small packets, BIOS setting changes may be needed. 20Consult the section on :ref:`Enabling Additional Functionality <Enabling_Additional_Functionality>` 21for more information on the required changes. 22 23.. note:: 24 25 If UEFI secure boot is enabled, the Linux kernel may disallow the use of 26 UIO on the system. Therefore, devices for use by DPDK should be bound to the 27 ``vfio-pci`` kernel module rather than ``igb_uio`` or ``uio_pci_generic``. 28 For more details see :ref:`linux_gsg_binding_kernel`. 29 30Compilation of the DPDK 31----------------------- 32 33**Required Tools and Libraries:** 34 35.. note:: 36 37 The setup commands and installed packages needed on various systems may be different. 38 For details on Linux distributions and the versions tested, please consult the DPDK Release Notes. 39 40* General development tools including a supported C compiler such as gcc (version 4.9+) or clang (version 3.4+). 41 42 * For RHEL/Fedora systems these can be installed using ``dnf groupinstall "Development Tools"`` 43 44 * For Ubuntu/Debian systems these can be installed using ``apt install build-essential`` 45 46* Python 3.5 or later. 47 48* Meson (version 0.47.1+) and ninja 49 50 * ``meson`` & ``ninja-build`` packages in most Linux distributions 51 52 * If the packaged version is below the minimum version, the latest versions 53 can be installed from Python's "pip" repository: ``pip3 install meson ninja`` 54 55* Library for handling NUMA (Non Uniform Memory Access). 56 57 * ``numactl-devel`` in RHEL/Fedora; 58 59 * ``libnuma-dev`` in Debian/Ubuntu; 60 61.. note:: 62 63 Please ensure that the latest patches are applied to third party libraries 64 and software to avoid any known vulnerabilities. 65 66 67**Optional Tools:** 68 69* Intel® C++ Compiler (icc). For installation, additional libraries may be required. 70 See the icc Installation Guide found in the Documentation directory under the compiler installation. 71 72* IBM® Advance ToolChain for Powerlinux. This is a set of open source development tools and runtime libraries 73 which allows users to take leading edge advantage of IBM's latest POWER hardware features on Linux. To install 74 it, see the IBM official installation document. 75 76**Additional Libraries** 77 78A number of DPDK components, such as libraries and poll-mode drivers (PMDs) have additional dependencies. 79For DPDK builds, the presence or absence of these dependencies will be automatically detected 80enabling or disabling the relevant components appropriately. 81 82In each case, the relevant library development package (``-devel`` or ``-dev``) is needed to build the DPDK components. 83 84For libraries the additional dependencies include: 85 86* libarchive: for some unit tests using tar to get their resources. 87 88* libelf: to compile and use the bpf library. 89 90For poll-mode drivers, the additional dependencies for each driver can be 91found in that driver's documentation in the relevant DPDK guide document, 92e.g. :doc:`../nics/index` 93 94 95Building DPDK Applications 96-------------------------- 97 98The tool pkg-config or pkgconf, integrated in most build systems, 99must be used to parse options and dependencies from libdpdk.pc. 100 101.. note:: 102 103 pkg-config 0.27, supplied with RHEL-7, 104 does not process the Libs.private section correctly, 105 resulting in statically linked applications not being linked properly. 106 107 108Running DPDK Applications 109------------------------- 110 111To run a DPDK application, some customization may be required on the target machine. 112 113System Software 114~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 115 116**Required:** 117 118* Kernel version >= 3.16 119 120 The kernel version required is based on the oldest long term stable kernel available 121 at kernel.org when the DPDK version is in development. 122 Compatibility for recent distribution kernels will be kept, notably RHEL/CentOS 7. 123 124 The kernel version in use can be checked using the command:: 125 126 uname -r 127 128* glibc >= 2.7 (for features related to cpuset) 129 130 The version can be checked using the ``ldd --version`` command. 131 132* Kernel configuration 133 134 In the Fedora OS and other common distributions, such as Ubuntu, or Red Hat Enterprise Linux, 135 the vendor supplied kernel configurations can be used to run most DPDK applications. 136 137 For other kernel builds, options which should be enabled for DPDK include: 138 139 * HUGETLBFS 140 141 * PROC_PAGE_MONITOR support 142 143 * HPET and HPET_MMAP configuration options should also be enabled if HPET support is required. 144 See the section on :ref:`High Precision Event Timer (HPET) Functionality <High_Precision_Event_Timer>` for more details. 145 146.. _linux_gsg_hugepages: 147 148Use of Hugepages in the Linux Environment 149~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 150 151Hugepage support is required for the large memory pool allocation used for packet buffers 152(the HUGETLBFS option must be enabled in the running kernel as indicated the previous section). 153By using hugepage allocations, performance is increased since fewer pages are needed, 154and therefore less Translation Lookaside Buffers (TLBs, high speed translation caches), 155which reduce the time it takes to translate a virtual page address to a physical page address. 156Without hugepages, high TLB miss rates would occur with the standard 4k page size, slowing performance. 157 158Reserving Hugepages for DPDK Use 159^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 160 161The reservation of hugepages can be performed at run time. 162This is done by echoing the number of hugepages required 163to a ``nr_hugepages`` file in the ``/sys/kernel/`` directory 164corresponding to a specific page size (in Kilobytes). 165For a single-node system, the command to use is as follows 166(assuming that 1024 of 2MB pages are required):: 167 168 echo 1024 > /sys/kernel/mm/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages 169 170On a NUMA machine, the above command will usually divide the number of hugepages 171equally across all NUMA nodes (assuming there is enough memory on all NUMA nodes). 172However, pages can also be reserved explicitly on individual NUMA nodes 173using a ``nr_hugepages`` file in the ``/sys/devices/`` directory:: 174 175 echo 1024 > /sys/devices/system/node/node0/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages 176 echo 1024 > /sys/devices/system/node/node1/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages 177 178.. note:: 179 180 Some kernel versions may not allow reserving 1 GB hugepages at run time, 181 so reserving them at boot time may be the only option. 182 Please see below for instructions. 183 184**Alternative:** 185 186In the general case, reserving hugepages at run time is perfectly fine, 187but in use cases where having lots of physically contiguous memory is required, 188it is preferable to reserve hugepages at boot time, 189as that will help in preventing physical memory from becoming heavily fragmented. 190 191To reserve hugepages at boot time, a parameter is passed to the Linux kernel on the kernel command line. 192 193For 2 MB pages, just pass the hugepages option to the kernel. For example, to reserve 1024 pages of 2 MB, use:: 194 195 hugepages=1024 196 197For other hugepage sizes, for example 1G pages, the size must be specified explicitly and 198can also be optionally set as the default hugepage size for the system. 199For example, to reserve 4G of hugepage memory in the form of four 1G pages, the following options should be passed to the kernel:: 200 201 default_hugepagesz=1G hugepagesz=1G hugepages=4 202 203.. note:: 204 205 The hugepage sizes that a CPU supports can be determined from the CPU flags on Intel architecture. 206 If pse exists, 2M hugepages are supported; if pdpe1gb exists, 1G hugepages are supported. 207 On IBM Power architecture, the supported hugepage sizes are 16MB and 16GB. 208 209.. note:: 210 211 For 64-bit applications, it is recommended to use 1 GB hugepages if the platform supports them. 212 213In the case of a dual-socket NUMA system, 214the number of hugepages reserved at boot time is generally divided equally between the two sockets 215(on the assumption that sufficient memory is present on both sockets). 216 217See the Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt file in your Linux source tree for further details of these and other kernel options. 218 219Using Hugepages with the DPDK 220^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 221 222If secondary process support is not required, DPDK is able to use hugepages 223without any configuration by using "in-memory" mode. 224Please see :doc:`linux_eal_parameters` for more details. 225 226If secondary process support is required, 227mount points for hugepages need to be created. 228On modern Linux distributions, a default mount point for hugepages 229is provided by the system and is located at ``/dev/hugepages``. 230This mount point will use the default hugepage size 231set by the kernel parameters as described above. 232 233However, in order to use hugepage sizes other than the default, it is necessary 234to manually create mount points for those hugepage sizes (e.g. 1GB pages). 235 236To make the hugepages of size 1GB available for DPDK use, 237following steps must be performed:: 238 239 mkdir /mnt/huge 240 mount -t hugetlbfs pagesize=1GB /mnt/huge 241 242The mount point can be made permanent across reboots, by adding the following line to the ``/etc/fstab`` file:: 243 244 nodev /mnt/huge hugetlbfs pagesize=1GB 0 0 245