1.. BSD LICENSE 2 Copyright(c) 2010-2014 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. 3 All rights reserved. 4 5 Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 6 modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 7 are met: 8 9 * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 10 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 11 * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 12 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in 13 the documentation and/or other materials provided with the 14 distribution. 15 * Neither the name of Intel Corporation nor the names of its 16 contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived 17 from this software without specific prior written permission. 18 19 THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS 20 "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT 21 LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR 22 A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT 23 OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, 24 SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT 25 LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, 26 DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY 27 THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT 28 (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE 29 OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 30 31System Requirements 32=================== 33 34This chapter describes the packages required to compile the DPDK. 35 36.. note:: 37 38 If the DPDK is being used on an Intel® Communications Chipset 89xx Series platform, 39 please consult the *Intel® Communications Chipset 89xx Series Software for Linux* Getting Started Guide*. 40 41BIOS Setting Prerequisite on x86 42-------------------------------- 43 44For the majority of platforms, no special BIOS settings are needed to use basic DPDK functionality. 45However, for additional HPET timer and power management functionality, 46and high performance of small packets on 40G NIC, BIOS setting changes may be needed. 47Consult :ref:`Chapter 5. Enabling Additional Functionality <Enabling_Additional_Functionality>` 48for more information on the required changes. 49 50Compilation of the DPDK 51----------------------- 52 53**Required Tools:** 54 55.. note:: 56 57 Testing has been performed using Fedora* 18. The setup commands and installed packages needed on other systems may be different. 58 For details on other Linux distributions and the versions tested, please consult the DPDK Release Notes. 59 60* GNU make 61 62* coreutils: cmp, sed, grep, arch 63 64* gcc: versions 4.5.x or later is recommended for i686/x86_64. versions 4.8.x or later is recommended 65 for ppc_64 and x86_x32 ABI. On some distributions, some specific compiler flags and linker flags are enabled by 66 default and affect performance (- fstack-protector, for example). Please refer to the documentation 67 of your distribution and to gcc -dumpspecs. 68 69* libc headers (glibc-devel.i686 / libc6-dev-i386; glibc-devel.x86_64 for 64-bit compilation on Intel 70 architecture; glibc-devel.ppc64 for 64 bit IBM Power architecture;) 71 72* Linux kernel headers or sources required to build kernel modules. (kernel - devel.x86_64; 73 kernel - devel.ppc64) 74 75* Additional packages required for 32-bit compilation on 64-bit systems are: 76 77 glibc.i686, libgcc.i686, libstdc++.i686 and glibc-devel.i686 for Intel i686/x86_64; 78 79 glibc.ppc64, libgcc.ppc64, libstdc++.ppc64 and glibc-devel.ppc64 for IBM ppc_64; 80 81.. note:: 82 83 x86_x32 ABI is currently supported with distribution packages only on Ubuntu 84 higher than 13.10 or recent Debian distribution. The only supported compiler is gcc 4.8+. 85 86.. note:: 87 88 Python, version 2.6 or 2.7, to use various helper scripts included in the DPDK package 89 90 91**Optional Tools:** 92 93* Intel® C++ Compiler (icc). For installation, additional libraries may be required. 94 See the icc Installation Guide found in the Documentation directory under the compiler installation. 95 This release has been tested using version 12.1. 96 97* IBM® Advance ToolChain for Powerlinux. This is a set of open source development tools and runtime libraries 98 which allows users to take leading edge advantage of IBM's latest POWER hardware features on Linux. To install 99 it, see the IBM official installation document. 100 101* libpcap headers and libraries (libpcap-devel) to compile and use the libpcap-based poll-mode driver. 102 This driver is disabled by default and can be enabled by setting CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_PMD_PCAP=y in the build time config file. 103 104Running DPDK Applications 105------------------------- 106 107To run an DPDK application, some customization may be required on the target machine. 108 109System Software 110~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 111 112**Required:** 113 114* Kernel version >= 2.6.33 115 116 The kernel version in use can be checked using the command: 117 118 .. code-block:: console 119 120 uname -r 121 122For details of the patches needed to use the DPDK with earlier kernel versions, 123see the DPDK FAQ included in the *DPDK Release Notes*. 124Note also that Red hat* Linux* 6.2 and 6.3 uses a 2.6.32 kernel that already has all the necessary patches applied. 125 126* glibc >= 2.7 (for features related to cpuset) 127 128 The version can be checked using the ldd --version command. A sample output is shown below: 129 130 .. code-block:: console 131 132 # ldd --version 133 134 ldd (GNU libc) 2.14.90 135 Copyright (C) 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 136 This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO 137 warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. 138 Written by Roland McGrath and Ulrich Drepper. 139 140* Kernel configuration 141 142 In the Fedora* OS and other common distributions, such as Ubuntu*, or Red Hat Enterprise Linux*, 143 the vendor supplied kernel configurations can be used to run most DPDK applications. 144 145 For other kernel builds, options which should be enabled for DPDK include: 146 147 * UIO support 148 149 * HUGETLBFS 150 151 * PROC_PAGE_MONITOR support 152 153 * HPET and HPET_MMAP configuration options should also be enabled if HPET support is required. 154 See :ref:`Section 5.1 High Precision Event Timer (HPET) Functionality <High_Precision_Event_Timer>` for more details. 155 156Use of Hugepages in the Linux* Environment 157~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 158 159Hugepage support is required for the large memory pool allocation used for packet buffers 160(the HUGETLBFS option must be enabled in the running kernel as indicated in Section 2.3). 161By using hugepage allocations, performance is increased since fewer pages are needed, 162and therefore less Translation Lookaside Buffers (TLBs, high speed translation caches), 163which reduce the time it takes to translate a virtual page address to a physical page address. 164Without hugepages, high TLB miss rates would occur with the standard 4k page size, slowing performance. 165 166Reserving Hugepages for DPDK Use 167^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 168 169The allocation of hugepages should be done at boot time or as soon as possible after system boot 170to prevent memory from being fragmented in physical memory. 171To reserve hugepages at boot time, a parameter is passed to the Linux* kernel on the kernel command line. 172 173For 2 MB pages, just pass the hugepages option to the kernel. For example, to reserve 1024 pages of 2 MB, use: 174 175.. code-block:: console 176 177 hugepages=1024 178 179For other hugepage sizes, for example 1G pages, the size must be specified explicitly and 180can also be optionally set as the default hugepage size for the system. 181For example, to reserve 4G of hugepage memory in the form of four 1G pages, the following options should be passed to the kernel: 182 183.. code-block:: console 184 185 default_hugepagesz=1G hugepagesz=1G hugepages=4 186 187.. note:: 188 189 The hugepage sizes that a CPU supports can be determined from the CPU flags on Intel architecture. 190 If pse exists, 2M hugepages are supported; if pdpe1gb exists, 1G hugepages are supported. 191 On IBM Power architecture, the supported hugepage sizes are 16MB and 16GB. 192 193.. note:: 194 195 For 64-bit applications, it is recommended to use 1 GB hugepages if the platform supports them. 196 197In the case of a dual-socket NUMA system, 198the number of hugepages reserved at boot time is generally divided equally between the two sockets 199(on the assumption that sufficient memory is present on both sockets). 200 201See the Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt file in your Linux* source tree for further details of these and other kernel options. 202 203**Alternative:** 204 205For 2 MB pages, there is also the option of allocating hugepages after the system has booted. 206This is done by echoing the number of hugepages required to a nr_hugepages file in the /sys/devices/ directory. 207For a single-node system, the command to use is as follows (assuming that 1024 pages are required): 208 209.. code-block:: console 210 211 echo 1024 > /sys/kernel/mm/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages 212 213On a NUMA machine, pages should be allocated explicitly on separate nodes: 214 215.. code-block:: console 216 217 echo 1024 > /sys/devices/system/node/node0/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages 218 echo 1024 > /sys/devices/system/node/node1/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages 219 220.. note:: 221 222 For 1G pages, it is not possible to reserve the hugepage memory after the system has booted. 223 224Using Hugepages with the DPDK 225^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 226 227Once the hugepage memory is reserved, to make the memory available for DPDK use, perform the following steps: 228 229.. code-block:: console 230 231 mkdir /mnt/huge 232 mount -t hugetlbfs nodev /mnt/huge 233 234The mount point can be made permanent across reboots, by adding the following line to the /etc/fstab file: 235 236.. code-block:: console 237 238 nodev /mnt/huge hugetlbfs defaults 0 0 239 240For 1GB pages, the page size must be specified as a mount option: 241 242.. code-block:: console 243 244 nodev /mnt/huge_1GB hugetlbfs pagesize=1GB 0 0 245 246Xen Domain0 Support in the Linux* Environment 247~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 248 249The existing memory management implementation is based on the Linux* kernel hugepage mechanism. 250On the Xen hypervisor, hugepage support for DomainU (DomU) Guests means that DPDK applications work as normal for guests. 251 252However, Domain0 (Dom0) does not support hugepages. 253To work around this limitation, a new kernel module rte_dom0_mm is added to facilitate the allocation and mapping of memory via 254**IOCTL** (allocation) and **MMAP** (mapping). 255 256Enabling Xen Dom0 Mode in the DPDK 257^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 258 259By default, Xen Dom0 mode is disabled in the DPDK build configuration files. 260To support Xen Dom0, the CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_XEN_DOM0 setting should be changed to “y”, which enables the Xen Dom0 mode at compile time. 261 262Furthermore, the CONFIG_RTE_EAL_ALLOW_INV_SOCKET_ID setting should also be changed to “y” in the case of the wrong socket ID being received. 263 264Loading the DPDK rte_dom0_mm Module 265^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 266 267To run any DPDK application on Xen Dom0, the rte_dom0_mm module must be loaded into the running kernel with rsv_memsize option. 268The module is found in the kmod sub-directory of the DPDK target directory. 269This module should be loaded using the insmod command as shown below (assuming that the current directory is the DPDK target directory): 270 271.. code-block:: console 272 273 sudo insmod kmod/rte_dom0_mm.ko rsv_memsize=X 274 275The value X cannot be greater than 4096(MB). 276 277Configuring Memory for DPDK Use 278^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 279 280After the rte_dom0_mm.ko kernel module has been loaded, the user must configure the memory size for DPDK usage. 281This is done by echoing the memory size to a memsize file in the /sys/devices/ directory. 282Use the following command (assuming that 2048 MB is required): 283 284.. code-block:: console 285 286 echo 2048 > /sys/kernel/mm/dom0-mm/memsize-mB/memsize 287 288The user can also check how much memory has already been used: 289 290.. code-block:: console 291 292 cat /sys/kernel/mm/dom0-mm/memsize-mB/memsize_rsvd 293 294Xen Domain0 does not support NUMA configuration, as a result the --socket-mem command line option is invalid for Xen Domain0. 295 296.. note:: 297 298 The memsize value cannot be greater than the rsv_memsize value. 299 300Running the DPDK Application on Xen Domain0 301^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 302 303To run the DPDK application on Xen Domain0, an extra command line option --xen-dom0 is required. 304