xref: /dpdk/doc/guides/prog_guide/env_abstraction_layer.rst (revision e1ed63b0bdc9a5ded98efdf3cf7366e87fa27587)
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30fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
31fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger.. _Environment_Abstraction_Layer:
32fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
33fc1f2750SBernard IremongerEnvironment Abstraction Layer
34fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger=============================
35fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
36fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL) is responsible for gaining access to low-level resources such as hardware and memory space.
37fc1f2750SBernard IremongerIt provides a generic interface that hides the environment specifics from the applications and libraries.
38fc1f2750SBernard IremongerIt is the responsibility of the initialization routine to decide how to allocate these resources
39fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger(that is, memory space, PCI devices, timers, consoles, and so on).
40fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
41fc1f2750SBernard IremongerTypical services expected from the EAL are:
42fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
4348624fd9SSiobhan Butler*   DPDK Loading and Launching:
4448624fd9SSiobhan Butler    The DPDK and its application are linked as a single application and must be loaded by some means.
45fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
46fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger*   Core Affinity/Assignment Procedures:
47fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    The EAL provides mechanisms for assigning execution units to specific cores as well as creating execution instances.
48fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
49fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger*   System Memory Reservation:
50fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    The EAL facilitates the reservation of different memory zones, for example, physical memory areas for device interactions.
51fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
52fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger*   PCI Address Abstraction: The EAL provides an interface to access PCI address space.
53fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
54fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger*   Trace and Debug Functions: Logs, dump_stack, panic and so on.
55fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
56fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger*   Utility Functions: Spinlocks and atomic counters that are not provided in libc.
57fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
58fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger*   CPU Feature Identification: Determine at runtime if a particular feature, for example, Intel® AVX is supported.
59fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    Determine if the current CPU supports the feature set that the binary was compiled for.
60fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
61fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger*   Interrupt Handling: Interfaces to register/unregister callbacks to specific interrupt sources.
62fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
63fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger*   Alarm Functions: Interfaces to set/remove callbacks to be run at a specific time.
64fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
65fc1f2750SBernard IremongerEAL in a Linux-userland Execution Environment
66fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger---------------------------------------------
67fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
6848624fd9SSiobhan ButlerIn a Linux user space environment, the DPDK application runs as a user-space application using the pthread library.
691c29883cSBruce RichardsonPCI information about devices and address space is discovered through the /sys kernel interface and through kernel modules such as uio_pci_generic, or igb_uio.
70fc1f2750SBernard IremongerRefer to the UIO: User-space drivers documentation in the Linux kernel. This memory is mmap'd in the application.
71fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
72fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe EAL performs physical memory allocation using mmap() in hugetlbfs (using huge page sizes to increase performance).
7348624fd9SSiobhan ButlerThis memory is exposed to DPDK service layers such as the :ref:`Mempool Library <Mempool_Library>`.
74fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
7548624fd9SSiobhan ButlerAt this point, the DPDK services layer will be initialized, then through pthread setaffinity calls,
76fc1f2750SBernard Iremongereach execution unit will be assigned to a specific logical core to run as a user-level thread.
77fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
78fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe time reference is provided by the CPU Time-Stamp Counter (TSC) or by the HPET kernel API through a mmap() call.
79fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
80fc1f2750SBernard IremongerInitialization and Core Launching
81fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
82fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
83fc1f2750SBernard IremongerPart of the initialization is done by the start function of glibc.
84fc1f2750SBernard IremongerA check is also performed at initialization time to ensure that the micro architecture type chosen in the config file is supported by the CPU.
85fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThen, the main() function is called. The core initialization and launch is done in rte_eal_init() (see the API documentation).
86fc1f2750SBernard IremongerIt consist of calls to the pthread library (more specifically, pthread_self(), pthread_create(), and pthread_setaffinity_np()).
87fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
88fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger.. _pg_figure_2:
89fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
90fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger**Figure 2. EAL Initialization in a Linux Application Environment**
91fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
92fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger.. image3_png has been replaced
93fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
94fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger|linuxapp_launch|
95fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
96fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger.. note::
97fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
98fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    Initialization of objects, such as memory zones, rings, memory pools, lpm tables and hash tables,
99fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    should be done as part of the overall application initialization on the master lcore.
100fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    The creation and initialization functions for these objects are not multi-thread safe.
101fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    However, once initialized, the objects themselves can safely be used in multiple threads simultaneously.
102fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
103fc1f2750SBernard IremongerMulti-process Support
104fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
105fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
106fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe Linuxapp EAL allows a multi-process as well as a multi-threaded (pthread) deployment model.
107fc1f2750SBernard IremongerSee chapter 2.20
108fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger:ref:`Multi-process Support <Multi-process_Support>` for more details.
109fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
110fc1f2750SBernard IremongerMemory Mapping Discovery and Memory Reservation
111fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
112fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
113fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe allocation of large contiguous physical memory is done using the hugetlbfs kernel filesystem.
114fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe EAL provides an API to reserve named memory zones in this contiguous memory.
115fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe physical address of the reserved memory for that memory zone is also returned to the user by the memory zone reservation API.
116fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
117fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger.. note::
118fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
119fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    Memory reservations done using the APIs provided by the rte_malloc library are also backed by pages from the hugetlbfs filesystem.
120fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    However, physical address information is not available for the blocks of memory allocated in this way.
121fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
122fc1f2750SBernard IremongerXen Dom0 support without hugetbls
123fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
124fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
125fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe existing memory management implementation is based on the Linux kernel hugepage mechanism.
126fc1f2750SBernard IremongerHowever, Xen Dom0 does not support hugepages, so a new Linux kernel module rte_dom0_mm is added to workaround this limitation.
127fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
128fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe EAL uses IOCTL interface to notify the Linux kernel module rte_dom0_mm to allocate memory of specified size,
129fc1f2750SBernard Iremongerand get all memory segments information from the module,
130fc1f2750SBernard Iremongerand the EAL uses MMAP interface to map the allocated memory.
131fc1f2750SBernard IremongerFor each memory segment, the physical addresses are contiguous within it but actual hardware addresses are contiguous within 2MB.
132fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
133fc1f2750SBernard IremongerPCI Access
134fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~
135fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
136fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe EAL uses the /sys/bus/pci utilities provided by the kernel to scan the content on the PCI bus.
1371c29883cSBruce RichardsonTo access PCI memory, a kernel module called uio_pci_generic provides a /dev/uioX device file
1381c29883cSBruce Richardsonand resource files in /sys
139fc1f2750SBernard Iremongerthat can be mmap'd to obtain access to PCI address space from the application.
1401c29883cSBruce RichardsonThe DPDK-specific igb_uio module can also be used for this. Both drivers use the uio kernel feature (userland driver).
141fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
142fc1f2750SBernard IremongerPer-lcore and Shared Variables
143fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
144fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
145fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger.. note::
146fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
147fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    lcore refers to a logical execution unit of the processor, sometimes called a hardware *thread*.
148fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
149fc1f2750SBernard IremongerShared variables are the default behavior.
150fc1f2750SBernard IremongerPer-lcore variables are implemented using *Thread Local Storage* (TLS) to provide per-thread local storage.
151fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
152fc1f2750SBernard IremongerLogs
153fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~
154fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
155fc1f2750SBernard IremongerA logging API is provided by EAL.
156fc1f2750SBernard IremongerBy default, in a Linux application, logs are sent to syslog and also to the console.
157fc1f2750SBernard IremongerHowever, the log function can be overridden by the user to use a different logging mechanism.
158fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
159fc1f2750SBernard IremongerTrace and Debug Functions
160fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
161fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
162fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThere are some debug functions to dump the stack in glibc.
163fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe rte_panic() function can voluntarily provoke a SIG_ABORT,
164fc1f2750SBernard Iremongerwhich can trigger the generation of a core file, readable by gdb.
165fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
166fc1f2750SBernard IremongerCPU Feature Identification
167fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
168fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
169fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe EAL can query the CPU at runtime (using the rte_cpu_get_feature() function) to determine which CPU features are available.
170fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
171fc1f2750SBernard IremongerUser Space Interrupt and Alarm Handling
172fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
173fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
174fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe EAL creates a host thread to poll the UIO device file descriptors to detect the interrupts.
175fc1f2750SBernard IremongerCallbacks can be registered or unregistered by the EAL functions for a specific interrupt event
176fc1f2750SBernard Iremongerand are called in the host thread asynchronously.
177fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe EAL also allows timed callbacks to be used in the same way as for NIC interrupts.
178fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
179fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger.. note::
180fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
18148624fd9SSiobhan Butler    The only interrupts supported by the DPDK Poll-Mode Drivers are those for link status change,
182fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger    i.e. link up and link down notification.
183fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
184fc1f2750SBernard IremongerBlacklisting
185fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~~~
186fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
187fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe EAL PCI device blacklist functionality can be used to mark certain NIC ports as blacklisted,
18848624fd9SSiobhan Butlerso they are ignored by the DPDK.
189fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe ports to be blacklisted are identified using the PCIe* description (Domain:Bus:Device.Function).
190fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
191fc1f2750SBernard IremongerMisc Functions
192fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
193fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
194fc1f2750SBernard IremongerLocks and atomic operations are per-architecture (i686 and x86_64).
195fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
196fc1f2750SBernard IremongerMemory Segments and Memory Zones (memzone)
197fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger------------------------------------------
198fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
199fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe mapping of physical memory is provided by this feature in the EAL.
200fc1f2750SBernard IremongerAs physical memory can have gaps, the memory is described in a table of descriptors,
201fc1f2750SBernard Iremongerand each descriptor (called rte_memseg ) describes a contiguous portion of memory.
202fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
203fc1f2750SBernard IremongerOn top of this, the memzone allocator's role is to reserve contiguous portions of physical memory.
204fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThese zones are identified by a unique name when the memory is reserved.
205fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
206fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe rte_memzone descriptors are also located in the configuration structure.
207fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThis structure is accessed using rte_eal_get_configuration().
208fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe lookup (by name) of a memory zone returns a descriptor containing the physical address of the memory zone.
209fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
210fc1f2750SBernard IremongerMemory zones can be reserved with specific start address alignment by supplying the align parameter
211fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger(by default, they are aligned to cache line size).
212fc1f2750SBernard IremongerThe alignment value should be a power of two and not less than the cache line size (64 bytes).
213fc1f2750SBernard IremongerMemory zones can also be reserved from either 2 MB or 1 GB hugepages, provided that both are available on the system.
214fc1f2750SBernard Iremonger
2151733be6dSCunming Liang
2161733be6dSCunming LiangMultiple pthread
2171733be6dSCunming Liang----------------
2181733be6dSCunming Liang
219*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangDPDK usually pins one pthread per core to avoid the overhead of task switching.
220*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangThis allows for significant performance gains, but lacks flexibility and is not always efficient.
2211733be6dSCunming Liang
222*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangPower management helps to improve the CPU efficiency by limiting the CPU runtime frequency.
223*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangHowever, alternately it is possible to utilize the idle cycles available to take advantage of
224*e1ed63b0SCunming Liangthe full capability of the CPU.
2251733be6dSCunming Liang
226*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangBy taking advantage of cgroup, the CPU utilization quota can be simply assigned.
227*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangThis gives another way to improve the CPU efficienct, however, there is a prerequisite;
228*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangDPDK must handle the context switching between multiple pthreads per core.
2291733be6dSCunming Liang
230*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangFor further flexibility, it is useful to set pthread affinity not only to a CPU but to a CPU set.
2311733be6dSCunming Liang
2321733be6dSCunming LiangEAL pthread and lcore Affinity
2331733be6dSCunming Liang~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2341733be6dSCunming Liang
235*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangThe term "lcore" refers to an EAL thread, which is really a Linux/FreeBSD pthread.
236*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang"EAL pthreads"  are created and managed by EAL and execute the tasks issued by *remote_launch*.
237*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangIn each EAL pthread, there is a TLS (Thread Local Storage) called *_lcore_id* for unique identification.
238*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangAs EAL pthreads usually bind 1:1 to the physical CPU, the *_lcore_id* is typically equal to the CPU ID.
2391733be6dSCunming Liang
240*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangWhen using multiple pthreads, however, the binding is no longer always 1:1 between an EAL pthread and a specified physical CPU.
241*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangThe EAL pthread may have affinity to a CPU set, and as such the *_lcore_id* will not be the same as the CPU ID.
242*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangFor this reason, there is an EAL long option '--lcores' defined to assign the CPU affinity of lcores.
243*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangFor a specified lcore ID or ID group, the option allows setting the CPU set for that EAL pthread.
2441733be6dSCunming Liang
2451733be6dSCunming LiangThe format pattern:
2461733be6dSCunming Liang	--lcores='<lcore_set>[@cpu_set][,<lcore_set>[@cpu_set],...]'
2471733be6dSCunming Liang
2481733be6dSCunming Liang'lcore_set' and 'cpu_set' can be a single number, range or a group.
2491733be6dSCunming Liang
2501733be6dSCunming LiangA number is a "digit([0-9]+)"; a range is "<number>-<number>"; a group is "(<number|range>[,<number|range>,...])".
2511733be6dSCunming Liang
252*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangIf a '\@cpu_set' value is not supplied, the value of 'cpu_set' will default to the value of 'lcore_set'.
2531733be6dSCunming Liang
2541733be6dSCunming Liang    ::
2551733be6dSCunming Liang
2561733be6dSCunming Liang    	For example, "--lcores='1,2@(5-7),(3-5)@(0,2),(0,6),7-8'" which means start 9 EAL thread;
2571733be6dSCunming Liang    	    lcore 0 runs on cpuset 0x41 (cpu 0,6);
2581733be6dSCunming Liang    	    lcore 1 runs on cpuset 0x2 (cpu 1);
2591733be6dSCunming Liang    	    lcore 2 runs on cpuset 0xe0 (cpu 5,6,7);
2601733be6dSCunming Liang    	    lcore 3,4,5 runs on cpuset 0x5 (cpu 0,2);
2611733be6dSCunming Liang    	    lcore 6 runs on cpuset 0x41 (cpu 0,6);
2621733be6dSCunming Liang    	    lcore 7 runs on cpuset 0x80 (cpu 7);
2631733be6dSCunming Liang    	    lcore 8 runs on cpuset 0x100 (cpu 8).
2641733be6dSCunming Liang
265*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangUsing this option, for each given lcore ID, the associated CPUs can be assigned.
2661733be6dSCunming LiangIt's also compatible with the pattern of corelist('-l') option.
2671733be6dSCunming Liang
2681733be6dSCunming Liangnon-EAL pthread support
2691733be6dSCunming Liang~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2701733be6dSCunming Liang
271*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangIt is possible to use the DPDK execution context with any user pthread (aka. Non-EAL pthreads).
272*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangIn a non-EAL pthread, the *_lcore_id* is always LCORE_ID_ANY which identifies that it is not an EAL thread with a valid, unique, *_lcore_id*.
273*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangSome libraries will use an alternative unique ID (e.g. TID), some will not be impacted at all, and some will work but with limitations (e.g. timer and mempool libraries).
2741733be6dSCunming Liang
2751733be6dSCunming LiangAll these impacts are mentioned in :ref:`known_issue_label` section.
2761733be6dSCunming Liang
2771733be6dSCunming LiangPublic Thread API
2781733be6dSCunming Liang~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2791733be6dSCunming Liang
280*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangThere are two public APIs ``rte_thread_set_affinity()`` and ``rte_pthread_get_affinity()`` introduced for threads.
2811733be6dSCunming LiangWhen they're used in any pthread context, the Thread Local Storage(TLS) will be set/get.
2821733be6dSCunming Liang
2831733be6dSCunming LiangThose TLS include *_cpuset* and *_socket_id*:
2841733be6dSCunming Liang
285*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang*	*_cpuset* stores the CPUs bitmap to which the pthread is affinitized.
2861733be6dSCunming Liang
287*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang*	*_socket_id* stores the NUMA node of the CPU set. If the CPUs in CPU set belong to different NUMA node, the *_socket_id* will be set to SOCKTE_ID_ANY.
2881733be6dSCunming Liang
2891733be6dSCunming Liang
2901733be6dSCunming Liang.. _known_issue_label:
2911733be6dSCunming Liang
2921733be6dSCunming LiangKnown Issues
2931733be6dSCunming Liang~~~~~~~~~~~~
2941733be6dSCunming Liang
2951733be6dSCunming Liang+ rte_mempool
2961733be6dSCunming Liang
297*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  The rte_mempool uses a per-lcore cache inside the mempool.
298*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  For non-EAL pthreads, ``rte_lcore_id()`` will not return a valid number.
299*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  So for now, when rte_mempool is used with non-EAL pthreads, the put/get operations will bypass the mempool cache and there is a performance penalty because of this bypass.
300*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  Support for non-EAL mempool cache is currently being enabled.
3011733be6dSCunming Liang
3021733be6dSCunming Liang+ rte_ring
3031733be6dSCunming Liang
304*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  rte_ring supports multi-producer enqueue and multi-consumer dequeue.
305*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  However, it is non-preemptive, this has a knock on effect of making rte_mempool non-preemtable.
3061733be6dSCunming Liang
3071733be6dSCunming Liang  .. note::
3081733be6dSCunming Liang
3091733be6dSCunming Liang    The "non-preemptive" constraint means:
3101733be6dSCunming Liang
3111733be6dSCunming Liang    - a pthread doing multi-producers enqueues on a given ring must not
3121733be6dSCunming Liang      be preempted by another pthread doing a multi-producer enqueue on
3131733be6dSCunming Liang      the same ring.
3141733be6dSCunming Liang    - a pthread doing multi-consumers dequeues on a given ring must not
3151733be6dSCunming Liang      be preempted by another pthread doing a multi-consumer dequeue on
3161733be6dSCunming Liang      the same ring.
3171733be6dSCunming Liang
318*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang    Bypassing this constraint it may cause the 2nd pthread to spin until the 1st one is scheduled again.
3191733be6dSCunming Liang    Moreover, if the 1st pthread is preempted by a context that has an higher priority, it may even cause a dead lock.
3201733be6dSCunming Liang
321*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  This does not mean it cannot be used, simply, there is a need to narrow down the situation when it is used by multi-pthread on the same core.
3221733be6dSCunming Liang
3231733be6dSCunming Liang  1. It CAN be used for any single-producer or single-consumer situation.
3241733be6dSCunming Liang
325*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  2. It MAY be used by multi-producer/consumer pthread whose scheduling policy are all SCHED_OTHER(cfs). User SHOULD be aware of the performance penalty before using it.
3261733be6dSCunming Liang
327*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  3. It MUST not be used by multi-producer/consumer pthreads, whose scheduling policies are SCHED_FIFO or SCHED_RR.
3281733be6dSCunming Liang
3291733be6dSCunming Liang  ``RTE_RING_PAUSE_REP_COUNT`` is defined for rte_ring to reduce contention. It's mainly for case 2, a yield is issued after number of times pause repeat.
3301733be6dSCunming Liang
331*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  It adds a sched_yield() syscall if the thread spins for too long while waiting on the other thread to finish its operations on the ring.
332*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  This gives the pre-empted thread a chance to proceed and finish with the ring enqueue/dequeue operation.
3331733be6dSCunming Liang
3341733be6dSCunming Liang+ rte_timer
3351733be6dSCunming Liang
336*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  Running  ``rte_timer_manager()`` on a non-EAL pthread is not allowed. However, resetting/stopping the timer from a non-EAL pthread is allowed.
3371733be6dSCunming Liang
3381733be6dSCunming Liang+ rte_log
3391733be6dSCunming Liang
340*e1ed63b0SCunming Liang  In non-EAL pthreads, there is no per thread loglevel and logtype, global loglevels are used.
3411733be6dSCunming Liang
3421733be6dSCunming Liang+ misc
3431733be6dSCunming Liang
3441733be6dSCunming Liang  The debug statistics of rte_ring, rte_mempool and rte_timer are not supported in a non-EAL pthread.
3451733be6dSCunming Liang
3461733be6dSCunming Liangcgroup control
3471733be6dSCunming Liang~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3481733be6dSCunming Liang
349*e1ed63b0SCunming LiangThe following is a simple example of cgroup control usage, there are two pthreads(t0 and t1) doing packet I/O on the same core ($CPU).
3501733be6dSCunming LiangWe expect only 50% of CPU spend on packet IO.
3511733be6dSCunming Liang
3521733be6dSCunming Liang  .. code::
3531733be6dSCunming Liang
3541733be6dSCunming Liang    mkdir /sys/fs/cgroup/cpu/pkt_io
3551733be6dSCunming Liang    mkdir /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/pkt_io
3561733be6dSCunming Liang
3571733be6dSCunming Liang    echo $cpu > /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/cpuset.cpus
3581733be6dSCunming Liang
3591733be6dSCunming Liang    echo $t0 > /sys/fs/cgroup/cpu/pkt_io/tasks
3601733be6dSCunming Liang    echo $t0 > /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/pkt_io/tasks
3611733be6dSCunming Liang
3621733be6dSCunming Liang    echo $t1 > /sys/fs/cgroup/cpu/pkt_io/tasks
3631733be6dSCunming Liang    echo $t1 > /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/pkt_io/tasks
3641733be6dSCunming Liang
3651733be6dSCunming Liang    cd /sys/fs/cgroup/cpu/pkt_io
3661733be6dSCunming Liang    echo 100000 > pkt_io/cpu.cfs_period_us
3671733be6dSCunming Liang    echo  50000 > pkt_io/cpu.cfs_quota_us
3681733be6dSCunming Liang
3691733be6dSCunming Liang
370ba9e05cbSJohn McNamara.. |linuxapp_launch| image:: img/linuxapp_launch.*
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