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 31.. _Mbuf_Library: 32 33Mbuf Library 34============ 35 36The mbuf library provides the ability to allocate and free buffers (mbufs) 37that may be used by the DPDK application to store message buffers. 38The message buffers are stored in a mempool, using the :ref:`Mempool Library <Mempool_Library>`. 39 40A rte_mbuf struct can carry network packet buffers 41or generic control buffers (indicated by the CTRL_MBUF_FLAG). 42This can be extended to other types. 43The rte_mbuf header structure is kept as small as possible and currently uses 44just two cache lines, with the most frequently used fields being on the first 45of the two cache lines. 46 47Design of Packet Buffers 48------------------------ 49 50For the storage of the packet data (including protocol headers), two approaches were considered: 51 52#. Embed metadata within a single memory buffer the structure followed by a fixed size area for the packet data. 53 54#. Use separate memory buffers for the metadata structure and for the packet data. 55 56The advantage of the first method is that it only needs one operation to allocate/free the whole memory representation of a packet. 57On the other hand, the second method is more flexible and allows 58the complete separation of the allocation of metadata structures from the allocation of packet data buffers. 59 60The first method was chosen for the DPDK. 61The metadata contains control information such as message type, length, 62offset to the start of the data and a pointer for additional mbuf structures allowing buffer chaining. 63 64Message buffers that are used to carry network packets can handle buffer chaining 65where multiple buffers are required to hold the complete packet. 66This is the case for jumbo frames that are composed of many mbufs linked together through their next field. 67 68For a newly allocated mbuf, the area at which the data begins in the message buffer is 69RTE_PKTMBUF_HEADROOM bytes after the beginning of the buffer, which is cache aligned. 70Message buffers may be used to carry control information, packets, events, 71and so on between different entities in the system. 72Message buffers may also use their buffer pointers to point to other message buffer data sections or other structures. 73 74:numref:`figure_mbuf1` and :numref:`figure_mbuf2` show some of these scenarios. 75 76.. _figure_mbuf1: 77 78.. figure:: img/mbuf1.* 79 80 An mbuf with One Segment 81 82 83.. _figure_mbuf2: 84 85.. figure:: img/mbuf2.* 86 87 An mbuf with Three Segments 88 89 90The Buffer Manager implements a fairly standard set of buffer access functions to manipulate network packets. 91 92Buffers Stored in Memory Pools 93------------------------------ 94 95The Buffer Manager uses the :ref:`Mempool Library <Mempool_Library>` to allocate buffers. 96Therefore, it ensures that the packet header is interleaved optimally across the channels and ranks for L3 processing. 97An mbuf contains a field indicating the pool that it originated from. 98When calling rte_ctrlmbuf_free(m) or rte_pktmbuf_free(m), the mbuf returns to its original pool. 99 100Constructors 101------------ 102 103Packet and control mbuf constructors are provided by the API. 104The rte_pktmbuf_init() and rte_ctrlmbuf_init() functions initialize some fields in the mbuf structure that 105are not modified by the user once created (mbuf type, origin pool, buffer start address, and so on). 106This function is given as a callback function to the rte_mempool_create() function at pool creation time. 107 108Allocating and Freeing mbufs 109---------------------------- 110 111Allocating a new mbuf requires the user to specify the mempool from which the mbuf should be taken. 112For any newly-allocated mbuf, it contains one segment, with a length of 0. 113The offset to data is initialized to have some bytes of headroom in the buffer (RTE_PKTMBUF_HEADROOM). 114 115Freeing a mbuf means returning it into its original mempool. 116The content of an mbuf is not modified when it is stored in a pool (as a free mbuf). 117Fields initialized by the constructor do not need to be re-initialized at mbuf allocation. 118 119When freeing a packet mbuf that contains several segments, all of them are freed and returned to their original mempool. 120 121Manipulating mbufs 122------------------ 123 124This library provides some functions for manipulating the data in a packet mbuf. For instance: 125 126 * Get data length 127 128 * Get a pointer to the start of data 129 130 * Prepend data before data 131 132 * Append data after data 133 134 * Remove data at the beginning of the buffer (rte_pktmbuf_adj()) 135 136 * Remove data at the end of the buffer (rte_pktmbuf_trim()) Refer to the *DPDK API Reference* for details. 137 138Meta Information 139---------------- 140 141Some information is retrieved by the network driver and stored in an mbuf to make processing easier. 142For instance, the VLAN, the RSS hash result (see :ref:`Poll Mode Driver <Poll_Mode_Driver>`) 143and a flag indicating that the checksum was computed by hardware. 144 145An mbuf also contains the input port (where it comes from), and the number of segment mbufs in the chain. 146 147For chained buffers, only the first mbuf of the chain stores this meta information. 148 149For instance, this is the case on RX side for the IEEE1588 packet 150timestamp mechanism, the VLAN tagging and the IP checksum computation. 151 152On TX side, it is also possible for an application to delegate some 153processing to the hardware if it supports it. For instance, the 154PKT_TX_IP_CKSUM flag allows to offload the computation of the IPv4 155checksum. 156 157The following examples explain how to configure different TX offloads on 158a vxlan-encapsulated tcp packet: 159``out_eth/out_ip/out_udp/vxlan/in_eth/in_ip/in_tcp/payload`` 160 161- calculate checksum of out_ip:: 162 163 mb->l2_len = len(out_eth) 164 mb->l3_len = len(out_ip) 165 mb->ol_flags |= PKT_TX_IPV4 | PKT_TX_IP_CSUM 166 set out_ip checksum to 0 in the packet 167 168 This is supported on hardware advertising DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_IPV4_CKSUM. 169 170- calculate checksum of out_ip and out_udp:: 171 172 mb->l2_len = len(out_eth) 173 mb->l3_len = len(out_ip) 174 mb->ol_flags |= PKT_TX_IPV4 | PKT_TX_IP_CSUM | PKT_TX_UDP_CKSUM 175 set out_ip checksum to 0 in the packet 176 set out_udp checksum to pseudo header using rte_ipv4_phdr_cksum() 177 178 This is supported on hardware advertising DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_IPV4_CKSUM 179 and DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_UDP_CKSUM. 180 181- calculate checksum of in_ip:: 182 183 mb->l2_len = len(out_eth + out_ip + out_udp + vxlan + in_eth) 184 mb->l3_len = len(in_ip) 185 mb->ol_flags |= PKT_TX_IPV4 | PKT_TX_IP_CSUM 186 set in_ip checksum to 0 in the packet 187 188 This is similar to case 1), but l2_len is different. It is supported 189 on hardware advertising DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_IPV4_CKSUM. 190 Note that it can only work if outer L4 checksum is 0. 191 192- calculate checksum of in_ip and in_tcp:: 193 194 mb->l2_len = len(out_eth + out_ip + out_udp + vxlan + in_eth) 195 mb->l3_len = len(in_ip) 196 mb->ol_flags |= PKT_TX_IPV4 | PKT_TX_IP_CSUM | PKT_TX_TCP_CKSUM 197 set in_ip checksum to 0 in the packet 198 set in_tcp checksum to pseudo header using rte_ipv4_phdr_cksum() 199 200 This is similar to case 2), but l2_len is different. It is supported 201 on hardware advertising DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_IPV4_CKSUM and 202 DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_TCP_CKSUM. 203 Note that it can only work if outer L4 checksum is 0. 204 205- segment inner TCP:: 206 207 mb->l2_len = len(out_eth + out_ip + out_udp + vxlan + in_eth) 208 mb->l3_len = len(in_ip) 209 mb->l4_len = len(in_tcp) 210 mb->ol_flags |= PKT_TX_IPV4 | PKT_TX_IP_CKSUM | PKT_TX_TCP_CKSUM | 211 PKT_TX_TCP_SEG; 212 set in_ip checksum to 0 in the packet 213 set in_tcp checksum to pseudo header without including the IP 214 payload length using rte_ipv4_phdr_cksum() 215 216 This is supported on hardware advertising DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_TCP_TSO. 217 Note that it can only work if outer L4 checksum is 0. 218 219- calculate checksum of out_ip, in_ip, in_tcp:: 220 221 mb->outer_l2_len = len(out_eth) 222 mb->outer_l3_len = len(out_ip) 223 mb->l2_len = len(out_udp + vxlan + in_eth) 224 mb->l3_len = len(in_ip) 225 mb->ol_flags |= PKT_TX_OUTER_IPV4 | PKT_TX_OUTER_IP_CKSUM | \ 226 PKT_TX_IP_CKSUM | PKT_TX_TCP_CKSUM; 227 set out_ip checksum to 0 in the packet 228 set in_ip checksum to 0 in the packet 229 set in_tcp checksum to pseudo header using rte_ipv4_phdr_cksum() 230 231 This is supported on hardware advertising DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_IPV4_CKSUM, 232 DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_UDP_CKSUM and DEV_TX_OFFLOAD_OUTER_IPV4_CKSUM. 233 234The list of flags and their precise meaning is described in the mbuf API 235documentation (rte_mbuf.h). Also refer to the testpmd source code 236(specifically the csumonly.c file) for details. 237 238.. _direct_indirect_buffer: 239 240Direct and Indirect Buffers 241--------------------------- 242 243A direct buffer is a buffer that is completely separate and self-contained. 244An indirect buffer behaves like a direct buffer but for the fact that the buffer pointer and 245data offset in it refer to data in another direct buffer. 246This is useful in situations where packets need to be duplicated or fragmented, 247since indirect buffers provide the means to reuse the same packet data across multiple buffers. 248 249A buffer becomes indirect when it is "attached" to a direct buffer using the rte_pktmbuf_attach() function. 250Each buffer has a reference counter field and whenever an indirect buffer is attached to the direct buffer, 251the reference counter on the direct buffer is incremented. 252Similarly, whenever the indirect buffer is detached, the reference counter on the direct buffer is decremented. 253If the resulting reference counter is equal to 0, the direct buffer is freed since it is no longer in use. 254 255There are a few things to remember when dealing with indirect buffers. 256First of all, it is not possible to attach an indirect buffer to another indirect buffer. 257Secondly, for a buffer to become indirect, its reference counter must be equal to 1, 258that is, it must not be already referenced by another indirect buffer. 259Finally, it is not possible to reattach an indirect buffer to the direct buffer (unless it is detached first). 260 261While the attach/detach operations can be invoked directly using the recommended rte_pktmbuf_attach() and rte_pktmbuf_detach() functions, 262it is suggested to use the higher-level rte_pktmbuf_clone() function, 263which takes care of the correct initialization of an indirect buffer and can clone buffers with multiple segments. 264 265Since indirect buffers are not supposed to actually hold any data, 266the memory pool for indirect buffers should be configured to indicate the reduced memory consumption. 267Examples of the initialization of a memory pool for indirect buffers (as well as use case examples for indirect buffers) 268can be found in several of the sample applications, for example, the IPv4 Multicast sample application. 269 270Debug 271----- 272 273In debug mode (CONFIG_RTE_MBUF_DEBUG is enabled), 274the functions of the mbuf library perform sanity checks before any operation (such as, buffer corruption, bad type, and so on). 275 276Use Cases 277--------- 278 279All networking application should use mbufs to transport network packets. 280