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 31IPv4 Multicast Sample Application 32================================= 33 34The IPv4 Multicast application is a simple example of packet processing 35using the Data Plane Development Kit (DPDK). 36The application performs L3 multicasting. 37 38Overview 39-------- 40 41The application demonstrates the use of zero-copy buffers for packet forwarding. 42The initialization and run-time paths are very similar to those of the :doc:`l2_forward_real_virtual`. 43This guide highlights the differences between the two applications. 44There are two key differences from the L2 Forwarding sample application: 45 46* The IPv4 Multicast sample application makes use of indirect buffers. 47 48* The forwarding decision is taken based on information read from the input packet's IPv4 header. 49 50The lookup method is the Four-byte Key (FBK) hash-based method. 51The lookup table is composed of pairs of destination IPv4 address (the FBK) 52and a port mask associated with that IPv4 address. 53 54For convenience and simplicity, this sample application does not take IANA-assigned multicast addresses into account, 55but instead equates the last four bytes of the multicast group (that is, the last four bytes of the destination IP address) 56with the mask of ports to multicast packets to. 57Also, the application does not consider the Ethernet addresses; 58it looks only at the IPv4 destination address for any given packet. 59 60Building the Application 61------------------------ 62 63To compile the application: 64 65#. Go to the sample application directory: 66 67 .. code-block:: console 68 69 export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk 70 cd ${RTE_SDK}/examples/ipv4_multicast 71 72#. Set the target (a default target is used if not specified). For example: 73 74 .. code-block:: console 75 76 export RTE_TARGET=x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc 77 78See the *DPDK Getting Started Guide* for possible RTE_TARGET values. 79 80#. Build the application: 81 82 .. code-block:: console 83 84 make 85 86.. note:: 87 88 The compiled application is written to the build subdirectory. 89 To have the application written to a different location, 90 the O=/path/to/build/directory option may be specified in the make command. 91 92Running the Application 93----------------------- 94 95The application has a number of command line options: 96 97.. code-block:: console 98 99 ./build/ipv4_multicast [EAL options] -- -p PORTMASK [-q NQ] 100 101where, 102 103* -p PORTMASK: Hexadecimal bitmask of ports to configure 104 105* -q NQ: determines the number of queues per lcore 106 107.. note:: 108 109 Unlike the basic L2/L3 Forwarding sample applications, 110 NUMA support is not provided in the IPv4 Multicast sample application. 111 112Typically, to run the IPv4 Multicast sample application, issue the following command (as root): 113 114.. code-block:: console 115 116 ./build/ipv4_multicast -l 0-3 -n 3 -- -p 0x3 -q 1 117 118In this command: 119 120* The -l option enables cores 0, 1, 2 and 3 121 122* The -n option specifies 3 memory channels 123 124* The -p option enables ports 0 and 1 125 126* The -q option assigns 1 queue to each lcore 127 128Refer to the *DPDK Getting Started Guide* for general information on running applications 129and the Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL) options. 130 131Explanation 132----------- 133 134The following sections provide some explanation of the code. 135As mentioned in the overview section, 136the initialization and run-time paths are very similar to those of the :doc:`l2_forward_real_virtual`. 137The following sections describe aspects that are specific to the IPv4 Multicast sample application. 138 139Memory Pool Initialization 140~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 141 142The IPv4 Multicast sample application uses three memory pools. 143Two of the pools are for indirect buffers used for packet duplication purposes. 144Memory pools for indirect buffers are initialized differently from the memory pool for direct buffers: 145 146.. code-block:: c 147 148 packet_pool = rte_pktmbuf_pool_create("packet_pool", NB_PKT_MBUF, 32, 149 0, PKT_MBUF_DATA_SIZE, rte_socket_id()); 150 header_pool = rte_pktmbuf_pool_create("header_pool", NB_HDR_MBUF, 32, 151 0, HDR_MBUF_DATA_SIZE, rte_socket_id()); 152 clone_pool = rte_pktmbuf_pool_create("clone_pool", NB_CLONE_MBUF, 32, 153 0, 0, rte_socket_id()); 154 155The reason for this is because indirect buffers are not supposed to hold any packet data and 156therefore can be initialized with lower amount of reserved memory for each buffer. 157 158Hash Initialization 159~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 160 161The hash object is created and loaded with the pre-configured entries read from a global array: 162 163.. code-block:: c 164 165 static int 166 167 init_mcast_hash(void) 168 { 169 uint32_t i; 170 mcast_hash_params.socket_id = rte_socket_id(); 171 172 mcast_hash = rte_fbk_hash_create(&mcast_hash_params); 173 if (mcast_hash == NULL){ 174 return -1; 175 } 176 177 for (i = 0; i < N_MCAST_GROUPS; i ++){ 178 if (rte_fbk_hash_add_key(mcast_hash, mcast_group_table[i].ip, mcast_group_table[i].port_mask) < 0) { 179 return -1; 180 } 181 } 182 return 0; 183 } 184 185Forwarding 186~~~~~~~~~~ 187 188All forwarding is done inside the mcast_forward() function. 189Firstly, the Ethernet* header is removed from the packet and the IPv4 address is extracted from the IPv4 header: 190 191.. code-block:: c 192 193 /* Remove the Ethernet header from the input packet */ 194 195 iphdr = (struct ipv4_hdr *)rte_pktmbuf_adj(m, sizeof(struct ether_hdr)); 196 RTE_ASSERT(iphdr != NULL); 197 dest_addr = rte_be_to_cpu_32(iphdr->dst_addr); 198 199Then, the packet is checked to see if it has a multicast destination address and 200if the routing table has any ports assigned to the destination address: 201 202.. code-block:: c 203 204 if (!IS_IPV4_MCAST(dest_addr) || 205 (hash = rte_fbk_hash_lookup(mcast_hash, dest_addr)) <= 0 || 206 (port_mask = hash & enabled_port_mask) == 0) { 207 rte_pktmbuf_free(m); 208 return; 209 } 210 211Then, the number of ports in the destination portmask is calculated with the help of the bitcnt() function: 212 213.. code-block:: c 214 215 /* Get number of bits set. */ 216 217 static inline uint32_t bitcnt(uint32_t v) 218 { 219 uint32_t n; 220 221 for (n = 0; v != 0; v &= v - 1, n++) 222 ; 223 return n; 224 } 225 226This is done to determine which forwarding algorithm to use. 227This is explained in more detail in the next section. 228 229Thereafter, a destination Ethernet address is constructed: 230 231.. code-block:: c 232 233 /* construct destination Ethernet address */ 234 235 dst_eth_addr = ETHER_ADDR_FOR_IPV4_MCAST(dest_addr); 236 237Since Ethernet addresses are also part of the multicast process, each outgoing packet carries the same destination Ethernet address. 238The destination Ethernet address is constructed from the lower 23 bits of the multicast group OR-ed 239with the Ethernet address 01:00:5e:00:00:00, as per RFC 1112: 240 241.. code-block:: c 242 243 #define ETHER_ADDR_FOR_IPV4_MCAST(x) \ 244 (rte_cpu_to_be_64(0x01005e000000ULL | ((x) & 0x7fffff)) >> 16) 245 246Then, packets are dispatched to the destination ports according to the portmask associated with a multicast group: 247 248.. code-block:: c 249 250 for (port = 0; use_clone != port_mask; port_mask >>= 1, port++) { 251 /* Prepare output packet and send it out. */ 252 253 if ((port_mask & 1) != 0) { 254 if (likely ((mc = mcast_out_pkt(m, use_clone)) != NULL)) 255 mcast_send_pkt(mc, &dst_eth_addr.as_addr, qconf, port); 256 else if (use_clone == 0) 257 rte_pktmbuf_free(m); 258 } 259 } 260 261The actual packet transmission is done in the mcast_send_pkt() function: 262 263.. code-block:: c 264 265 static inline void mcast_send_pkt(struct rte_mbuf *pkt, struct ether_addr *dest_addr, struct lcore_queue_conf *qconf, uint8_t port) 266 { 267 struct ether_hdr *ethdr; 268 uint16_t len; 269 270 /* Construct Ethernet header. */ 271 272 ethdr = (struct ether_hdr *)rte_pktmbuf_prepend(pkt, (uint16_t) sizeof(*ethdr)); 273 274 RTE_ASSERT(ethdr != NULL); 275 276 ether_addr_copy(dest_addr, ðdr->d_addr); 277 ether_addr_copy(&ports_eth_addr[port], ðdr->s_addr); 278 ethdr->ether_type = rte_be_to_cpu_16(ETHER_TYPE_IPv4); 279 280 /* Put new packet into the output queue */ 281 282 len = qconf->tx_mbufs[port].len; 283 qconf->tx_mbufs[port].m_table[len] = pkt; 284 qconf->tx_mbufs[port].len = ++len; 285 286 /* Transmit packets */ 287 288 if (unlikely(MAX_PKT_BURST == len)) 289 send_burst(qconf, port); 290 } 291 292Buffer Cloning 293~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 294 295This is the most important part of the application since it demonstrates the use of zero- copy buffer cloning. 296There are two approaches for creating the outgoing packet and although both are based on the data zero-copy idea, 297there are some differences in the detail. 298 299The first approach creates a clone of the input packet, for example, 300walk though all segments of the input packet and for each of segment, 301create a new buffer and attach that new buffer to the segment 302(refer to rte_pktmbuf_clone() in the rte_mbuf library for more details). 303A new buffer is then allocated for the packet header and is prepended to the cloned buffer. 304 305The second approach does not make a clone, it just increments the reference counter for all input packet segment, 306allocates a new buffer for the packet header and prepends it to the input packet. 307 308Basically, the first approach reuses only the input packet's data, but creates its own copy of packet's metadata. 309The second approach reuses both input packet's data and metadata. 310 311The advantage of first approach is that each outgoing packet has its own copy of the metadata, 312so we can safely modify the data pointer of the input packet. 313That allows us to skip creation if the output packet is for the last destination port 314and instead modify input packet's header in place. 315For example, for N destination ports, we need to invoke mcast_out_pkt() (N-1) times. 316 317The advantage of the second approach is that there is less work to be done for each outgoing packet, 318that is, the "clone" operation is skipped completely. 319However, there is a price to pay. 320The input packet's metadata must remain intact, so for N destination ports, 321we need to invoke mcast_out_pkt() (N) times. 322 323Therefore, for a small number of outgoing ports (and segments in the input packet), 324first approach is faster. 325As the number of outgoing ports (and/or input segments) grows, the second approach becomes more preferable. 326 327Depending on the number of segments or the number of ports in the outgoing portmask, 328either the first (with cloning) or the second (without cloning) approach is taken: 329 330.. code-block:: c 331 332 use_clone = (port_num <= MCAST_CLONE_PORTS && m->pkt.nb_segs <= MCAST_CLONE_SEGS); 333 334It is the mcast_out_pkt() function that performs the packet duplication (either with or without actually cloning the buffers): 335 336.. code-block:: c 337 338 static inline struct rte_mbuf *mcast_out_pkt(struct rte_mbuf *pkt, int use_clone) 339 { 340 struct rte_mbuf *hdr; 341 342 /* Create new mbuf for the header. */ 343 344 if (unlikely ((hdr = rte_pktmbuf_alloc(header_pool)) == NULL)) 345 return NULL; 346 347 /* If requested, then make a new clone packet. */ 348 349 if (use_clone != 0 && unlikely ((pkt = rte_pktmbuf_clone(pkt, clone_pool)) == NULL)) { 350 rte_pktmbuf_free(hdr); 351 return NULL; 352 } 353 354 /* prepend new header */ 355 356 hdr->pkt.next = pkt; 357 358 /* update header's fields */ 359 360 hdr->pkt.pkt_len = (uint16_t)(hdr->pkt.data_len + pkt->pkt.pkt_len); 361 hdr->pkt.nb_segs = (uint8_t)(pkt->pkt.nb_segs + 1); 362 363 /* copy metadata from source packet */ 364 365 hdr->pkt.in_port = pkt->pkt.in_port; 366 hdr->pkt.vlan_macip = pkt->pkt.vlan_macip; 367 hdr->pkt.hash = pkt->pkt.hash; 368 hdr->ol_flags = pkt->ol_flags; 369 rte_mbuf_sanity_check(hdr, RTE_MBUF_PKT, 1); 370 371 return hdr; 372 } 373