xref: /dpdk/doc/guides/sample_app_ug/l2_forward_real_virtual.rst (revision 945acb4a0d644d194f1823084a234f9c286dcf8c)
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30
31.. _l2_fwd_app_real_and_virtual:
32
33L2 Forwarding Sample Application (in Real and Virtualized Environments)
34=======================================================================
35
36The L2 Forwarding sample application is a simple example of packet processing using
37the Data Plane Development Kit (DPDK) which
38also takes advantage of Single Root I/O Virtualization (SR-IOV) features in a virtualized environment.
39
40.. note::
41
42    Please note that previously a separate L2 Forwarding in Virtualized Environments sample application was used,
43    however, in later DPDK versions these sample applications have been merged.
44
45Overview
46--------
47
48The L2 Forwarding sample application, which can operate in real and virtualized environments,
49performs L2 forwarding for each packet that is received on an RX_PORT.
50The destination port is the adjacent port from the enabled portmask, that is,
51if the first four ports are enabled (portmask 0xf),
52ports 1 and 2 forward into each other, and ports 3 and 4 forward into each other.
53Also, if MAC addresses updating is enabled, the MAC addresses are affected as follows:
54
55*   The source MAC address is replaced by the TX_PORT MAC address
56
57*   The destination MAC address is replaced by  02:00:00:00:00:TX_PORT_ID
58
59This application can be used to benchmark performance using a traffic-generator, as shown in the :numref:`figure_l2_fwd_benchmark_setup`,
60or in a virtualized environment as shown in :numref:`figure_l2_fwd_virtenv_benchmark_setup`.
61
62.. _figure_l2_fwd_benchmark_setup:
63
64.. figure:: img/l2_fwd_benchmark_setup.*
65
66   Performance Benchmark Setup (Basic Environment)
67
68.. _figure_l2_fwd_virtenv_benchmark_setup:
69
70.. figure:: img/l2_fwd_virtenv_benchmark_setup.*
71
72   Performance Benchmark Setup (Virtualized Environment)
73
74This application may be used for basic VM to VM communication as shown in :numref:`figure_l2_fwd_vm2vm`,
75when MAC addresses updating is disabled.
76
77.. _figure_l2_fwd_vm2vm:
78
79.. figure:: img/l2_fwd_vm2vm.*
80
81   Virtual Machine to Virtual Machine communication.
82
83The L2 Forwarding application can also be used as a starting point for developing a new application based on the DPDK.
84
85.. _l2_fwd_vf_setup:
86
87Virtual Function Setup Instructions
88~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
89
90This application can use the virtual function available in the system and
91therefore can be used in a virtual machine without passing through
92the whole Network Device into a guest machine in a virtualized scenario.
93The virtual functions can be enabled in the host machine or the hypervisor with the respective physical function driver.
94
95For example, in a Linux* host machine, it is possible to enable a virtual function using the following command:
96
97.. code-block:: console
98
99    modprobe ixgbe max_vfs=2,2
100
101This command enables two Virtual Functions on each of Physical Function of the NIC,
102with two physical ports in the PCI configuration space.
103It is important to note that enabled Virtual Function 0 and 2 would belong to Physical Function 0
104and Virtual Function 1 and 3 would belong to Physical Function 1,
105in this case enabling a total of four Virtual Functions.
106
107Compiling the Application
108-------------------------
109
110To compile the sample application see :doc:`compiling`.
111
112The application is located in the ``l2fwd`` sub-directory.
113
114Running the Application
115-----------------------
116
117The application requires a number of command line options:
118
119.. code-block:: console
120
121    ./build/l2fwd [EAL options] -- -p PORTMASK [-q NQ] --[no-]mac-updating
122
123where,
124
125*   p PORTMASK: A hexadecimal bitmask of the ports to configure
126
127*   q NQ: A number of queues (=ports) per lcore (default is 1)
128
129*   --[no-]mac-updating: Enable or disable MAC addresses updating (enabled by default).
130
131To run the application in linuxapp environment with 4 lcores, 16 ports and 8 RX queues per lcore and MAC address
132updating enabled, issue the command:
133
134.. code-block:: console
135
136    $ ./build/l2fwd -l 0-3 -n 4 -- -q 8 -p ffff
137
138Refer to the *DPDK Getting Started Guide* for general information on running applications
139and the Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL) options.
140
141Explanation
142-----------
143
144The following sections provide some explanation of the code.
145
146.. _l2_fwd_app_cmd_arguments:
147
148Command Line Arguments
149~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
150
151The L2 Forwarding sample application takes specific parameters,
152in addition to Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL) arguments.
153The preferred way to parse parameters is to use the getopt() function,
154since it is part of a well-defined and portable library.
155
156The parsing of arguments is done in the l2fwd_parse_args() function.
157The method of argument parsing is not described here.
158Refer to the *glibc getopt(3)* man page for details.
159
160EAL arguments are parsed first, then application-specific arguments.
161This is done at the beginning of the main() function:
162
163.. code-block:: c
164
165    /* init EAL */
166
167    ret = rte_eal_init(argc, argv);
168    if (ret < 0)
169        rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Invalid EAL arguments\n");
170
171    argc -= ret;
172    argv += ret;
173
174    /* parse application arguments (after the EAL ones) */
175
176    ret = l2fwd_parse_args(argc, argv);
177    if (ret < 0)
178        rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Invalid L2FWD arguments\n");
179
180.. _l2_fwd_app_mbuf_init:
181
182Mbuf Pool Initialization
183~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
184
185Once the arguments are parsed, the mbuf pool is created.
186The mbuf pool contains a set of mbuf objects that will be used by the driver
187and the application to store network packet data:
188
189.. code-block:: c
190
191    /* create the mbuf pool */
192
193    l2fwd_pktmbuf_pool = rte_pktmbuf_pool_create("mbuf_pool", NB_MBUF,
194	MEMPOOL_CACHE_SIZE, 0, RTE_MBUF_DEFAULT_BUF_SIZE,
195	rte_socket_id());
196
197    if (l2fwd_pktmbuf_pool == NULL)
198        rte_panic("Cannot init mbuf pool\n");
199
200The rte_mempool is a generic structure used to handle pools of objects.
201In this case, it is necessary to create a pool that will be used by the driver.
202The number of allocated pkt mbufs is NB_MBUF, with a data room size of
203RTE_MBUF_DEFAULT_BUF_SIZE each.
204A per-lcore cache of 32 mbufs is kept.
205The memory is allocated in NUMA socket 0,
206but it is possible to extend this code to allocate one mbuf pool per socket.
207
208The rte_pktmbuf_pool_create() function uses the default mbuf pool and mbuf
209initializers, respectively rte_pktmbuf_pool_init() and rte_pktmbuf_init().
210An advanced application may want to use the mempool API to create the
211mbuf pool with more control.
212
213.. _l2_fwd_app_dvr_init:
214
215Driver Initialization
216~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
217
218The main part of the code in the main() function relates to the initialization of the driver.
219To fully understand this code, it is recommended to study the chapters that related to the Poll Mode Driver
220in the *DPDK Programmer's Guide* - Rel 1.4 EAR and the *DPDK API Reference*.
221
222.. code-block:: c
223
224    if (rte_pci_probe() < 0)
225        rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Cannot probe PCI\n");
226
227    nb_ports = rte_eth_dev_count();
228
229    if (nb_ports == 0)
230        rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "No Ethernet ports - bye\n");
231
232    /* reset l2fwd_dst_ports */
233
234    for (portid = 0; portid < RTE_MAX_ETHPORTS; portid++)
235        l2fwd_dst_ports[portid] = 0;
236
237    last_port = 0;
238
239    /*
240     * Each logical core is assigned a dedicated TX queue on each port.
241     */
242
243    for (portid = 0; portid < nb_ports; portid++) {
244        /* skip ports that are not enabled */
245
246        if ((l2fwd_enabled_port_mask & (1 << portid)) == 0)
247           continue;
248
249        if (nb_ports_in_mask % 2) {
250            l2fwd_dst_ports[portid] = last_port;
251            l2fwd_dst_ports[last_port] = portid;
252        }
253        else
254           last_port = portid;
255
256        nb_ports_in_mask++;
257
258        rte_eth_dev_info_get((uint8_t) portid, &dev_info);
259    }
260
261Observe that:
262
263*   rte_igb_pmd_init_all() simultaneously registers the driver as a PCI driver and as an Ethernet* Poll Mode Driver.
264
265*   rte_pci_probe() parses the devices on the PCI bus and initializes recognized devices.
266
267The next step is to configure the RX and TX queues.
268For each port, there is only one RX queue (only one lcore is able to poll a given port).
269The number of TX queues depends on the number of available lcores.
270The rte_eth_dev_configure() function is used to configure the number of queues for a port:
271
272.. code-block:: c
273
274    ret = rte_eth_dev_configure((uint8_t)portid, 1, 1, &port_conf);
275    if (ret < 0)
276        rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Cannot configure device: "
277            "err=%d, port=%u\n",
278            ret, portid);
279
280The global configuration is stored in a static structure:
281
282.. code-block:: c
283
284    static const struct rte_eth_conf port_conf = {
285        .rxmode = {
286            .split_hdr_size = 0,
287            .header_split = 0,   /**< Header Split disabled */
288            .hw_ip_checksum = 0, /**< IP checksum offload disabled */
289            .hw_vlan_filter = 0, /**< VLAN filtering disabled */
290            .jumbo_frame = 0,    /**< Jumbo Frame Support disabled */
291            .hw_strip_crc= 0,    /**< CRC stripped by hardware */
292        },
293
294        .txmode = {
295            .mq_mode = ETH_DCB_NONE
296        },
297    };
298
299.. _l2_fwd_app_rx_init:
300
301RX Queue Initialization
302~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
303
304The application uses one lcore to poll one or several ports, depending on the -q option,
305which specifies the number of queues per lcore.
306
307For example, if the user specifies -q 4, the application is able to poll four ports with one lcore.
308If there are 16 ports on the target (and if the portmask argument is -p ffff ),
309the application will need four lcores to poll all the ports.
310
311.. code-block:: c
312
313    ret = rte_eth_rx_queue_setup((uint8_t) portid, 0, nb_rxd, SOCKET0, &rx_conf, l2fwd_pktmbuf_pool);
314    if (ret < 0)
315
316        rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "rte_eth_rx_queue_setup: "
317            "err=%d, port=%u\n",
318            ret, portid);
319
320The list of queues that must be polled for a given lcore is stored in a private structure called struct lcore_queue_conf.
321
322.. code-block:: c
323
324    struct lcore_queue_conf {
325        unsigned n_rx_port;
326        unsigned rx_port_list[MAX_RX_QUEUE_PER_LCORE];
327        struct mbuf_table tx_mbufs[L2FWD_MAX_PORTS];
328    } rte_cache_aligned;
329
330    struct lcore_queue_conf lcore_queue_conf[RTE_MAX_LCORE];
331
332The values n_rx_port and rx_port_list[] are used in the main packet processing loop
333(see :ref:`l2_fwd_app_rx_tx_packets`).
334
335The global configuration for the RX queues is stored in a static structure:
336
337.. code-block:: c
338
339    static const struct rte_eth_rxconf rx_conf = {
340        .rx_thresh = {
341            .pthresh = RX_PTHRESH,
342            .hthresh = RX_HTHRESH,
343            .wthresh = RX_WTHRESH,
344        },
345    };
346
347.. _l2_fwd_app_tx_init:
348
349TX Queue Initialization
350~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
351
352Each lcore should be able to transmit on any port. For every port, a single TX queue is initialized.
353
354.. code-block:: c
355
356    /* init one TX queue on each port */
357
358    fflush(stdout);
359
360    ret = rte_eth_tx_queue_setup((uint8_t) portid, 0, nb_txd, rte_eth_dev_socket_id(portid), &tx_conf);
361    if (ret < 0)
362        rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "rte_eth_tx_queue_setup:err=%d, port=%u\n", ret, (unsigned) portid);
363
364The global configuration for TX queues is stored in a static structure:
365
366.. code-block:: c
367
368    static const struct rte_eth_txconf tx_conf = {
369        .tx_thresh = {
370            .pthresh = TX_PTHRESH,
371            .hthresh = TX_HTHRESH,
372            .wthresh = TX_WTHRESH,
373        },
374        .tx_free_thresh = RTE_TEST_TX_DESC_DEFAULT + 1, /* disable feature */
375    };
376
377.. _l2_fwd_app_rx_tx_packets:
378
379Receive, Process and Transmit Packets
380~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
381
382In the l2fwd_main_loop() function, the main task is to read ingress packets from the RX queues.
383This is done using the following code:
384
385.. code-block:: c
386
387    /*
388     * Read packet from RX queues
389     */
390
391    for (i = 0; i < qconf->n_rx_port; i++) {
392        portid = qconf->rx_port_list[i];
393        nb_rx = rte_eth_rx_burst((uint8_t) portid, 0,  pkts_burst, MAX_PKT_BURST);
394
395        for (j = 0; j < nb_rx; j++) {
396            m = pkts_burst[j];
397            rte_prefetch0[rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m, void *)); l2fwd_simple_forward(m, portid);
398        }
399    }
400
401Packets are read in a burst of size MAX_PKT_BURST.
402The rte_eth_rx_burst() function writes the mbuf pointers in a local table and returns the number of available mbufs in the table.
403
404Then, each mbuf in the table is processed by the l2fwd_simple_forward() function.
405The processing is very simple: process the TX port from the RX port, then replace the source and destination MAC addresses if MAC
406addresses updating is enabled.
407
408.. note::
409
410    In the following code, one line for getting the output port requires some explanation.
411
412During the initialization process, a static array of destination ports (l2fwd_dst_ports[]) is filled such that for each source port,
413a destination port is assigned that is either the next or previous enabled port from the portmask.
414Naturally, the number of ports in the portmask must be even, otherwise, the application exits.
415
416.. code-block:: c
417
418    static void
419    l2fwd_simple_forward(struct rte_mbuf *m, unsigned portid)
420    {
421        struct ether_hdr *eth;
422        void *tmp;
423        unsigned dst_port;
424
425        dst_port = l2fwd_dst_ports[portid];
426
427        eth = rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m, struct ether_hdr *);
428
429        /* 02:00:00:00:00:xx */
430
431        tmp = &eth->d_addr.addr_bytes[0];
432
433        *((uint64_t *)tmp) = 0x000000000002 + ((uint64_t) dst_port << 40);
434
435        /* src addr */
436
437        ether_addr_copy(&l2fwd_ports_eth_addr[dst_port], &eth->s_addr);
438
439        l2fwd_send_packet(m, (uint8_t) dst_port);
440    }
441
442Then, the packet is sent using the l2fwd_send_packet (m, dst_port) function.
443For this test application, the processing is exactly the same for all packets arriving on the same RX port.
444Therefore, it would have been possible to call the l2fwd_send_burst() function directly from the main loop
445to send all the received packets on the same TX port,
446using the burst-oriented send function, which is more efficient.
447
448However, in real-life applications (such as, L3 routing),
449packet N is not necessarily forwarded on the same port as packet N-1.
450The application is implemented to illustrate that, so the same approach can be reused in a more complex application.
451
452The l2fwd_send_packet() function stores the packet in a per-lcore and per-txport table.
453If the table is full, the whole packets table is transmitted using the l2fwd_send_burst() function:
454
455.. code-block:: c
456
457    /* Send the packet on an output interface */
458
459    static int
460    l2fwd_send_packet(struct rte_mbuf *m, uint16_t port)
461    {
462        unsigned lcore_id, len;
463        struct lcore_queue_conf *qconf;
464
465        lcore_id = rte_lcore_id();
466        qconf = &lcore_queue_conf[lcore_id];
467        len = qconf->tx_mbufs[port].len;
468        qconf->tx_mbufs[port].m_table[len] = m;
469        len++;
470
471        /* enough pkts to be sent */
472
473        if (unlikely(len == MAX_PKT_BURST)) {
474            l2fwd_send_burst(qconf, MAX_PKT_BURST, port);
475            len = 0;
476        }
477
478        qconf->tx_mbufs[port].len = len; return 0;
479    }
480
481To ensure that no packets remain in the tables, each lcore does a draining of TX queue in its main loop.
482This technique introduces some latency when there are not many packets to send,
483however it improves performance:
484
485.. code-block:: c
486
487    cur_tsc = rte_rdtsc();
488
489    /*
490     *   TX burst queue drain
491     */
492
493    diff_tsc = cur_tsc - prev_tsc;
494
495    if (unlikely(diff_tsc > drain_tsc)) {
496        for (portid = 0; portid < RTE_MAX_ETHPORTS; portid++) {
497            if (qconf->tx_mbufs[portid].len == 0)
498                continue;
499
500            l2fwd_send_burst(&lcore_queue_conf[lcore_id], qconf->tx_mbufs[portid].len, (uint8_t) portid);
501
502            qconf->tx_mbufs[portid].len = 0;
503        }
504
505        /* if timer is enabled */
506
507        if (timer_period > 0) {
508            /* advance the timer */
509
510            timer_tsc += diff_tsc;
511
512            /* if timer has reached its timeout */
513
514            if (unlikely(timer_tsc >= (uint64_t) timer_period)) {
515                /* do this only on master core */
516
517                if (lcore_id == rte_get_master_lcore()) {
518                    print_stats();
519
520                    /* reset the timer */
521                    timer_tsc = 0;
522                }
523            }
524        }
525
526        prev_tsc = cur_tsc;
527    }
528