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.. _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------------------------- 109 110#. Go to the example directory: 111 112 .. code-block:: console 113 114 export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk 115 cd ${RTE_SDK}/examples/l2fwd 116 117#. Set the target (a default target is used if not specified). For example: 118 119 .. code-block:: console 120 121 export RTE_TARGET=x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc 122 123 *See the DPDK Getting Started Guide* for possible RTE_TARGET values. 124 125#. Build the application: 126 127 .. code-block:: console 128 129 make 130 131Running the Application 132----------------------- 133 134The application requires a number of command line options: 135 136.. code-block:: console 137 138 ./build/l2fwd [EAL options] -- -p PORTMASK [-q NQ] --[no-]mac-updating 139 140where, 141 142* p PORTMASK: A hexadecimal bitmask of the ports to configure 143 144* q NQ: A number of queues (=ports) per lcore (default is 1) 145 146* --[no-]mac-updating: Enable or disable MAC addresses updating (enabled by default). 147 148To run the application in linuxapp environment with 4 lcores, 16 ports and 8 RX queues per lcore and MAC address 149updating enabled, issue the command: 150 151.. code-block:: console 152 153 $ ./build/l2fwd -c f -n 4 -- -q 8 -p ffff 154 155Refer to the *DPDK Getting Started Guide* for general information on running applications 156and the Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL) options. 157 158Explanation 159----------- 160 161The following sections provide some explanation of the code. 162 163.. _l2_fwd_app_cmd_arguments: 164 165Command Line Arguments 166~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 167 168The L2 Forwarding sample application takes specific parameters, 169in addition to Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL) arguments. 170The preferred way to parse parameters is to use the getopt() function, 171since it is part of a well-defined and portable library. 172 173The parsing of arguments is done in the l2fwd_parse_args() function. 174The method of argument parsing is not described here. 175Refer to the *glibc getopt(3)* man page for details. 176 177EAL arguments are parsed first, then application-specific arguments. 178This is done at the beginning of the main() function: 179 180.. code-block:: c 181 182 /* init EAL */ 183 184 ret = rte_eal_init(argc, argv); 185 if (ret < 0) 186 rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Invalid EAL arguments\n"); 187 188 argc -= ret; 189 argv += ret; 190 191 /* parse application arguments (after the EAL ones) */ 192 193 ret = l2fwd_parse_args(argc, argv); 194 if (ret < 0) 195 rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Invalid L2FWD arguments\n"); 196 197.. _l2_fwd_app_mbuf_init: 198 199Mbuf Pool Initialization 200~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 201 202Once the arguments are parsed, the mbuf pool is created. 203The mbuf pool contains a set of mbuf objects that will be used by the driver 204and the application to store network packet data: 205 206.. code-block:: c 207 208 /* create the mbuf pool */ 209 210 l2fwd_pktmbuf_pool = rte_mempool_create("mbuf_pool", NB_MBUF, MBUF_SIZE, 32, sizeof(struct rte_pktmbuf_pool_private), 211 rte_pktmbuf_pool_init, NULL, rte_pktmbuf_init, NULL, SOCKET0, 0); 212 213 if (l2fwd_pktmbuf_pool == NULL) 214 rte_panic("Cannot init mbuf pool\n"); 215 216The rte_mempool is a generic structure used to handle pools of objects. 217In this case, it is necessary to create a pool that will be used by the driver, 218which expects to have some reserved space in the mempool structure, 219sizeof(struct rte_pktmbuf_pool_private) bytes. 220The number of allocated pkt mbufs is NB_MBUF, with a size of MBUF_SIZE each. 221A per-lcore cache of 32 mbufs is kept. 222The memory is allocated in NUMA socket 0, 223but it is possible to extend this code to allocate one mbuf pool per socket. 224 225Two callback pointers are also given to the rte_mempool_create() function: 226 227* The first callback pointer is to rte_pktmbuf_pool_init() and is used 228 to initialize the private data of the mempool, which is needed by the driver. 229 This function is provided by the mbuf API, but can be copied and extended by the developer. 230 231* The second callback pointer given to rte_mempool_create() is the mbuf initializer. 232 The default is used, that is, rte_pktmbuf_init(), which is provided in the rte_mbuf library. 233 If a more complex application wants to extend the rte_pktmbuf structure for its own needs, 234 a new function derived from rte_pktmbuf_init( ) can be created. 235 236.. _l2_fwd_app_dvr_init: 237 238Driver Initialization 239~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 240 241The main part of the code in the main() function relates to the initialization of the driver. 242To fully understand this code, it is recommended to study the chapters that related to the Poll Mode Driver 243in the *DPDK Programmer's Guide* - Rel 1.4 EAR and the *DPDK API Reference*. 244 245.. code-block:: c 246 247 if (rte_eal_pci_probe() < 0) 248 rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Cannot probe PCI\n"); 249 250 nb_ports = rte_eth_dev_count(); 251 252 if (nb_ports == 0) 253 rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "No Ethernet ports - bye\n"); 254 255 /* reset l2fwd_dst_ports */ 256 257 for (portid = 0; portid < RTE_MAX_ETHPORTS; portid++) 258 l2fwd_dst_ports[portid] = 0; 259 260 last_port = 0; 261 262 /* 263 * Each logical core is assigned a dedicated TX queue on each port. 264 */ 265 266 for (portid = 0; portid < nb_ports; portid++) { 267 /* skip ports that are not enabled */ 268 269 if ((l2fwd_enabled_port_mask & (1 << portid)) == 0) 270 continue; 271 272 if (nb_ports_in_mask % 2) { 273 l2fwd_dst_ports[portid] = last_port; 274 l2fwd_dst_ports[last_port] = portid; 275 } 276 else 277 last_port = portid; 278 279 nb_ports_in_mask++; 280 281 rte_eth_dev_info_get((uint8_t) portid, &dev_info); 282 } 283 284Observe that: 285 286* rte_igb_pmd_init_all() simultaneously registers the driver as a PCI driver and as an Ethernet* Poll Mode Driver. 287 288* rte_eal_pci_probe() parses the devices on the PCI bus and initializes recognized devices. 289 290The next step is to configure the RX and TX queues. 291For each port, there is only one RX queue (only one lcore is able to poll a given port). 292The number of TX queues depends on the number of available lcores. 293The rte_eth_dev_configure() function is used to configure the number of queues for a port: 294 295.. code-block:: c 296 297 ret = rte_eth_dev_configure((uint8_t)portid, 1, 1, &port_conf); 298 if (ret < 0) 299 rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Cannot configure device: " 300 "err=%d, port=%u\n", 301 ret, portid); 302 303The global configuration is stored in a static structure: 304 305.. code-block:: c 306 307 static const struct rte_eth_conf port_conf = { 308 .rxmode = { 309 .split_hdr_size = 0, 310 .header_split = 0, /**< Header Split disabled */ 311 .hw_ip_checksum = 0, /**< IP checksum offload disabled */ 312 .hw_vlan_filter = 0, /**< VLAN filtering disabled */ 313 .jumbo_frame = 0, /**< Jumbo Frame Support disabled */ 314 .hw_strip_crc= 0, /**< CRC stripped by hardware */ 315 }, 316 317 .txmode = { 318 .mq_mode = ETH_DCB_NONE 319 }, 320 }; 321 322.. _l2_fwd_app_rx_init: 323 324RX Queue Initialization 325~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 326 327The application uses one lcore to poll one or several ports, depending on the -q option, 328which specifies the number of queues per lcore. 329 330For example, if the user specifies -q 4, the application is able to poll four ports with one lcore. 331If there are 16 ports on the target (and if the portmask argument is -p ffff ), 332the application will need four lcores to poll all the ports. 333 334.. code-block:: c 335 336 ret = rte_eth_rx_queue_setup((uint8_t) portid, 0, nb_rxd, SOCKET0, &rx_conf, l2fwd_pktmbuf_pool); 337 if (ret < 0) 338 339 rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "rte_eth_rx_queue_setup: " 340 "err=%d, port=%u\n", 341 ret, portid); 342 343The list of queues that must be polled for a given lcore is stored in a private structure called struct lcore_queue_conf. 344 345.. code-block:: c 346 347 struct lcore_queue_conf { 348 unsigned n_rx_port; 349 unsigned rx_port_list[MAX_RX_QUEUE_PER_LCORE]; 350 struct mbuf_table tx_mbufs[L2FWD_MAX_PORTS]; 351 } rte_cache_aligned; 352 353 struct lcore_queue_conf lcore_queue_conf[RTE_MAX_LCORE]; 354 355The values n_rx_port and rx_port_list[] are used in the main packet processing loop 356(see :ref:`l2_fwd_app_rx_tx_packets`). 357 358The global configuration for the RX queues is stored in a static structure: 359 360.. code-block:: c 361 362 static const struct rte_eth_rxconf rx_conf = { 363 .rx_thresh = { 364 .pthresh = RX_PTHRESH, 365 .hthresh = RX_HTHRESH, 366 .wthresh = RX_WTHRESH, 367 }, 368 }; 369 370.. _l2_fwd_app_tx_init: 371 372TX Queue Initialization 373~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 374 375Each lcore should be able to transmit on any port. For every port, a single TX queue is initialized. 376 377.. code-block:: c 378 379 /* init one TX queue on each port */ 380 381 fflush(stdout); 382 383 ret = rte_eth_tx_queue_setup((uint8_t) portid, 0, nb_txd, rte_eth_dev_socket_id(portid), &tx_conf); 384 if (ret < 0) 385 rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "rte_eth_tx_queue_setup:err=%d, port=%u\n", ret, (unsigned) portid); 386 387The global configuration for TX queues is stored in a static structure: 388 389.. code-block:: c 390 391 static const struct rte_eth_txconf tx_conf = { 392 .tx_thresh = { 393 .pthresh = TX_PTHRESH, 394 .hthresh = TX_HTHRESH, 395 .wthresh = TX_WTHRESH, 396 }, 397 .tx_free_thresh = RTE_TEST_TX_DESC_DEFAULT + 1, /* disable feature */ 398 }; 399 400.. _l2_fwd_app_rx_tx_packets: 401 402Receive, Process and Transmit Packets 403~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 404 405In the l2fwd_main_loop() function, the main task is to read ingress packets from the RX queues. 406This is done using the following code: 407 408.. code-block:: c 409 410 /* 411 * Read packet from RX queues 412 */ 413 414 for (i = 0; i < qconf->n_rx_port; i++) { 415 portid = qconf->rx_port_list[i]; 416 nb_rx = rte_eth_rx_burst((uint8_t) portid, 0, pkts_burst, MAX_PKT_BURST); 417 418 for (j = 0; j < nb_rx; j++) { 419 m = pkts_burst[j]; 420 rte_prefetch0[rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m, void *)); l2fwd_simple_forward(m, portid); 421 } 422 } 423 424Packets are read in a burst of size MAX_PKT_BURST. 425The rte_eth_rx_burst() function writes the mbuf pointers in a local table and returns the number of available mbufs in the table. 426 427Then, each mbuf in the table is processed by the l2fwd_simple_forward() function. 428The processing is very simple: process the TX port from the RX port, then replace the source and destination MAC addresses if MAC 429addresses updating is enabled. 430 431.. note:: 432 433 In the following code, one line for getting the output port requires some explanation. 434 435During the initialization process, a static array of destination ports (l2fwd_dst_ports[]) is filled such that for each source port, 436a destination port is assigned that is either the next or previous enabled port from the portmask. 437Naturally, the number of ports in the portmask must be even, otherwise, the application exits. 438 439.. code-block:: c 440 441 static void 442 l2fwd_simple_forward(struct rte_mbuf *m, unsigned portid) 443 { 444 struct ether_hdr *eth; 445 void *tmp; 446 unsigned dst_port; 447 448 dst_port = l2fwd_dst_ports[portid]; 449 450 eth = rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m, struct ether_hdr *); 451 452 /* 02:00:00:00:00:xx */ 453 454 tmp = ð->d_addr.addr_bytes[0]; 455 456 *((uint64_t *)tmp) = 0x000000000002 + ((uint64_t) dst_port << 40); 457 458 /* src addr */ 459 460 ether_addr_copy(&l2fwd_ports_eth_addr[dst_port], ð->s_addr); 461 462 l2fwd_send_packet(m, (uint8_t) dst_port); 463 } 464 465Then, the packet is sent using the l2fwd_send_packet (m, dst_port) function. 466For this test application, the processing is exactly the same for all packets arriving on the same RX port. 467Therefore, it would have been possible to call the l2fwd_send_burst() function directly from the main loop 468to send all the received packets on the same TX port, 469using the burst-oriented send function, which is more efficient. 470 471However, in real-life applications (such as, L3 routing), 472packet N is not necessarily forwarded on the same port as packet N-1. 473The application is implemented to illustrate that, so the same approach can be reused in a more complex application. 474 475The l2fwd_send_packet() function stores the packet in a per-lcore and per-txport table. 476If the table is full, the whole packets table is transmitted using the l2fwd_send_burst() function: 477 478.. code-block:: c 479 480 /* Send the packet on an output interface */ 481 482 static int 483 l2fwd_send_packet(struct rte_mbuf *m, uint8_t port) 484 { 485 unsigned lcore_id, len; 486 struct lcore_queue_conf *qconf; 487 488 lcore_id = rte_lcore_id(); 489 qconf = &lcore_queue_conf[lcore_id]; 490 len = qconf->tx_mbufs[port].len; 491 qconf->tx_mbufs[port].m_table[len] = m; 492 len++; 493 494 /* enough pkts to be sent */ 495 496 if (unlikely(len == MAX_PKT_BURST)) { 497 l2fwd_send_burst(qconf, MAX_PKT_BURST, port); 498 len = 0; 499 } 500 501 qconf->tx_mbufs[port].len = len; return 0; 502 } 503 504To ensure that no packets remain in the tables, each lcore does a draining of TX queue in its main loop. 505This technique introduces some latency when there are not many packets to send, 506however it improves performance: 507 508.. code-block:: c 509 510 cur_tsc = rte_rdtsc(); 511 512 /* 513 * TX burst queue drain 514 */ 515 516 diff_tsc = cur_tsc - prev_tsc; 517 518 if (unlikely(diff_tsc > drain_tsc)) { 519 for (portid = 0; portid < RTE_MAX_ETHPORTS; portid++) { 520 if (qconf->tx_mbufs[portid].len == 0) 521 continue; 522 523 l2fwd_send_burst(&lcore_queue_conf[lcore_id], qconf->tx_mbufs[portid].len, (uint8_t) portid); 524 525 qconf->tx_mbufs[portid].len = 0; 526 } 527 528 /* if timer is enabled */ 529 530 if (timer_period > 0) { 531 /* advance the timer */ 532 533 timer_tsc += diff_tsc; 534 535 /* if timer has reached its timeout */ 536 537 if (unlikely(timer_tsc >= (uint64_t) timer_period)) { 538 /* do this only on master core */ 539 540 if (lcore_id == rte_get_master_lcore()) { 541 print_stats(); 542 543 /* reset the timer */ 544 timer_tsc = 0; 545 } 546 } 547 } 548 549 prev_tsc = cur_tsc; 550 } 551