xref: /dpdk/doc/guides/sample_app_ug/l3_forward.rst (revision 8750576fb2a9a067ffbcce4bab6481f3bfa47097)
1..  SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
2    Copyright(c) 2010-2014 Intel Corporation.
3
4L3 Forwarding Sample Application
5================================
6
7The L3 forwarding application is an example of packet processing
8using DPDK to demonstrate the usage of poll and event mode packet I/O mechanism.
9
10Overview
11--------
12
13The application demonstrates the use of the hash, LPM, FIB and ACL libraries in DPDK
14to implement packet forwarding using poll or event mode PMDs for packet I/O.
15The initialization and run-time paths are very similar to those of the
16:doc:`l2_forward_real_virtual` and :doc:`l2_forward_event`.
17The main difference from the L2 forwarding sample application
18is that optionally the packet can be Rx/Tx from/to eventdev instead of to port directly.
19The forwarding decision is made based on information read from the input packet.
20
21Eventdev can optionally use S/W or H/W (if supported by platform) scheduler
22implementation for packet I/O based on run time parameters.
23
24The lookup method is hash-based, LPM-based, FIB-based or ACL-based
25and is selected at run time.
26When the selected lookup method is hash-based,
27a hash object is used to emulate the flow classification stage.
28The hash object is used in correlation with a flow table to map each input packet to its flow at runtime.
29
30The hash lookup key is represented by a DiffServ 5-tuple composed of the following fields read from the input packet:
31Source IP Address, Destination IP Address, Protocol, Source Port and Destination Port.
32The ID of the output interface for the input packet is read from the identified flow table entry.
33The set of flows used by the application is statically configured and loaded into the hash at initialization time.
34When the selected lookup method is LPM or FIB based,
35an LPM or FIB object is used to emulate the forwarding stage for IPv4 packets.
36The LPM or FIB object is used as the routing table
37to identify the next hop for each input packet at runtime.
38
39The LPM and FIB lookup keys are represented by the destination IP address field
40read from the input packet.
41The ID of the output interface for the input packet is the next hop
42returned by the LPM or FIB lookup.
43The set of LPM and FIB rules used by the application is statically configured
44and loaded into the LPM or FIB object at initialization time.
45
46For ACL, the ACL library is used to perform both ACL and route entry lookup.
47When packets are received from a port,
48the application extracts the necessary information
49from the TCP/IP header of the received packet
50and performs a lookup in the rule database to figure out
51whether the packets should be dropped (in the ACL range)
52or forwarded to desired ports.
53For ACL, the application implements packet classification
54for the IPv4/IPv6 5-tuple syntax specifically.
55The 5-tuple syntax consists of a source IP address, a destination IP address,
56a source port, a destination port and a protocol identifier.
57
58In the sample application, hash-based, LPM-based, FIB-based and ACL-based forwarding supports
59both IPv4 and IPv6.
60During the initialization, phase route rules for IPv4 and IPv6 are read from rule files.
61
62Compiling the Application
63-------------------------
64
65To compile the sample application, see :doc:`compiling`.
66
67The application is located in the ``l3fwd`` sub-directory.
68
69Running the Application
70-----------------------
71
72The application has a number of command line options::
73
74    ./dpdk-l3fwd [EAL options] -- -p PORTMASK
75                             --rule_ipv4=FILE
76                             --rule_ipv6=FILE
77                             [-P]
78                             [--lookup LOOKUP_METHOD]
79                             --config(port,queue,lcore)[,(port,queue,lcore)]
80                             [--eth-dest=X,MM:MM:MM:MM:MM:MM]
81                             [--max-pkt-len PKTLEN]
82                             [--no-numa]
83                             [--hash-entry-num]
84                             [--ipv6]
85                             [--parse-ptype]
86                             [--per-port-pool]
87                             [--mode]
88                             [--eventq-sched]
89                             [--event-eth-rxqs]
90                             [--event-vector [--event-vector-size SIZE] [--event-vector-tmo NS]]
91                             [-E]
92                             [-L]
93
94Where,
95
96* ``-p PORTMASK:`` Hexadecimal bitmask of ports to configure
97
98* ``--rule_ipv4=FILE:`` specify the ipv4 rules entries file.
99  Each rule occupies one line.
100
101* ``--rule_ipv6=FILE:`` specify the ipv6 rules entries file.
102
103* ``-P:`` Optional, sets all ports to promiscuous mode so that packets are accepted regardless of the packet's Ethernet MAC destination address.
104  Without this option, only packets with the Ethernet MAC destination address set to the Ethernet address of the port are accepted.
105
106* ``--lookup:`` Optional, select the lookup method.
107  Accepted options:
108  ``em`` (Exact Match),
109  ``lpm`` (Longest Prefix Match),
110  ``fib`` (Forwarding Information Base),
111  ``acl`` (Access Control List).
112  Default is ``lpm``.
113
114* ``--config (port,queue,lcore)[,(port,queue,lcore)]:`` Determines which queues from which ports are mapped to which cores.
115
116* ``--eth-dest=X,MM:MM:MM:MM:MM:MM:`` Optional, ethernet destination for port X.
117
118* ``--max-pkt-len:`` Optional, maximum packet length in decimal (64-9600).
119
120* ``--no-numa:`` Optional, disables numa awareness.
121
122* ``--hash-entry-num:`` Optional, specifies the hash entry number in hexadecimal to be setup.
123
124* ``--ipv6:`` Optional, set if running ipv6 packets.
125
126* ``--parse-ptype:`` Optional, set to use software to analyze packet type. Without this option, hardware will check the packet type.
127
128* ``--per-port-pool:`` Optional, set to use independent buffer pools per port. Without this option, single buffer pool is used for all ports.
129
130* ``--mode:`` Optional, Packet transfer mode for I/O, poll or eventdev.
131
132* ``--eventq-sched:`` Optional, Event queue synchronization method, Ordered, Atomic or Parallel. Only valid if --mode=eventdev.
133
134* ``--event-eth-rxqs:`` Optional, Number of ethernet RX queues per device. Only valid if --mode=eventdev.
135
136* ``--event-vector:`` Optional, Enable event vectorization. Only valid if --mode=eventdev.
137
138* ``--event-vector-size:`` Optional, Max vector size if event vectorization is enabled.
139
140* ``--event-vector-tmo:`` Optional, Max timeout to form vector in nanoseconds if event vectorization is enabled.
141
142* ``--alg=<val>:`` optional, ACL classify method to use, one of:
143  ``scalar|sse|avx2|neon|altivec|avx512x16|avx512x32``
144
145* ``-E:`` Optional, enable exact match,
146  legacy flag, please use ``--lookup=em`` instead.
147
148* ``-L:`` Optional, enable longest prefix match,
149  legacy flag, please use ``--lookup=lpm`` instead.
150
151
152For example, consider a dual processor socket platform with 8 physical cores, where cores 0-7 and 16-23 appear on socket 0,
153while cores 8-15 and 24-31 appear on socket 1.
154
155To enable L3 forwarding between two ports, assuming that both ports are in the same socket, using two cores, cores 1 and 2,
156(which are in the same socket too), use the following command:
157
158.. code-block:: console
159
160    ./<build_dir>/examples/dpdk-l3fwd -l 1,2 -n 4 -- -p 0x3 --config="(0,0,1),(1,0,2)" --rule_ipv4="rule_ipv4.cfg" --rule_ipv6="rule_ipv6.cfg"
161
162In this command:
163
164*   The -l option enables cores 1, 2
165
166*   The -p option enables ports 0 and 1
167
168*   The --config option enables one queue on each port and maps each (port,queue) pair to a specific core.
169    The following table shows the mapping in this example:
170
171+----------+-----------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
172| **Port** | **Queue** | **lcore** | **Description**                     |
173|          |           |           |                                     |
174+----------+-----------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
175| 0        | 0         | 1         | Map queue 0 from port 0 to lcore 1. |
176|          |           |           |                                     |
177+----------+-----------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
178| 1        | 0         | 2         | Map queue 0 from port 1 to lcore 2. |
179|          |           |           |                                     |
180+----------+-----------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
181
182*   The -rule_ipv4 option specifies the reading of IPv4 rules sets from the rule_ipv4.cfg file
183
184*   The -rule_ipv6 option specifies the reading of IPv6 rules sets from the rule_ipv6.cfg file.
185
186To use eventdev mode with sync method **ordered** on the above environment,
187the following is the sample command:
188
189.. code-block:: console
190
191    ./<build_dir>/examples/dpdk-l3fwd -l 0-3 -n 4 -a <event device> -- -p 0x3 --eventq-sched=ordered --rule_ipv4="rule_ipv4.cfg" --rule_ipv6="rule_ipv6.cfg"
192
193or
194
195.. code-block:: console
196
197    ./<build_dir>/examples/dpdk-l3fwd -l 0-3 -n 4 -a <event device> \
198		-- -p 0x03 --mode=eventdev --eventq-sched=ordered --rule_ipv4="rule_ipv4.cfg" --rule_ipv6="rule_ipv6.cfg"
199
200In this command:
201
202*   -a option allows the event device supported by platform.
203    The syntax used to indicate this device may vary based on platform.
204
205*   The --mode option defines PMD to be used for packet I/O.
206
207*   The --eventq-sched option enables synchronization menthod of event queue so that packets will be scheduled accordingly.
208
209If application uses S/W scheduler, it uses following DPDK services:
210
211*   Software scheduler
212*   Rx adapter service function
213*   Tx adapter service function
214
215The application needs service cores to run the above mentioned services. Service cores
216must be provided as EAL parameters along with the --vdev=event_sw0 to enable S/W
217scheduler. The following is the sample command:
218
219.. code-block:: console
220
221    ./<build_dir>/examples/dpdk-l3fwd -l 0-7 -s 0xf0000 -n 4 --vdev event_sw0 -- -p 0x3 --mode=eventdev --eventq-sched=ordered --rule_ipv4="rule_ipv4.cfg" --rule_ipv6="rule_ipv6.cfg"
222
223In case of eventdev mode, *--config* option is not used for ethernet port
224configuration. Instead, each ethernet port will be configured with this
225setup:
226
227*   Single Rx/Tx queue
228
229*   Each Rx queue will be connected to event queue via Rx adapter.
230
231*   Each Tx queue will be connected via Tx adapter.
232
233Refer to the *DPDK Getting Started Guide* for general information on running applications and
234the Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL) options.
235
236.. _l3_fwd_explanation:
237
238Explanation
239-----------
240
241The following sections provide explanation of the sample application code. As mentioned in the overview section,
242the initialization and run-time paths are very similar to those of the :doc:`l2_forward_real_virtual` and :doc:`l2_forward_event`.
243The following sections describe aspects that are specific to the L3 Forwarding sample application.
244
245Parse Rules from File
246~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
247
248The application parses the rules from the file and adds them to the appropriate route table by calling the appropriate function.
249It ignores empty and comment lines, and parses and validates the rules it reads.
250If errors are detected, the application exits with messages to identify the errors encountered.
251
252The format of the route rules differs based on which lookup method is being used.
253Therefore, the code only decreases the priority number with each rule it parses.
254Route rules are mandatory.
255To read data from the specified file successfully, the application assumes the following:
256
257*   Each rule occupies a single line.
258
259*   Only the following four rule line types are valid in this application:
260
261*   Route rule line, which starts with a leading character 'R'
262
263*   Comment line, which starts with a leading character '#'
264
265*   ACL rule line, which starts with a leading character ‘@’
266
267*   Empty line, which consists of a space, form-feed ('\f'), newline ('\n'),
268    carriage return ('\r'), horizontal tab ('\t'), or vertical tab ('\v').
269
270Other lines types are considered invalid.
271
272*   Rules are organized in descending order of priority,
273    which means rules at the head of the file always have a higher priority than those further down in the file.
274
275*   A typical IPv4 LPM/FIB rule line should have a format as shown below:
276
277R<destination_ip>/<ip_mask_length><output_port_number>
278
279*   A typical IPv4 EM rule line should have a format as shown below:
280
281R<destination_ip><source_ip><destination_port><source_port><protocol><output_port_number>
282
283*   A typical IPv4 ACL rule line should have a format as shown below:
284
285.. _figure_ipv4_acl_rule:
286
287.. figure:: img/ipv4_acl_rule.*
288
289   A typical IPv4 ACL rule
290
291IPv4 addresses are specified in CIDR format as specified in RFC 4632.
292For LPM/FIB/ACL they consist of the dot notation for the address
293and a prefix length separated by '/'.
294For example, 192.168.0.34/32, where the address is 192.168.0.34 and the prefix length is 32.
295For EM, they consist of just the dot notation for the address and no prefix length.
296For example, 192.168.0.34, where the Address is 192.168.0.34.
297EM also includes ports which are specified as a single number which represents a single port.
298
299The application parses the rules from the file,
300it ignores empty and comment lines
301and parses and validates the rules it reads.
302If errors are detected, the application exits
303with messages to identify the errors encountered.
304The ACL rules save the index to the specific rules in the userdata field,
305while route rules save the forwarding port number.
306
307Hash Initialization
308~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
309
310The hash object is created and loaded with the pre-configured entries read from a global array,
311and then generate the expected 5-tuple as key to keep consistence with those of real flow
312for the convenience to execute hash performance test on 4M/8M/16M flows.
313
314.. note::
315
316    The Hash initialization will setup both ipv4 and ipv6 hash table,
317    and populate the either table depending on the value of variable ipv6.
318
319.. note::
320
321    Value of global variable ipv6 can be specified with --ipv6 in the command line.
322    Value of global variable hash_entry_number,
323    which is used to specify the total hash entry number for all used ports in hash performance test,
324    can be specified with --hash-entry-num VALUE in command line, being its default value 4.
325
326.. code-block:: c
327
328    #if (APP_LOOKUP_METHOD == APP_LOOKUP_EXACT_MATCH)
329
330        static void
331        setup_hash(int socketid)
332        {
333            // ...
334
335            if (ipv6 == 0) {
336                /* populate the ipv4 hash */
337                populate_ipv4_flow_into_table(
338                    ipv4_l3fwd_em_lookup_struct[socketid]);
339            } else {
340                /* populate the ipv6 hash */
341                populate_ipv6_flow_into_table(
342                    ipv6_l3fwd_em_lookup_struct[socketid]);
343            }
344        }
345    #endif
346
347LPM Initialization
348~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
349
350The LPM object is created and loaded with the pre-configured entries read from a global array.
351
352.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/l3fwd/l3fwd_em.c
353    :language: c
354    :start-after: Initialize exact match (hash) parameters. 8<
355    :end-before: >8 End of initialization of hash parameters.
356
357FIB Initialization
358~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
359
360The FIB object is created and loaded with the pre-configured entries
361read from a global array.
362The abridged code snippet below shows the FIB initialization for IPv4,
363the full setup function including the IPv6 setup can be seen in the app code.
364
365.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/l3fwd/l3fwd_fib.c
366   :language: c
367   :start-after: Function to setup fib. 8<
368   :end-before: >8 End of setup fib.
369
370ACL Initialization
371~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
372
373For each supported ACL rule format (IPv4 5-tuple, IPv6 6-tuple),
374the application creates a separate context handler
375from the ACL library for each CPU socket on the board
376and adds parsed rules into that context.
377
378Note, that for each supported rule type,
379the application needs to calculate the expected offset of the fields
380from the start of the packet.
381That's why only packets with fixed IPv4/ IPv6 header are supported.
382That allows to perform ACL classify straight over incoming packet buffer -
383no extra protocol field retrieval need to be performed.
384
385Subsequently, the application checks whether NUMA is enabled.
386If it is, the application records the socket IDs of the CPU cores involved in the task.
387
388Finally, the application creates contexts handler from the ACL library,
389adds rules parsed from the file into the database and build an ACL trie.
390It is important to note that the application creates an independent copy
391of each database for each socket CPU involved in the task
392to reduce the time for remote memory access.
393
394.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/l3fwd/l3fwd_acl.c
395   :language: c
396   :start-after: Setup ACL context. 8<
397   :end-before: >8 End of ACL context setup.
398
399Packet Forwarding for Hash-based Lookups
400~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
401
402For each input packet, the packet forwarding operation is done by the l3fwd_simple_forward()
403or simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts() function for IPv4 packets or the simple_ipv6_fwd_4pkts() function for IPv6 packets.
404The l3fwd_simple_forward() function provides the basic functionality for both IPv4 and IPv6 packet forwarding
405for any number of burst packets received,
406and the packet forwarding decision (that is, the identification of the output interface for the packet)
407for hash-based lookups is done by the  get_ipv4_dst_port() or get_ipv6_dst_port() function.
408The get_ipv4_dst_port() function is shown below:
409
410.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/l3fwd/l3fwd_em.c
411   :language: c
412   :start-after: Performing hash-based lookups. 8<
413   :end-before: >8 End of performing hash-based lookups.
414
415The get_ipv6_dst_port() function is similar to the get_ipv4_dst_port() function.
416
417The simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts() and simple_ipv6_fwd_4pkts() function are optimized for continuous 4 valid ipv4 and ipv6 packets,
418they leverage the multiple buffer optimization to boost the performance of forwarding packets with the exact match on hash table.
419The key code snippet of simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts() is shown below:
420
421.. code-block:: c
422
423    static inline void
424    simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts(struct rte_mbuf* m[4], uint16_t portid, struct lcore_conf *qconf)
425    {
426        // ...
427
428        data[0] = _mm_loadu_si128(( m128i*)(rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m[0], unsigned char *) + sizeof(struct rte_ether_hdr) + offsetof(struct rte_ipv4_hdr, time_to_live)));
429        data[1] = _mm_loadu_si128(( m128i*)(rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m[1], unsigned char *) + sizeof(struct rte_ether_hdr) + offsetof(struct rte_ipv4_hdr, time_to_live)));
430        data[2] = _mm_loadu_si128(( m128i*)(rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m[2], unsigned char *) + sizeof(struct rte_ether_hdr) + offsetof(struct rte_ipv4_hdr, time_to_live)));
431        data[3] = _mm_loadu_si128(( m128i*)(rte_pktmbuf_mtod(m[3], unsigned char *) + sizeof(struct rte_ether_hdr) + offsetof(struct rte_ipv4_hdr, time_to_live)));
432
433        key[0].xmm = _mm_and_si128(data[0], mask0);
434        key[1].xmm = _mm_and_si128(data[1], mask0);
435        key[2].xmm = _mm_and_si128(data[2], mask0);
436        key[3].xmm = _mm_and_si128(data[3], mask0);
437
438        const void *key_array[4] = {&key[0], &key[1], &key[2],&key[3]};
439
440        rte_hash_lookup_bulk(qconf->ipv4_lookup_struct, &key_array[0], 4, ret);
441
442        dst_port[0] = (ret[0] < 0)? portid:ipv4_l3fwd_out_if[ret[0]];
443        dst_port[1] = (ret[1] < 0)? portid:ipv4_l3fwd_out_if[ret[1]];
444        dst_port[2] = (ret[2] < 0)? portid:ipv4_l3fwd_out_if[ret[2]];
445        dst_port[3] = (ret[3] < 0)? portid:ipv4_l3fwd_out_if[ret[3]];
446
447        // ...
448    }
449
450The simple_ipv6_fwd_4pkts() function is similar to the simple_ipv4_fwd_4pkts() function.
451
452Known issue: IP packets with extensions or IP packets which are not TCP/UDP cannot work well at this mode.
453
454Packet Forwarding for LPM-based Lookups
455~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
456
457For each input packet, the packet forwarding operation is done by the l3fwd_simple_forward() function,
458but the packet forwarding decision (that is, the identification of the output interface for the packet)
459for LPM-based lookups is done by the get_ipv4_dst_port() function below:
460
461.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/l3fwd/l3fwd_lpm.c
462   :language: c
463   :start-after: Performing LPM-based lookups. 8<
464   :end-before: >8 End of performing LPM-based lookups.
465
466Packet Forwarding for FIB-based Lookups
467~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
468
469The FIB library was designed to process multiple packets at once,
470it does not have separate functions for single and bulk lookups.
471``rte_fib_lookup_bulk`` is used for IPv4 lookups
472and ``rte_fib6_lookup_bulk`` for IPv6.
473Various examples of these functions being used
474can be found in the sample app code.
475
476Eventdev Driver Initialization
477~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
478
479Eventdev driver initialization is the same as L2 forwarding eventdev application.
480Refer :doc:`l2_forward_event` for more details.
481