xref: /dpdk/doc/guides/sample_app_ug/multi_process.rst (revision fea1d908d39989a27890b29b5c0ec94c85c8257b)
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30
31Multi-process Sample Application
32================================
33
34This chapter describes the example applications for multi-processing that are included in the DPDK.
35
36Example Applications
37--------------------
38
39Building the Sample Applications
40~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
41
42The multi-process example applications are built in the same way as other sample applications,
43and as documented in the *DPDK Getting Started Guide*.
44To build all the example applications:
45
46#.  Set RTE_SDK and go to the example directory:
47
48    .. code-block:: console
49
50        export RTE_SDK=/path/to/rte_sdk
51        cd ${RTE_SDK}/examples/multi_process
52
53#.  Set the target (a default target will be used if not specified). For example:
54
55    .. code-block:: console
56
57        export RTE_TARGET=x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc
58
59    See the *DPDK Getting Started Guide* for possible RTE_TARGET values.
60
61#.  Build the applications:
62
63    .. code-block:: console
64
65        make
66
67.. note::
68
69    If just a specific multi-process application needs to be built,
70    the final make command can be run just in that application's directory,
71    rather than at the top-level multi-process directory.
72
73Basic Multi-process Example
74~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
75
76The examples/simple_mp folder in the DPDK release contains a basic example application to demonstrate how
77two DPDK processes can work together using queues and memory pools to share information.
78
79Running the Application
80^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
81
82To run the application, start one copy of the simple_mp binary in one terminal,
83passing at least two cores in the coremask, as follows:
84
85.. code-block:: console
86
87    ./build/simple_mp -c 3 -n 4 --proc-type=primary
88
89For the first DPDK process run, the proc-type flag can be omitted or set to auto,
90since all DPDK processes will default to being a primary instance,
91meaning they have control over the hugepage shared memory regions.
92The process should start successfully and display a command prompt as follows:
93
94.. code-block:: console
95
96    $ ./build/simple_mp -c 3 -n 4 --proc-type=primary
97    EAL: coremask set to 3
98    EAL: Detected lcore 0 on socket 0
99    EAL: Detected lcore 1 on socket 0
100    EAL: Detected lcore 2 on socket 0
101    EAL: Detected lcore 3 on socket 0
102    ...
103
104    EAL: Requesting 2 pages of size 1073741824
105    EAL: Requesting 768 pages of size 2097152
106    EAL: Ask a virtual area of 0x40000000 bytes
107    EAL: Virtual area found at 0x7ff200000000 (size = 0x40000000)
108    ...
109
110    EAL: check igb_uio module
111    EAL: check module finished
112    EAL: Master core 0 is ready (tid=54e41820)
113    EAL: Core 1 is ready (tid=53b32700)
114
115    Starting core 1
116
117    simple_mp >
118
119To run the secondary process to communicate with the primary process,
120again run the same binary setting at least two cores in the coremask:
121
122.. code-block:: console
123
124    ./build/simple_mp -c C -n 4 --proc-type=secondary
125
126When running a secondary process such as that shown above, the proc-type parameter can again be specified as auto.
127However, omitting the parameter altogether will cause the process to try and start as a primary rather than secondary process.
128
129Once the process type is specified correctly,
130the process starts up, displaying largely similar status messages to the primary instance as it initializes.
131Once again, you will be presented with a command prompt.
132
133Once both processes are running, messages can be sent between them using the send command.
134At any stage, either process can be terminated using the quit command.
135
136.. code-block:: console
137
138   EAL: Master core 10 is ready (tid=b5f89820)           EAL: Master core 8 is ready (tid=864a3820)
139   EAL: Core 11 is ready (tid=84ffe700)                  EAL: Core 9 is ready (tid=85995700)
140   Starting core 11                                      Starting core 9
141   simple_mp > send hello_secondary                      simple_mp > core 9: Received 'hello_secondary'
142   simple_mp > core 11: Received 'hello_primary'         simple_mp > send hello_primary
143   simple_mp > quit                                      simple_mp > quit
144
145.. note::
146
147    If the primary instance is terminated, the secondary instance must also be shut-down and restarted after the primary.
148    This is necessary because the primary instance will clear and reset the shared memory regions on startup,
149    invalidating the secondary process's pointers.
150    The secondary process can be stopped and restarted without affecting the primary process.
151
152How the Application Works
153^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
154
155The core of this example application is based on using two queues and a single memory pool in shared memory.
156These three objects are created at startup by the primary process,
157since the secondary process cannot create objects in memory as it cannot reserve memory zones,
158and the secondary process then uses lookup functions to attach to these objects as it starts up.
159
160.. code-block:: c
161
162    if (rte_eal_process_type() == RTE_PROC_PRIMARY){
163        send_ring = rte_ring_create(_PRI_2_SEC, ring_size, SOCKET0, flags);
164        recv_ring = rte_ring_create(_SEC_2_PRI, ring_size, SOCKET0, flags);
165        message_pool = rte_mempool_create(_MSG_POOL, pool_size, string_size, pool_cache, priv_data_sz, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, SOCKET0, flags);
166    } else {
167        recv_ring = rte_ring_lookup(_PRI_2_SEC);
168        send_ring = rte_ring_lookup(_SEC_2_PRI);
169        message_pool = rte_mempool_lookup(_MSG_POOL);
170    }
171
172Note, however, that the named ring structure used as send_ring in the primary process is the recv_ring in the secondary process.
173
174Once the rings and memory pools are all available in both the primary and secondary processes,
175the application simply dedicates two threads to sending and receiving messages respectively.
176The receive thread simply dequeues any messages on the receive ring, prints them,
177and frees the buffer space used by the messages back to the memory pool.
178The send thread makes use of the command-prompt library to interactively request user input for messages to send.
179Once a send command is issued by the user, a buffer is allocated from the memory pool, filled in with the message contents,
180then enqueued on the appropriate rte_ring.
181
182Symmetric Multi-process Example
183~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
184
185The second example of DPDK multi-process support demonstrates how a set of processes can run in parallel,
186with each process performing the same set of packet- processing operations.
187(Since each process is identical in functionality to the others,
188we refer to this as symmetric multi-processing, to differentiate it from asymmetric multi- processing -
189such as a client-server mode of operation seen in the next example,
190where different processes perform different tasks, yet co-operate to form a packet-processing system.)
191The following diagram shows the data-flow through the application, using two processes.
192
193.. _figure_6:
194
195**Figure 6. Example Data Flow in a Symmetric Multi-process Application**
196
197.. image9_png has been renamed
198
199|sym_multi_proc_app|
200
201As the diagram shows, each process reads packets from each of the network ports in use.
202RSS is used to distribute incoming packets on each port to different hardware RX queues.
203Each process reads a different RX queue on each port and so does not contend with any other process for that queue access.
204Similarly, each process writes outgoing packets to a different TX queue on each port.
205
206Running the Application
207^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
208
209As with the simple_mp example, the first instance of the symmetric_mp process must be run as the primary instance,
210though with a number of other application- specific parameters also provided after the EAL arguments.
211These additional parameters are:
212
213*   -p <portmask>, where portmask is a hexadecimal bitmask of what ports on the system are to be used.
214    For example: -p 3 to use ports 0 and 1 only.
215
216*   --num-procs <N>, where N is the total number of symmetric_mp instances that will be run side-by-side to perform packet processing.
217    This parameter is used to configure the appropriate number of receive queues on each network port.
218
219*   --proc-id <n>, where n is a numeric value in the range 0 <= n < N (number of processes, specified above).
220    This identifies which symmetric_mp instance is being run, so that each process can read a unique receive queue on each network port.
221
222The secondary symmetric_mp instances must also have these parameters specified,
223and the first two must be the same as those passed to the primary instance, or errors result.
224
225For example, to run a set of four symmetric_mp instances, running on lcores 1-4,
226all performing level-2 forwarding of packets between ports 0 and 1,
227the following commands can be used (assuming run as root):
228
229.. code-block:: console
230
231    # ./build/symmetric_mp -c 2 -n 4 --proc-type=auto -- -p 3 --num-procs=4 --proc-id=0
232    # ./build/symmetric_mp -c 4 -n 4 --proc-type=auto -- -p 3 --num-procs=4 --proc-id=1
233    # ./build/symmetric_mp -c 8 -n 4 --proc-type=auto -- -p 3 --num-procs=4 --proc-id=2
234    # ./build/symmetric_mp -c 10 -n 4 --proc-type=auto -- -p 3 --num-procs=4 --proc-id=3
235
236.. note::
237
238    In the above example, the process type can be explicitly specified as primary or secondary, rather than auto.
239    When using auto, the first process run creates all the memory structures needed for all processes -
240    irrespective of whether it has a proc-id of 0, 1, 2 or 3.
241
242.. note::
243
244    For the symmetric multi-process example, since all processes work in the same manner,
245    once the hugepage shared memory and the network ports are initialized,
246    it is not necessary to restart all processes if the primary instance dies.
247    Instead, that process can be restarted as a secondary,
248    by explicitly setting the proc-type to secondary on the command line.
249    (All subsequent instances launched will also need this explicitly specified,
250    as auto-detection will detect no primary processes running and therefore attempt to re-initialize shared memory.)
251
252How the Application Works
253^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
254
255The initialization calls in both the primary and secondary instances are the same for the most part,
256calling the rte_eal_init(), 1 G and 10 G driver initialization and then rte_eal_pci_probe() functions.
257Thereafter, the initialization done depends on whether the process is configured as a primary or secondary instance.
258
259In the primary instance, a memory pool is created for the packet mbufs and the network ports to be used are initialized -
260the number of RX and TX queues per port being determined by the num-procs parameter passed on the command-line.
261The structures for the initialized network ports are stored in shared memory and
262therefore will be accessible by the secondary process as it initializes.
263
264.. code-block:: c
265
266    if (num_ports & 1)
267       rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Application must use an even number of ports\n");
268
269    for(i = 0; i < num_ports; i++){
270        if(proc_type == RTE_PROC_PRIMARY)
271            if (smp_port_init(ports[i], mp, (uint16_t)num_procs) < 0)
272                rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Error initializing ports\n");
273    }
274
275In the secondary instance, rather than initializing the network ports, the port information exported by the primary process is used,
276giving the secondary process access to the hardware and software rings for each network port.
277Similarly, the memory pool of mbufs is accessed by doing a lookup for it by name:
278
279.. code-block:: c
280
281    mp = (proc_type == RTE_PROC_SECONDARY) ? rte_mempool_lookup(_SMP_MBUF_POOL) : rte_mempool_create(_SMP_MBUF_POOL, NB_MBUFS, MBUF_SIZE, ... )
282
283Once this initialization is complete, the main loop of each process, both primary and secondary,
284is exactly the same - each process reads from each port using the queue corresponding to its proc-id parameter,
285and writes to the corresponding transmit queue on the output port.
286
287Client-Server Multi-process Example
288~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
289
290The third example multi-process application included with the DPDK shows how one can
291use a client-server type multi-process design to do packet processing.
292In this example, a single server process performs the packet reception from the ports being used and
293distributes these packets using round-robin ordering among a set of client  processes,
294which perform the actual packet processing.
295In this case, the client applications just perform level-2 forwarding of packets by sending each packet out on a different network port.
296
297The following diagram shows the data-flow through the application, using two client processes.
298
299.. _figure_7:
300
301**Figure 7. Example Data Flow in a Client-Server Symmetric Multi-process Application**
302
303.. image10_png has been renamed
304
305|client_svr_sym_multi_proc_app|
306
307Running the Application
308^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
309
310The server process must be run initially as the primary process to set up all memory structures for use by the clients.
311In addition to the EAL parameters, the application- specific parameters are:
312
313*   -p <portmask >, where portmask is a hexadecimal bitmask of what ports on the system are to be used.
314    For example: -p 3 to use ports 0 and 1 only.
315
316*   -n <num-clients>, where the num-clients parameter is the number of client processes that will process the packets received
317    by the server application.
318
319.. note::
320
321    In the server process, a single thread, the master thread, that is, the lowest numbered lcore in the coremask, performs all packet I/O.
322    If a coremask is specified with more than a single lcore bit set in it,
323    an additional lcore will be used for a thread to periodically print packet count statistics.
324
325Since the server application stores configuration data in shared memory, including the network ports to be used,
326the only application parameter needed by a client process is its client instance ID.
327Therefore, to run a server application on lcore 1 (with lcore 2 printing statistics) along with two client processes running on lcores 3 and 4,
328the following commands could be used:
329
330.. code-block:: console
331
332    # ./mp_server/build/mp_server -c 6 -n 4 -- -p 3 -n 2
333    # ./mp_client/build/mp_client -c 8 -n 4 --proc-type=auto -- -n 0
334    # ./mp_client/build/mp_client -c 10 -n 4 --proc-type=auto -- -n 1
335
336.. note::
337
338    If the server application dies and needs to be restarted, all client applications also need to be restarted,
339    as there is no support in the server application for it to run as a secondary process.
340    Any client processes that need restarting can be restarted without affecting the server process.
341
342How the Application Works
343^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
344
345The server process performs the network port and data structure initialization much as the symmetric multi-process application does when run as primary.
346One additional enhancement in this sample application is that the server process stores its port configuration data in a memory zone in hugepage shared memory.
347This eliminates the need for the client processes to have the portmask parameter passed into them on the command line,
348as is done for the symmetric multi-process application, and therefore eliminates mismatched parameters as a potential source of errors.
349
350In the same way that the server process is designed to be run as a primary process instance only,
351the client processes are designed to be run as secondary instances only.
352They have no code to attempt to create shared memory objects.
353Instead, handles to all needed rings and memory pools are obtained via calls to rte_ring_lookup() and rte_mempool_lookup().
354The network ports for use by the processes are obtained by loading the network port drivers and probing the PCI bus,
355which will, as in the symmetric multi-process example,
356automatically get access to the network ports using the settings already configured by the primary/server process.
357
358Once all applications are initialized, the server operates by reading packets from each network port in turn and
359distributing those packets to the client queues (software rings, one for each client process) in round-robin order.
360On the client side, the packets are read from the rings in as big of bursts as possible, then routed out to a different network port.
361The routing used is very simple. All packets received on the first NIC port are transmitted back out on the second port and vice versa.
362Similarly, packets are routed between the 3rd and 4th network ports and so on.
363The sending of packets is done by writing the packets directly to the network ports; they are not transferred back via the server process.
364
365In both the server and the client processes, outgoing packets are buffered before being sent,
366so as to allow the sending of multiple packets in a single burst to improve efficiency.
367For example, the client process will buffer packets to send,
368until either the buffer is full or until we receive no further packets from the server.
369
370Master-slave Multi-process Example
371~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
372
373The fourth example of DPDK multi-process support demonstrates a master-slave model that
374provide the capability of application recovery if a slave process crashes or  meets unexpected conditions.
375In addition, it also demonstrates the floating process,
376which can run among different cores in contrast to the traditional way of binding a process/thread to a specific CPU core,
377using the local cache mechanism of mempool structures.
378
379This application performs the same functionality as the L2 Forwarding sample application,
380therefore this chapter does not cover that part but describes functionality that is introduced in this multi-process example only.
381Please refer to Chapter 9, "L2 Forwarding Sample Application (in Real and Virtualized Environments)" for more information.
382
383Unlike previous examples where all processes are started from the command line with input arguments, in this example,
384only one process is spawned from the command line and that process creates other processes.
385The following section describes this in more detail.
386
387Master-slave Process Models
388^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
389
390The process spawned from the command line is called the *master process* in this document.
391A process created by the master is called a *slave process*.
392The application has only one master process, but could have multiple slave processes.
393
394Once the master process begins to run, it tries to initialize all the resources such as
395memory, CPU cores, driver, ports, and so on, as the other examples do.
396Thereafter, it creates slave processes, as shown in the following figure.
397
398.. _figure_8:
399
400**Figure 8. Master-slave Process Workflow**
401
402.. image11_png has been renamed
403
404|master_slave_proc|
405
406The master process calls the rte_eal_mp_remote_launch() EAL function to launch an application function for each pinned thread through the pipe.
407Then, it waits to check if any slave processes have exited.
408If so, the process tries to re-initialize the resources that belong to that slave and launch them in the pinned thread entry again.
409The following section describes the recovery procedures in more detail.
410
411For each pinned thread in EAL, after reading any data from the pipe, it tries to call the function that the application specified.
412In this master specified function, a fork() call creates a slave process that performs the L2 forwarding task.
413Then, the function waits until the slave exits, is killed or crashes. Thereafter, it notifies the master of this event and returns.
414Finally, the EAL pinned thread waits until the new function is launched.
415
416After discussing the master-slave model, it is necessary to mention another issue, global and static variables.
417
418For multiple-thread cases, all global and static variables have only one copy and they can be accessed by any thread if applicable.
419So, they can be used to sync or share data among threads.
420
421In the previous examples, each process has separate global and static variables in memory and are independent of each other.
422If it is necessary to share the knowledge, some communication mechanism should be deployed, such as, memzone, ring, shared memory, and so on.
423The global or static variables are not a valid approach to share data among processes.
424For variables in this example, on the one hand, the slave process inherits all the knowledge of these variables after being created by the master.
425On the other hand, other processes cannot know if one or more processes modifies them after slave creation since that
426is the nature of a multiple process address space.
427But this does not mean that these variables cannot be used to share or sync data; it depends on the use case.
428The following are the possible use cases:
429
430#.  The master process starts and initializes a variable and it will never be changed after slave processes created. This case is OK.
431
432#.  After the slave processes are created, the master or slave cores need to change a variable, but other processes do not need to know the change.
433    This case is also OK.
434
435#.  After the slave processes are created, the master or a slave needs to change a variable.
436    In the meantime, one or more other process needs to be aware of the change.
437    In this case, global and static variables cannot be used to share knowledge. Another communication mechanism is needed.
438    A simple approach without lock protection can be a heap buffer allocated by rte_malloc or mem zone.
439
440Slave Process Recovery Mechanism
441^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
442
443Before talking about the recovery mechanism, it is necessary to know what is needed before a new slave instance can run if a previous one exited.
444
445When a slave process exits, the system returns all the resources allocated for this process automatically.
446However, this does not include the resources that were allocated by the DPDK. All the hardware resources are shared among the processes,
447which include memzone, mempool, ring, a heap buffer allocated by the rte_malloc library, and so on.
448If the new instance runs and the allocated resource is not returned, either resource allocation failed or the hardware resource is lost forever.
449
450When a slave process runs, it may have dependencies on other processes.
451They could have execution sequence orders; they could share the ring to communicate; they could share the same port for reception and forwarding;
452they could use lock structures to do exclusive access in some critical path.
453What happens to the dependent process(es) if the peer leaves?
454The consequence are varied since the dependency cases are complex.
455It depends on what the processed had shared.
456However, it is necessary to notify the peer(s) if one slave exited.
457Then, the peer(s) will be aware of that and wait until the new instance begins to run.
458
459Therefore, to provide the capability to resume the new slave instance if the previous one exited, it is necessary to provide several mechanisms:
460
461#.  Keep a resource list for each slave process.
462    Before a slave process run, the master should prepare a resource list.
463    After it exits, the master could either delete the allocated resources and create new ones,
464    or re-initialize those for use by the new instance.
465
466#.  Set up a notification mechanism for slave process exit cases. After the specific slave leaves,
467    the master should be notified and then help to create a new instance.
468    This mechanism is provided in Section 15.1.5.1, "Master-slave Process Models".
469
470#.  Use a synchronization mechanism among dependent processes.
471    The master should have the capability to stop or kill slave processes that have a dependency on the one that has exited.
472    Then, after the new instance of exited slave process begins to run, the dependency ones could resume or run from the start.
473    The example sends a STOP command to slave processes dependent on the exited one, then they will exit.
474    Thereafter, the master creates new instances for the exited slave processes.
475
476The following diagram describes slave process recovery.
477
478.. _figure_9:
479
480**Figure 9. Slave Process Recovery Process Flow**
481
482.. image12_png has been renamed
483
484|slave_proc_recov|
485
486Floating Process Support
487^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
488
489When the DPDK application runs, there is always a -c option passed in to indicate the cores that are enabled.
490Then, the DPDK creates a thread for each enabled core.
491By doing so, it creates a 1:1 mapping between the enabled core and each thread.
492The enabled core always has an ID, therefore, each thread has a unique core ID in the DPDK execution environment.
493With the ID, each thread can easily access the structures or resources exclusively belonging to it without using function parameter passing.
494It can easily use the rte_lcore_id() function to get the value in every function that is called.
495
496For threads/processes not created in that way, either pinned to a core or not, they will not own a unique ID and the
497rte_lcore_id() function will not work in the correct way.
498However, sometimes these threads/processes still need the unique ID mechanism to do easy access on structures or resources.
499For example, the DPDK mempool library provides a local cache mechanism
500(refer to *DPDK Programmer's Guide* , Section 6.4, "Local Cache")
501for fast element allocation and freeing.
502If using a non-unique ID or a fake one,
503a race condition occurs if two or more threads/ processes with the same core ID try to use the local cache.
504
505Therefore, unused core IDs from the passing of parameters with the -c option are used to organize the core ID allocation array.
506Once the floating process is spawned, it tries to allocate a unique core ID from the array and release it on exit.
507
508A natural way to spawn a floating process is to use the fork() function and allocate a unique core ID from the unused core ID array.
509However, it is necessary to write new code to provide a notification mechanism for slave exit
510and make sure the process recovery mechanism can work with it.
511
512To avoid producing redundant code, the Master-Slave process model is still used to spawn floating processes,
513then cancel the affinity to specific cores.
514Besides that, clear the core ID assigned to the DPDK spawning a thread that has a 1:1 mapping with the core mask.
515Thereafter, get a new core ID from the unused core ID allocation array.
516
517Run the Application
518^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
519
520This example has a command line similar to the L2 Forwarding sample application with a few differences.
521
522To run the application, start one copy of the l2fwd_fork binary in one terminal.
523Unlike the L2 Forwarding example,
524this example requires at least three cores since the master process will wait and be accountable for slave process recovery.
525The command is as follows:
526
527.. code-block:: console
528
529    #./build/l2fwd_fork -c 1c -n 4 -- -p 3 -f
530
531This example provides another -f option to specify the use of floating process.
532If not specified, the example will use a pinned process to perform the L2 forwarding task.
533
534To verify the recovery mechanism, proceed as follows: First, check the PID of the slave processes:
535
536.. code-block:: console
537
538    #ps -fe | grep l2fwd_fork
539    root 5136 4843 29 11:11 pts/1 00:00:05 ./build/l2fwd_fork
540    root 5145 5136 98 11:11 pts/1 00:00:11 ./build/l2fwd_fork
541    root 5146 5136 98 11:11 pts/1 00:00:11 ./build/l2fwd_fork
542
543Then, kill one of the slaves:
544
545.. code-block:: console
546
547    #kill -9 5145
548
549After 1 or 2 seconds, check whether the slave has resumed:
550
551.. code-block:: console
552
553    #ps -fe | grep l2fwd_fork
554    root 5136 4843 3 11:11 pts/1 00:00:06 ./build/l2fwd_fork
555    root 5247 5136 99 11:14 pts/1 00:00:01 ./build/l2fwd_fork
556    root 5248 5136 99 11:14 pts/1 00:00:01 ./build/l2fwd_fork
557
558It can also monitor the traffic generator statics to see whether slave processes have resumed.
559
560Explanation
561^^^^^^^^^^^
562
563As described in previous sections,
564not all global and static variables need to change to be accessible in multiple processes;
565it depends on how they are used.
566In this example,
567the statics info on packets dropped/forwarded/received count needs to be updated by the slave process,
568and the master needs to see the update and print them out.
569So, it needs to allocate a heap buffer using rte_zmalloc.
570In addition, if the -f option is specified,
571an array is needed to store the allocated core ID for the floating process so that the master can return it
572after a slave has exited accidentally.
573
574.. code-block:: c
575
576    static int
577    l2fwd_malloc_shared_struct(void)
578    {
579        port_statistics = rte_zmalloc("port_stat", sizeof(struct l2fwd_port_statistics) * RTE_MAX_ETHPORTS, 0);
580
581        if (port_statistics == NULL)
582            return -1;
583
584        /* allocate mapping_id array */
585
586        if (float_proc) {
587            int i;
588
589            mapping_id = rte_malloc("mapping_id", sizeof(unsigned) * RTE_MAX_LCORE, 0);
590            if (mapping_id == NULL)
591                return -1;
592
593            for (i = 0 ;i < RTE_MAX_LCORE; i++)
594                mapping_id[i] = INVALID_MAPPING_ID;
595
596        }
597        return 0;
598    }
599
600For each slave process, packets are received from one port and forwarded to another port that another slave is operating on.
601If the other slave exits accidentally, the port it is operating on may not work normally,
602so the first slave cannot forward packets to that port.
603There is a dependency on the port in this case. So, the master should recognize the dependency.
604The following is the code to detect this dependency:
605
606.. code-block:: c
607
608    for (portid = 0; portid < nb_ports; portid++) {
609        /* skip ports that are not enabled */
610
611        if ((l2fwd_enabled_port_mask & (1 << portid)) == 0)
612            continue;
613
614        /* Find pair ports' lcores */
615
616        find_lcore = find_pair_lcore = 0;
617        pair_port = l2fwd_dst_ports[portid];
618
619        for (i = 0; i < RTE_MAX_LCORE; i++) {
620            if (!rte_lcore_is_enabled(i))
621                continue;
622
623            for (j = 0; j < lcore_queue_conf[i].n_rx_port;j++) {
624                if (lcore_queue_conf[i].rx_port_list[j] == portid) {
625                    lcore = i;
626                    find_lcore = 1;
627                    break;
628                }
629
630                if (lcore_queue_conf[i].rx_port_list[j] == pair_port) {
631                    pair_lcore = i;
632                    find_pair_lcore = 1;
633                    break;
634                }
635            }
636
637            if (find_lcore && find_pair_lcore)
638                break;
639        }
640
641        if (!find_lcore || !find_pair_lcore)
642            rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Not find port=%d pair\\n", portid);
643
644        printf("lcore %u and %u paired\\n", lcore, pair_lcore);
645
646        lcore_resource[lcore].pair_id = pair_lcore;
647        lcore_resource[pair_lcore].pair_id = lcore;
648    }
649
650Before launching the slave process,
651it is necessary to set up the communication channel between the master and slave so that
652the master can notify the slave if its peer process with the dependency exited.
653In addition, the master needs to register a callback function in the case where a specific slave exited.
654
655.. code-block:: c
656
657    for (i = 0; i < RTE_MAX_LCORE; i++) {
658        if (lcore_resource[i].enabled) {
659            /* Create ring for master and slave communication */
660
661            ret = create_ms_ring(i);
662            if (ret != 0)
663                rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Create ring for lcore=%u failed",i);
664
665            if (flib_register_slave_exit_notify(i,slave_exit_cb) != 0)
666                rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "Register master_trace_slave_exit failed");
667        }
668    }
669
670After launching the slave process, the master waits and prints out the port statics periodically.
671If an event indicating that a slave process exited is detected,
672it sends the STOP command to the peer and waits until it has also exited.
673Then, it tries to clean up the execution environment and prepare new resources.
674Finally, the new slave instance is launched.
675
676.. code-block:: c
677
678    while (1) {
679        sleep(1);
680        cur_tsc = rte_rdtsc();
681        diff_tsc = cur_tsc - prev_tsc;
682
683        /* if timer is enabled */
684
685        if (timer_period > 0) {
686            /* advance the timer */
687            timer_tsc += diff_tsc;
688
689            /* if timer has reached its timeout */
690            if (unlikely(timer_tsc >= (uint64_t) timer_period)) {
691                print_stats();
692
693                /* reset the timer */
694                timer_tsc = 0;
695            }
696        }
697
698        prev_tsc = cur_tsc;
699
700        /* Check any slave need restart or recreate */
701
702        rte_spinlock_lock(&res_lock);
703
704        for (i = 0; i < RTE_MAX_LCORE; i++) {
705            struct lcore_resource_struct *res = &lcore_resource[i];
706            struct lcore_resource_struct *pair = &lcore_resource[res->pair_id];
707
708            /* If find slave exited, try to reset pair */
709
710            if (res->enabled && res->flags && pair->enabled) {
711                if (!pair->flags) {
712                    master_sendcmd_with_ack(pair->lcore_id, CMD_STOP);
713                    rte_spinlock_unlock(&res_lock);
714                    sleep(1);
715                    rte_spinlock_lock(&res_lock);
716                    if (pair->flags)
717                        continue;
718                }
719
720                if (reset_pair(res->lcore_id, pair->lcore_id) != 0)
721                    rte_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, "failed to reset slave");
722
723                res->flags = 0;
724                pair->flags = 0;
725            }
726        }
727        rte_spinlock_unlock(&res_lock);
728    }
729
730When the slave process is spawned and starts to run, it checks whether the floating process option is applied.
731If so, it clears the affinity to a specific core and also sets the unique core ID to 0.
732Then, it tries to allocate a new core ID.
733Since the core ID has changed, the resource allocated by the master cannot work,
734so it remaps the resource to the new core ID slot.
735
736.. code-block:: c
737
738    static int
739    l2fwd_launch_one_lcore( attribute ((unused)) void *dummy)
740    {
741        unsigned lcore_id = rte_lcore_id();
742
743        if (float_proc) {
744            unsigned flcore_id;
745
746            /* Change it to floating process, also change it's lcore_id */
747
748            clear_cpu_affinity();
749
750            RTE_PER_LCORE(_lcore_id) = 0;
751
752            /* Get a lcore_id */
753
754            if (flib_assign_lcore_id() < 0 ) {
755                printf("flib_assign_lcore_id failed\n");
756                return -1;
757            }
758
759            flcore_id = rte_lcore_id();
760
761            /* Set mapping id, so master can return it after slave exited */
762
763            mapping_id[lcore_id] = flcore_id;
764            printf("Org lcore_id = %u, cur lcore_id = %u\n",lcore_id, flcore_id);
765            remapping_slave_resource(lcore_id, flcore_id);
766        }
767
768        l2fwd_main_loop();
769
770        /* return lcore_id before return */
771        if (float_proc) {
772            flib_free_lcore_id(rte_lcore_id());
773            mapping_id[lcore_id] = INVALID_MAPPING_ID;
774        }
775        return 0;
776    }
777
778.. |sym_multi_proc_app| image:: img/sym_multi_proc_app.*
779
780.. |client_svr_sym_multi_proc_app| image:: img/client_svr_sym_multi_proc_app.*
781
782.. |master_slave_proc| image:: img/master_slave_proc.*
783
784.. |slave_proc_recov| image:: img/slave_proc_recov.*
785