1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause 2 Copyright(c) 2016-2017 Intel Corporation. 3 4Server-Node EFD Sample Application 5================================== 6 7This sample application demonstrates the use of EFD library as a flow-level 8load balancer, for more information about the EFD Library please refer to the 9DPDK programmer's guide. 10 11This sample application is a variant of the 12:ref:`client-server sample application <multi_process_app>` 13where a specific target node is specified for every and each flow 14(not in a round-robin fashion as the original load balancing sample application). 15 16Overview 17-------- 18 19The architecture of the EFD flow-based load balancer sample application is 20presented in the following figure. 21 22.. _figure_efd_sample_app_overview: 23 24.. figure:: img/server_node_efd.* 25 26 Using EFD as a Flow-Level Load Balancer 27 28As shown in :numref:`figure_efd_sample_app_overview`, 29the sample application consists of a front-end node (server) 30using the EFD library to create a load-balancing table for flows, 31for each flow a target backend worker node is specified. The EFD table does not 32store the flow key (unlike a regular hash table), and hence, it can 33individually load-balance millions of flows (number of targets * maximum number 34of flows fit in a flow table per target) while still fitting in CPU cache. 35 36It should be noted that although they are referred to as nodes, the frontend 37server and worker nodes are processes running on the same platform. 38 39Front-end Server 40~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 41 42Upon initializing, the frontend server node (process) creates a flow 43distributor table (based on the EFD library) which is populated with flow 44information and its intended target node. 45 46The sample application assigns a specific target node_id (process) for each of 47the IP destination addresses as follows: 48 49.. code-block:: c 50 51 node_id = i % num_nodes; /* Target node id is generated */ 52 ip_dst = rte_cpu_to_be_32(i); /* Specific ip destination address is 53 assigned to this target node */ 54 55then the pair of <key,target> is inserted into the flow distribution table. 56 57The main loop of the server process receives a burst of packets, then for 58each packet, a flow key (IP destination address) is extracted. The flow 59distributor table is looked up and the target node id is returned. Packets are 60then enqueued to the specified target node id. 61 62It should be noted that flow distributor table is not a membership test table. 63I.e. if the key has already been inserted the target node id will be correct, 64but for new keys the flow distributor table will return a value (which can be 65valid). 66 67Backend Worker Nodes 68~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 69 70Upon initializing, the worker node (process) creates a flow table (a regular 71hash table that stores the key default size 1M flows) which is populated with 72only the flow information that is serviced at this node. This flow key is 73essential to point out new keys that have not been inserted before. 74 75The worker node's main loop is simply receiving packets then doing a hash table 76lookup. If a match occurs then statistics are updated for flows serviced by 77this node. If no match is found in the local hash table then this indicates 78that this is a new flow, which is dropped. 79 80 81Compiling the Application 82------------------------- 83 84To compile the sample application see :doc:`compiling`. 85 86The application is located in the ``server_node_efd`` sub-directory. 87 88Running the Application 89----------------------- 90 91The application has two binaries to be run: the front-end server 92and the back-end node. 93 94The frontend server (server) has the following command line options:: 95 96 ./<build_dir>/examples/dpdk-server [EAL options] -- -p PORTMASK -n NUM_NODES -f NUM_FLOWS 97 98Where, 99 100* ``-p PORTMASK:`` Hexadecimal bitmask of ports to configure 101* ``-n NUM_NODES:`` Number of back-end nodes that will be used 102* ``-f NUM_FLOWS:`` Number of flows to be added in the EFD table (1 million, by default) 103 104The back-end node (node) has the following command line options:: 105 106 ./node [EAL options] -- -n NODE_ID 107 108Where, 109 110* ``-n NODE_ID:`` Node ID, which cannot be equal or higher than NUM_MODES 111 112 113First, the server app must be launched, with the number of nodes that will be run. 114Once it has been started, the node instances can be run, with different NODE_ID. 115These instances have to be run as secondary processes, with ``--proc-type=secondary`` 116in the EAL options, which will attach to the primary process memory, and therefore, 117they can access the queues created by the primary process to distribute packets. 118 119To successfully run the application, the command line used to start the 120application has to be in sync with the traffic flows configured on the traffic 121generator side. 122 123For examples of application command lines and traffic generator flows, please 124refer to the DPDK Test Report. For more details on how to set up and run the 125sample applications provided with DPDK package, please refer to the 126:ref:`DPDK Getting Started Guide for Linux <linux_gsg>` and 127:ref:`DPDK Getting Started Guide for FreeBSD <freebsd_gsg>`. 128 129 130Explanation 131----------- 132 133As described in previous sections, there are two processes in this example. 134 135The first process, the front-end server, creates and populates the EFD table, 136which is used to distribute packets to nodes, which the number of flows 137specified in the command line (1 million, by default). 138 139 140.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/server_node_efd/server/init.c 141 :language: c 142 :start-after: Create EFD table. 8< 143 :end-before: >8 End of creation EFD table. 144 145After initialization, packets are received from the enabled ports, and the IPv4 146address from the packets is used as a key to look up in the EFD table, 147which tells the node where the packet has to be distributed. 148 149.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/server_node_efd/server/main.c 150 :language: c 151 :start-after: Processing packets. 8< 152 :end-before: >8 End of process_packets. 153 154The burst of packets received is enqueued in temporary buffers (per node), 155and enqueued in the shared ring between the server and the node. 156After this, a new burst of packets is received and this process is 157repeated infinitely. 158 159.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/server_node_efd/server/main.c 160 :language: c 161 :start-after: Flush rx queue. 8< 162 :end-before: >8 End of sending a burst of traffic to a node. 163 164The second process, the back-end node, receives the packets from the shared 165ring with the server and send them out, if they belong to the node. 166 167At initialization, it attaches to the server process memory, to have 168access to the shared ring, parameters and statistics. 169 170.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/server_node_efd/node/node.c 171 :language: c 172 :start-after: Attaching to the server process memory. 8< 173 :end-before: >8 End of attaching to the server process memory. 174 :dedent: 1 175 176Then, the hash table that contains the flows that will be handled 177by the node is created and populated. 178 179.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/server_node_efd/node/node.c 180 :language: c 181 :start-after: Creation of hash table. 8< 182 :end-before: >8 End of creation of hash table. 183 184After initialization, packets are dequeued from the shared ring 185(from the server) and, like in the server process, 186the IPv4 address from the packets is used as a key to look up in the hash table. 187If there is a hit, packet is stored in a buffer, to be eventually transmitted 188in one of the enabled ports. If key is not there, packet is dropped, since the 189flow is not handled by the node. 190 191.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/server_node_efd/node/node.c 192 :language: c 193 :start-after: Packets dequeued from the shared ring. 8< 194 :end-before: >8 End of packets dequeueing. 195 196Finally, note that both processes updates statistics, such as transmitted, received 197and dropped packets, which are shown and refreshed by the server app. 198 199.. literalinclude:: ../../../examples/server_node_efd/server/main.c 200 :language: c 201 :start-after: Display recorded statistics. 8< 202 :end-before: >8 End of displaying the recorded statistics. 203