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authorVratko Polak <vrpolak@cisco.com>2020-11-19 14:06:56 +0100
committerVratko Polak <vrpolak@cisco.com>2020-11-19 17:18:00 +0100
commit7ea927993481fbb2619c3acd47a623d66dc0c980 (patch)
tree4bc90a183f8250b299496d016e70a8ee6a5de3a6
parent5bd840cd830d73bc308ccd23fac4bbe9cae26c6d (diff)
Methodology: Trex modes and transactions
Change-Id: I43423dea499bce3a298dbbba752c2aee2a322836 Signed-off-by: Vratko Polak <vrpolak@cisco.com>
-rw-r--r--docs/report/introduction/methodology_data_plane_throughput/methodology_data_plane_throughput.rst3
-rw-r--r--docs/report/introduction/methodology_trex_traffic_generator.rst233
-rw-r--r--docs/report/introduction/test_environment_tg.rst12
3 files changed, 199 insertions, 49 deletions
diff --git a/docs/report/introduction/methodology_data_plane_throughput/methodology_data_plane_throughput.rst b/docs/report/introduction/methodology_data_plane_throughput/methodology_data_plane_throughput.rst
index 6389353a65..00dcb0b40e 100644
--- a/docs/report/introduction/methodology_data_plane_throughput/methodology_data_plane_throughput.rst
+++ b/docs/report/introduction/methodology_data_plane_throughput/methodology_data_plane_throughput.rst
@@ -13,6 +13,9 @@ Following throughput test methods are used:
- MRR - Maximum Receive Rate
- PLRsearch - Probabilistic Loss Ratio search
+..
+ TODO: Add RECONF.
+
Description of each test method is followed by generic test properties
shared by all methods.
diff --git a/docs/report/introduction/methodology_trex_traffic_generator.rst b/docs/report/introduction/methodology_trex_traffic_generator.rst
index aea4d3236d..9813b28025 100644
--- a/docs/report/introduction/methodology_trex_traffic_generator.rst
+++ b/docs/report/introduction/methodology_trex_traffic_generator.rst
@@ -5,59 +5,194 @@ Usage
~~~~~
`TRex traffic generator <https://trex-tgn.cisco.com>`_ is used for majority of
-CSIT performance tests. TRex stateless mode is used to measure NDR and PDR
-throughputs using MLRsearch and to measure maximum transfer rate in MRR tests.
-
-TRex is installed and run on the TG compute node. The typical procedure is:
-
-- TRex configuration is set in its configuration file
-
- ::
-
- $ sudo -E -S sh -c 'cat << EOF > /etc/trex_cfg.yaml
- - version: 2
- c: 8
- limit_memory: 8192
- interfaces: ["${pci1}","${pci2}"]
- port_info:
- - dest_mac: [${dest_mac1}]
- src_mac: [${src_mac1}]
- - dest_mac: [${dest_mac2}]
- src_mac: [${src_mac2}]
- platform :
- master_thread_id: 0
- latency_thread_id: 9
- dual_if:
- - socket: 0
- threads: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
- EOF'
-
-- TRex is started in the interactive mode as a background service
-
- ::
-
- $ sh -c 'cd <t-rex-install-dir>/scripts/ && \
- sudo nohup ./t-rex-64 -i --prefix $(hostname) --hdrh --no-scapy-server \
- > /tmp/trex.log 2>&1 &' > /dev/null
-
-- There are traffic streams dynamically prepared for each test, based on traffic
- profiles. The traffic is sent and the statistics obtained using API
- :command:`trex.stl.api.STLClient`.
-
-Measuring Packet Loss
+CSIT performance tests. TRex is used in multiple types of performance tests,
+see :ref:`data_plane_throughput` for more detail.
+
+TRex is installed and run on the TG compute node.
+Versioning, installation and startup is documented in
+:ref:`test_environment_tg`.
+
+Traffic modes
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+TRex is primarily used in two (mutually incompatible) modes.
+
+Stateless mode
+______________
+
+Sometimes abbreviated as STL.
+A mode with high performance, which is unable to react to incoming traffic.
+We use this mode whenever it is possible.
+Typical test where this mode is not applicable is NAT44ED,
+as DUT does not assign deterministic outside address+port combinations,
+so we are unable to create traffic that does not lose packets
+in out2in direction.
+
+Measurement results are based on simple L2 counters
+(opackets, ipackets) for each traffic direction.
+
+Stateful mode
+_____________
+
+A mode capable of reacting to incoming traffic.
+Contrary to the stateless mode, only UDP and TCP is supported
+(carried over IPv4 or IPv6 packets).
+Performance is limited, as TRex needs to do more CPU processing.
+TRex suports two subtypes of stateful traffic,
+CSIT uses ASTF (Advanced STateFul mode).
+
+This mode is suitable for NAT44ED tests, as clients send packets from inside,
+and servers react to it, so they see the outside address and port to respond to.
+Also, they do not send traffic before NAT44ED has opened the sessions.
+
+When possible, L2 counters (opackets, ipackets) are used.
+Some tests need L7 counters, which track protocol state (e.g. TCP),
+but the values are less than reliable on high loads.
+
+Traffic Continuity
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Generated traffic is either continuous, or limited.
+Both modes support both continuities in principle.
+
+Continuous traffic
+__________________
+
+Traffic is started without any size goal.
+Traffic is ended based on time duration as hinted by search algorithm.
+This is useful when DUT behavior does not depend on the traffic duration.
+The default for stateless mode.
+
+Limited traffic
+_______________
+
+Traffic has defined size goal, duration is computed based on the goal.
+Traffic is ended when the size goal is reached,
+or when the computed duration is reached.
+This is useful when DUT behavior depends on traffic size,
+e.g. target number of session, each to be hit once.
+This is used mainly for stateful mode.
+
+Traffic synchronicity
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Following sequence is followed to measure packet loss:
+Traffic can be generated synchronously (test waits for duration)
+or asynchronously (test operates during traffic and stops traffic explicitly).
+
+Synchronous traffic
+___________________
+
+Trial measurement is driven by given (or precomputed) duration,
+no activity from test driver during the traffic.
+Used for most trials.
-- Create an instance of STLClient.
-- Connect to the client.
-- Add all streams.
-- Clear statistics.
-- Send the traffic for defined time.
-- Get the statistics.
+Asynchronous traffic
+____________________
-If there is a warm-up phase required, the traffic is sent also before
-test and the statistics are ignored.
+Traffic is started, but then the test driver is free to perform
+other actions, before stopping the traffic explicitly.
+This is used mainly by reconf tests, but also by some trials
+used for runtime telemetry.
+
+Trafic profiles
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+TRex supports several ways to define the traffic.
+CSIT uses small Python modules based on Scapy as definitions.
+Details of traffic profiles depend on modes (STL or ASTF),
+but some are common for both modes.
+
+Search algorithms are intentionally unaware of the traffic mode used,
+so CSIT defines some terms to use instead of mode-specific TRex terms.
+
+Transactions
+____________
+
+TRex traffic profile defines a small number of behaviors,
+in CSIT called transaction templates. Traffic profiles also instruct
+TRex how to create a large number of transactions based on the templates.
+
+Continuous traffic loops over the generated transactions.
+Limited traffic usually executes each transaction once.
+
+Currently, ASTF profiles define one transaction template each.
+Number of packets expected per one transaction varies based on profile details,
+as does the criterion for when a transaction is considered successful.
+
+Stateless transactions are just one packet (sent from one TG port,
+successful if received on the other TG port).
+Thus unidirectional stateless profiles define one transaction template,
+bidirectional stateless profiles define two transaction templates.
+
+TPS multiplier
+______________
+
+TRex aims to open transaction specified by the profile at a steady rate.
+While TRex allows the transaction template to define its intended "cps" value,
+CSIT does not specify it, so the default value of 1 is applied,
+meaning TRex will open one transaction per second (and transaction template)
+by default. But CSIT invocation uses "multiplier" (mult) argument
+when starting the traffic, that multiplies the cps value,
+meaning it acts as TPS (transactions per second) input.
+
+With a slight abuse of nomenclature, bidirectional stateless tests
+set "packets per transaction" value to 2, just to keep the TPS semantics
+as a unidirectional input value.
+
+Duration stretching
+___________________
+
+TRex can be IO-bound, CPU-bound, or have any other reason
+why it is not able to generate the traffic at the requested TPS.
+Some conditions are detected, leading to TRex failure,
+for example when the bandwidth does not fit into the line capacity.
+But many reasons are not detected.
+
+Unfortunately, TRex frequently reacts by not honoring the duration
+in synchronous mode, taking longer to send the traffic,
+leading to lower then requested load offered to DUT.
+This usualy breaks assumptions used in search algorithms,
+so it has to be avoided.
+
+For stateless traffic, the behavior is quite deterministic,
+so the workaround is to apply a fictional TPS limit (max_rate)
+to search algorithms, usually depending only on the NIC used.
+
+For stateful traffic the behavior is not deterministic enough,
+for example the limit for TCP traffic depends on DUT packet loss.
+In CSIT we decided to use logic similar to asynchronous traffic.
+The traffic driver sleeps for a time, then stops the traffic explicitly.
+The library that parses counters into measurement results
+than usually treats unsent packets as lost.
+
+We have added a IP4base tests for every NAT44ED test,
+so that users can compare results.
+Of the results are very similar, it is probable TRex was the bottleneck.
+
+Startup delay
+_____________
+
+By investigating TRex behavior, it was found that TRex does not start
+the traffic in ASTF mode immediately. There is a delay of zero traffic,
+after which the traffic rate ramps up to the defined TPS value.
+
+It is possible to poll for counters during the traffic
+(fist nonzero means traffic has started),
+but that was found to influence the NDR results.
+
+Thus "sleep and stop" stategy is used, which needs a correction
+to the computed duration so traffic is stopped after the intended
+duration of real traffic. Luckily, it turns out this correction
+is not dependend on traffic profile nor CPU used by TRex,
+so a fixed constant (0.1115 seconds) works well.
+
+The result computations need a precise enough duration of the real traffic,
+luckily server side of TRex has precise enough counter for that.
+
+It is unknown whether stateless traffic profiles also exhibit a startup delay.
+Unfortunately, stateless mode does not have similarly precise duration counter,
+so some results (mostly MRR) are affected by less precise duration measurement
+in Python part of CSIT code.
Measuring Latency
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
diff --git a/docs/report/introduction/test_environment_tg.rst b/docs/report/introduction/test_environment_tg.rst
index 28b233a574..24df4deb63 100644
--- a/docs/report/introduction/test_environment_tg.rst
+++ b/docs/report/introduction/test_environment_tg.rst
@@ -1,3 +1,5 @@
+.. _test_environment_tg:
+
TG Settings - TRex
------------------
@@ -54,6 +56,16 @@ Also, Python client is now starting traffic with:
core_mask=STLClient.CORE_MASK_PIN
+TG Startup Command (Stateful Mode)
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+::
+
+ $ sudo -E -S sh -c "cd '${trex_install_dir}/scripts/' && \
+ nohup ./t-rex-64 -i --prefix $(hostname) --astf --hdrh --no-scapy-server \
+ --mbuf-factor 32 > /tmp/trex.log 2>&1 &" > /dev/null
+
+
TG API Driver
~~~~~~~~~~~~~