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+---
+title: "Network Address Translation"
+weight: 1
+---
+
+# Network Address Translation
+
+## NAT44 Prefix Bindings
+
+NAT44 prefix bindings should be representative to target applications,
+where a number of private IPv4 addresses from the range defined by
+RFC1918 is mapped to a smaller set of public IPv4 addresses from the
+public range.
+
+Following quantities are used to describe inside to outside IP address
+and port bindings scenarios:
+
+- Inside-addresses, number of inside source addresses
+ (representing inside hosts).
+- Ports-per-inside-address, number of TCP/UDP source
+ ports per inside source address.
+- Outside-addresses, number of outside (public) source addresses
+ allocated to NAT44.
+- Ports-per-outside-address, number of TCP/UDP source
+ ports per outside source address. The maximal number of
+ ports-per-outside-address usable for NAT is 64 512
+ (in non-reserved port range 1024-65535, RFC4787).
+- Sharing-ratio, equal to inside-addresses divided by outside-addresses.
+
+CSIT NAT44 tests are designed to take into account the maximum number of
+ports (sessions) required per inside host (inside-address) and at the
+same time to maximize the use of outside-address range by using all
+available outside ports. With this in mind, the following scheme of
+NAT44 sharing ratios has been devised for use in CSIT:
+
+ **ports-per-inside-address** | **sharing-ratio**
+-----------------------------:|------------------:
+ 63 | 1024
+ 126 | 512
+ 252 | 256
+ 504 | 128
+
+Initial CSIT NAT44 tests, including associated TG/TRex traffic profiles,
+are based on ports-per-inside-address set to 63 and the sharing ratio of
+1024. This approach is currently used for all NAT44 tests including
+NAT44det (NAT44 deterministic used for Carrier Grade NAT applications)
+and NAT44ed (Endpoint Dependent).
+
+Private address ranges to be used in tests:
+
+- 192.168.0.0 - 192.168.255.255 (192.168/16 prefix)
+
+ - Total of 2^16 (65 536) of usable IPv4 addresses.
+ - Used in tests for up to 65 536 inside addresses (inside hosts).
+
+- 172.16.0.0 - 172.31.255.255 (172.16/12 prefix)
+
+ - Total of 2^20 (1 048 576) of usable IPv4 addresses.
+ - Used in tests for up to 1 048 576 inside addresses (inside hosts).
+
+### NAT44 Session Scale
+
+NAT44 session scale tested is govern by the following logic:
+
+- Number of inside-addresses(hosts) H[i] = (H[i-1] x 2^2) with H(0)=1 024,
+ i = 1,2,3, ...
+
+ - H[i] = 1 024, 4 096, 16 384, 65 536, 262 144, ...
+
+- Number of sessions S[i] = H[i] * ports-per-inside-address
+
+ - ports-per-inside-address = 63
+
+ **i** | **hosts** | **sessions**
+------:|----------:|-------------:
+ 0 | 1 024 | 64 512
+ 1 | 4 096 | 258 048
+ 2 | 16 384 | 1 032 192
+ 3 | 65 536 | 4 128 768
+ 4 | 262 144 | 16 515 072
+
+### NAT44 Deterministic
+
+NAT44det performance tests are using TRex STL (Stateless) API and traffic
+profiles, similar to all other stateless packet forwarding tests like
+ip4, ip6 and l2, sending UDP packets in both directions
+inside-to-outside and outside-to-inside.
+
+The inside-to-outside traffic uses single destination address (20.0.0.0)
+and port (1024).
+The inside-to-outside traffic covers whole inside address and port range,
+the outside-to-inside traffic covers whole outside address and port range.
+
+NAT44det translation entries are created during the ramp-up phase,
+followed by verification that all entries are present,
+before proceeding to the main measurements of the test.
+This ensures session setup does not impact the forwarding performance test.
+
+Associated CSIT test cases use the following naming scheme to indicate
+NAT44det scenario tested:
+
+- ethip4udp-nat44det-h{H}-p{P}-s{S}-[mrr|ndrpdr|soak]
+
+ - {H}, number of inside hosts, H = 1024, 4096, 16384, 65536, 262144.
+ - {P}, number of ports per inside host, P = 63.
+ - {S}, number of sessions, S = 64512, 258048, 1032192, 4128768,
+ 16515072.
+ - [mrr|ndrpdr|soak], MRR, NDRPDR or SOAK test.
+
+### NAT44 Endpoint-Dependent
+
+In order to excercise NAT44ed ability to translate based on both
+source and destination address and port, the inside-to-outside traffic
+varies also destination address and port. Destination port is the same
+as source port, destination address has the same offset as the source address,
+but applied to different subnet (starting with 20.0.0.0).
+
+As the mapping is not deterministic (for security reasons),
+we cannot easily use stateless bidirectional traffic profiles.
+Inside address and port range is fully covered,
+but we do not know which outside-to-inside source address and port to use
+to hit an open session.
+
+Therefore, NAT44ed is benchmarked using following methodologies:
+
+- Unidirectional throughput using *stateless* traffic profile.
+- Connections-per-second (CPS) using *stateful* traffic profile.
+- Bidirectional throughput (TPUT, see below) using *stateful* traffic profile.
+
+Unidirectional NAT44ed throughput tests are using TRex STL (Stateless)
+APIs and traffic profiles, but with packets sent only in
+inside-to-outside direction.
+Similarly to NAT44det, NAT44ed unidirectional throughput tests include
+a ramp-up phase to establish and verify the presence of required NAT44ed
+binding entries. As the sessions have finite duration, the test code
+keeps inserting ramp-up trials during the search, if it detects a risk
+of sessions timing out. Any zero loss trial visits all sessions,
+so it acts also as a ramp-up.
+
+Stateful NAT44ed tests are using TRex ASTF (Advanced Stateful) APIs and
+traffic profiles, with packets sent in both directions. Tests are run
+with both UDP and TCP sessions.
+As NAT44ed CPS (connections-per-second) stateful tests
+measure (also) session opening performance,
+they use state reset instead of ramp-up trial.
+NAT44ed TPUT (bidirectional throughput) tests prepend ramp-up trials
+as in the unidirectional tests,
+so the test results describe performance without translation entry
+creation overhead.
+
+Associated CSIT test cases use the following naming scheme to indicate
+NAT44det case tested:
+
+- Stateless: ethip4udp-nat44ed-h{H}-p{P}-s{S}-udir-[mrr|ndrpdr|soak]
+
+ - {H}, number of inside hosts, H = 1024, 4096, 16384, 65536, 262144.
+ - {P}, number of ports per inside host, P = 63.
+ - {S}, number of sessions, S = 64512, 258048, 1032192, 4128768,
+ 16515072.
+ - udir-[mrr|ndrpdr|soak], unidirectional stateless tests MRR, NDRPDR
+ or SOAK.
+
+- Stateful: ethip4[udp|tcp]-nat44ed-h{H}-p{P}-s{S}-[cps|tput]-[mrr|ndrpdr|soak]
+
+ - [udp|tcp], UDP or TCP sessions
+ - {H}, number of inside hosts, H = 1024, 4096, 16384, 65536, 262144.
+ - {P}, number of ports per inside host, P = 63.
+ - {S}, number of sessions, S = 64512, 258048, 1032192, 4128768,
+ 16515072.
+ - [cps|tput], connections-per-second session establishment rate or
+ packets-per-second average rate, or packets-per-second rate
+ without session establishment.
+ - [mrr|ndrpdr|soak], bidirectional stateful tests MRR, NDRPDR, or SOAK.
+
+## Stateful traffic profiles
+
+There are several important details which distinguish ASTF profiles
+from stateless profiles.
+
+### General considerations
+
+#### Protocols
+
+ASTF profiles are limited to either UDP or TCP protocol.
+
+#### Programs
+
+Each template in the profile defines two "programs", one for the client side
+and one for the server side.
+
+Each program specifies when that side has to wait until enough data is received
+(counted in packets for UDP and in bytes for TCP)
+and when to send additional data. Together, the two programs
+define a single transaction. Due to packet loss, transaction may take longer,
+use more packets (retransmission) or never finish in its entirety.
+
+#### Instances
+
+A client instance is created according to TPS parameter for the trial,
+and sends the first packet of the transaction (in some cases more packets).
+Each client instance uses a different source address (see sequencing below)
+and some source port. The destination address also comes from a range,
+but destination port has to be constant for a given program.
+
+TRex uses an opaque way to chose source ports, but as session counting shows,
+next client with the same source address uses a different source port.
+
+Server instance is created when the first packet arrives to the server side.
+Source address and port of the first packet are used as destination address
+and port for the server responses. This is the ability we need
+when outside surface is not predictable.
+
+When a program reaches its end, the instance is deleted.
+This creates possible issues with server instances. If the server instance
+does not read all the data client has sent, late data packets
+can cause a second copy of server instance to be created,
+which breaks assumptions on how many packet a transaction should have.
+
+The need for server instances to read all the data reduces the overall
+bandwidth TRex is able to create in ASTF mode.
+
+Note that client instances are not created on packets,
+so it is safe to end client program without reading all server data
+(unless the definition of transaction success requires that).
+
+#### Sequencing
+
+ASTF profiles offer two modes for choosing source and destination IP addresses
+for client programs: seqential and pseudorandom.
+In current tests we are using sequential addressing only (if destination
+address varies at all).
+
+For client destination UDP/TCP port, we use a single constant value.
+(TRex can support multiple program pairs in the same traffic profile,
+distinguished by the port number.)
+
+#### Transaction overlap
+
+If a transaction takes longer to finish, compared to period implied by TPS,
+TRex will have multiple client or server instances active at a time.
+
+During calibration testing we have found this increases CPU utilization,
+and for high TPS it can lead to TRex's Rx or Tx buffers becoming full.
+This generally leads to duration stretching, and/or packet loss on TRex.
+
+Currently used transactions were chosen to be short, so risk of bad behavior
+is decreased. But in MRR tests, where load is computed based on NIC ability,
+not TRex ability, anomalous behavior is still possible
+(e.g. MRR values being way lower than NDR).
+
+#### Delays
+
+TRex supports adding constant delays to ASTF programs.
+This can be useful, for example if we want to separate connection establishment
+from data transfer.
+
+But as TRex tracks delayed instances as active, this still results
+in higher CPU utilization and reduced performance issues
+(as other overlaping transactions). So the current tests do not use any delays.
+
+#### Keepalives
+
+Both UDP and TCP protocol implementations in TRex programs support keepalive
+duration. That means there is a configurable period of keepalive time,
+and TRex sends keepalive packets automatically (outside the program)
+for the time the program is active (started, not ended yet)
+but not sending any packets.
+
+For TCP this is generally not a big deal, as the other side usually
+retransmits faster. But for UDP it means a packet loss may leave
+the receiving program running.
+
+In order to avoid keepalive packets, keepalive value is set to a high number.
+Here, "high number" means that even at maximum scale and minimum TPS,
+there are still no keepalive packets sent within the corresponding
+(computed) trial duration. This number is kept the same also for
+smaller scale traffic profiles, to simplify maintenance.
+
+#### Transaction success
+
+The transaction is considered successful at Layer-7 (L7) level
+when both program instances close. At this point, various L7 counters
+(unofficial name) are updated on TRex.
+
+We found that proper close and L7 counter update can be CPU intensive,
+whereas lower-level counters (ipackets, opackets) called L2 counters
+can keep up with higher loads.
+
+For some tests, we do not need to confirm the whole transaction was successful.
+CPS (connections per second) tests are a typical example.
+We care only for NAT44ed creating a session (needs one packet
+in inside-to-outside direction per session) and being able to use it
+(needs one packet in outside-to-inside direction).
+
+Similarly in TPUT tests (packet throuput, counting both control
+and data packets), we care about NAT44ed ability to forward packets,
+we do not care whether aplications (TRex) can fully process them at that rate.
+
+Therefore each type of tests has its own formula (usually just one counter
+already provided by TRex) to count "successful enough" transactions
+and attempted transactions. Currently, all tests relying on L7 counters
+use size-limited profiles, so they know what the count of attempted
+transactions should be, but due to duration stretching
+TRex might have been unable to send that many packets.
+For search purposes, unattempted transactions are treated the same
+as attempted but failed transactions.
+
+Sometimes even the number of transactions as tracked by search algorithm
+does not match the transactions as defined by ASTF programs.
+See TCP TPUT profile below.
+
+### UDP CPS
+
+This profile uses a minimalistic transaction to verify NAT44ed session has been
+created and it allows outside-to-inside traffic.
+
+Client instance sends one packet and ends.
+Server instance sends one packet upon creation and ends.
+
+In principle, packet size is configurable,
+but currently used tests apply only one value (100 bytes frame).
+
+Transaction counts as attempted when opackets counter increases on client side.
+Transaction counts as successful when ipackets counter increases on client side.
+
+### TCP CPS
+
+This profile uses a minimalistic transaction to verify NAT44ed session has been
+created and it allows outside-to-inside traffic.
+
+Client initiates TCP connection. Client waits until connection is confirmed
+(by reading zero data bytes). Client ends.
+Server accepts the connection. Server waits for indirect confirmation
+from client (by waiting for client to initiate close). Server ends.
+
+Without packet loss, the whole transaction takes 7 packets to finish
+(4 and 3 per direction).
+From NAT44ed point of view, only the first two are needed to verify
+the session got created.
+
+Packet size is not configurable, but currently used tests report
+frame size as 64 bytes.
+
+Transaction counts as attempted when tcps_connattempt counter increases
+on client side.
+Transaction counts as successful when tcps_connects counter increases
+on client side.
+
+### UDP TPUT
+
+This profile uses a small transaction of "request-response" type,
+with several packets simulating data payload.
+
+Client sends 5 packets and closes immediately.
+Server reads all 5 packets (needed to avoid late packets creating new
+server instances), then sends 5 packets and closes.
+The value 5 was chosen to mirror what TCP TPUT (see below) choses.
+
+Packet size is configurable, currently we have tests for 100,
+1518 and 9000 bytes frame (to match size of TCP TPUT data frames, see below).
+
+As this is a packet oriented test, we do not track the whole
+10 packet transaction. Similarly to stateless tests, we treat each packet
+as a "transaction" for search algorthm packet loss ratio purposes.
+Therefore a "transaction" is attempted when opacket counter on client
+or server side is increased. Transaction is successful if ipacket counter
+on client or server side is increased.
+
+If one of 5 client packets is lost, server instance will get stuck
+in the reading phase. This probably decreases TRex performance,
+but it leads to more stable results then alternatives.
+
+### TCP TPUT
+
+This profile uses a small transaction of "request-response" type,
+with some data amount to be transferred both ways.
+
+In CSIT release 22.06, TRex behavior changed, so we needed to edit
+the traffic profile. Let us describe the pre-22.06 profile first.
+
+Client connects, sends 5 data packets worth of data,
+receives 5 data packets worth of data and closes its side of the connection.
+Server accepts connection, reads 5 data packets worth of data,
+sends 5 data packets worth of data and closes its side of the connection.
+As usual in TCP, sending side waits for ACK from the receiving side
+before proceeding with next step of its program.
+
+Server read is needed to avoid premature close and second server instance.
+Client read is not stricly needed, but ACKs allow TRex to close
+the server instance quickly, thus saving CPU and improving performance.
+
+The number 5 of data packets was chosen so TRex is able to send them
+in a single burst, even with 9000 byte frame size (TRex has a hard limit
+on initial window size).
+That leads to 16 packets (9 of them in c2s direction) to be exchanged
+if no loss occurs.
+The size of data packets is controlled by the traffic profile setting
+the appropriate maximum segment size. Due to TRex restrictions,
+the minimal size for IPv4 data frame achievable by this method is 70 bytes,
+which is more than our usual minimum of 64 bytes.
+For that reason, the data frame sizes available for testing are 100 bytes
+(that allows room for eventually adding IPv6 ASTF tests),
+1518 bytes and 9000 bytes. There is no control over control packet sizes.
+
+Exactly as in UDP TPUT, ipackets and opackets counters are used for counting
+"transactions" (in fact packets).
+
+If packet loss occurs, there can be large transaction overlap, even if most
+ASTF programs finish eventually. This can lead to big duration stretching
+and somehow uneven rate of packets sent. This makes it hard to interpret
+MRR results (frequently MRR is below NDR for this reason),
+but NDR and PDR results tend to be stable enough.
+
+In 22.06, the "ACK from the receiving side" behavior changed,
+the receiving side started sending ACK sometimes
+also before receiving the full set of 5 data packets.
+If the previous profile is understood as a "single challenge, single response"
+where challenge (and also response) is sent as a burst of 5 data packets,
+the new profile uses "bursts" of 1 packet instead, but issues
+the challenge-response part 5 times sequentially
+(waiting for receiving the response before sending next challenge).
+This new profile happens to have the same overall packet count
+(when no re-transmissions are needed).
+Although it is possibly more taxing for TRex CPU,
+the results are comparable to the old traffic profile.
+
+## Ip4base tests
+
+Contrary to stateless traffic profiles, we do not have a simple limit
+that would guarantee TRex is able to send traffic at specified load.
+For that reason, we have added tests where "nat44ed" is replaced by "ip4base".
+Instead of NAT44ed processing, the tests set minimalistic IPv4 routes,
+so that packets are forwarded in both inside-to-outside and outside-to-inside
+directions.
+
+The packets arrive to server end of TRex with different source address&port
+than in NAT44ed tests (no translation to outside values is done with ip4base),
+but those are not specified in the stateful traffic profiles.
+The server end (as always) uses the received address&port as destination
+for outside-to-inside traffic. Therefore the same stateful traffic profile
+works for both NAT44ed and ip4base test (of the same scale).
+
+The NAT44ed results are displayed together with corresponding ip4base results.
+If they are similar, TRex is probably the bottleneck.
+If NAT44ed result is visibly smaller, it describes the real VPP performance.