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authorPierre Pfister <ppfister@cisco.com>2016-08-04 16:13:09 +0100
committerDave Barach <openvpp@barachs.net>2016-08-11 14:05:40 +0000
commit041eacc81656d2ed5bc01b96b15a7d03a1700f13 (patch)
treef1cded1a27f92bab90fec8e5ea9d991ee2ff7eb5 /plugins/lb-plugin/README.md
parent3590ac5881261c95a3c575360e24903d60fac392 (diff)
VPP-130: MagLev-like Load Balancer
This plugin provides load balancing for VPP in a way that is largely inspired from Google's MagLev: http://research.google.com/pubs/pub44824.html More info in the README.md Change-Id: I1223f495d5c2d5200808a398504119f2830337e9 Signed-off-by: Pierre Pfister <ppfister@cisco.com>
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+# Load Balancer plugin for VPP
+
+## Version
+
+The load balancer plugin is currently in *beta* version.
+Both CLIs and APIs are subject to *heavy* changes.
+Wich also means feedback is really welcome regarding features, apis, etc...
+
+## Overview
+
+This plugin provides load balancing for VPP in a way that is largely inspired
+from Google's MagLev: http://research.google.com/pubs/pub44824.html
+
+The load balancer is configured with a set of Virtual IPs (VIP, which can be
+prefixes), and for each VIP, with a set of Application Server addresses (ASs).
+
+Traffic received for a given VIP (or VIP prefix) is tunneled using GRE towards
+the different ASs in a way that (tries to) ensure that a given session will
+always be tunneled to the same AS.
+
+Both VIPs or ASs can be IPv4 or IPv6, but for a given VIP, all ASs must be using
+the same encap. type (i.e. IPv4+GRE or IPv6+GRE). Meaning that for a given VIP,
+all AS addresses must be of the same family.
+
+## Performances
+
+The load balancer has been tested up to 1 millions flows and still forwards more
+than 3Mpps per core in such circumstances.
+Although 3Mpps seems already good, it is likely that performances will be improved
+in next versions.
+
+## Configuration
+
+### Global LB parameters
+
+The load balancer needs to be configured with some parameters:
+
+ lb conf [ip4-src-address <addr>] [ip6-src-address <addr>]
+ [buckets <n>] [timeout <s>]
+
+ip4-src-address: the source address used to send encap. packets using IPv4.
+
+ip6-src-address: the source address used to send encap. packets using IPv6.
+
+buckets: the *per-thread* established-connexions-table number of buckets.
+
+timeout: the number of seconds a connection will remain in the
+ established-connexions-table while no packet for this flow
+ is received.
+
+
+### Configure the VIPs
+
+ lb vip <prefix> [encap (gre6|gre4)] [new_len <n>] [del]
+
+new_len is the size of the new-connection-table. It should be 1 or 2 orders of
+magnitude bigger than the number of ASs for the VIP in order to ensure a good
+load balancing.
+
+Examples:
+
+ lb vip 2002::/16 encap gre6 new_len 1024
+ lb vip 2003::/16 encap gre4 new_len 2048
+ lb vip 80.0.0.0/8 encap gre6 new_len 16
+ lb vip 90.0.0.0/8 encap gre4 new_len 1024
+
+### Configure the ASs (for each VIP)
+
+ lb as <vip-prefix> [<address> [<address> [...]]] [del]
+
+You can add (or delete) as many ASs at a time (for a single VIP).
+Note that the AS address family must correspond to the VIP encap. IP family.
+
+Examples:
+
+ lb as 2002::/16 2001::2 2001::3 2001::4
+ lb as 2003::/16 10.0.0.1 10.0.0.2
+ lb as 80.0.0.0/8 2001::2
+ lb as 90.0.0.0/8 10.0.0.1
+
+
+
+## Monitoring
+
+The plugin provides quite a bunch of counters and information.
+These are still subject to quite significant changes.
+
+ show lb
+ show lb vip
+ show lb vip verbose
+
+ show node counters
+
+
+## Design notes
+
+### Multi-Threading
+
+MagLev is a distributed system which pseudo-randomly generates a
+new-connections-table based on AS names such that each server configured with
+the same set of ASs ends up with the same table. Connection stickyness is then
+ensured with an established-connections-table. Using ECMP, it is assumed (but
+not relied on) that servers will mostly receive traffic for different flows.
+
+This implementation pushes the parallelism a little bit further by using
+one established-connections table per thread. This is equivalent to assuming
+that RSS will make a job similar to ECMP, and is pretty useful as threads don't
+need to get a lock in order to write in the table.
+
+### Hash Table
+
+A load balancer requires an efficient read and write hash table. The hash table
+used by ip6-forward is very read-efficient, but not so much for writing. In
+addition, it is not a big deal if writing into the hash table fails (again,
+MagLev uses a flow table but does not heaviliy relies on it).
+
+The plugin therefore uses a very specific (and stupid) hash table.
+ - Fixed (and power of 2) number of buckets (configured at runtime)
+ - Fixed (and power of 2) elements per buckets (configured at compilation time)
+
+### Reference counting
+
+When an AS is removed, there is two possible ways to react.
+ - Keep using the AS for established connections
+ - Change AS for established connections (likely to cause error for TCP)
+
+In the first case, although an AS is removed from the configuration, its
+associated state needs to stay around as long as it is used by at least one
+thread.
+
+In order to avoid locks, a specific reference counter is used. The design is quite
+similar to clib counters but:
+ - It is possible to decrease the value
+ - Summing will not zero the per-thread counters
+ - Only the thread can reallocate its own counters vector (to avoid concurrency issues)
+
+This reference counter is lock free, but reading a count of 0 does not mean
+the value can be freed unless it is ensured by *other* means that no other thread
+is concurrently referencing the object. In the case of this plugin, it is assumed
+that no concurrent event will take place after a few seconds.
+