diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/gettingstarted/developers/vlib.md | 128 |
1 files changed, 117 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/docs/gettingstarted/developers/vlib.md b/docs/gettingstarted/developers/vlib.md index 9ef37fd2657..f25b0bab54b 100644 --- a/docs/gettingstarted/developers/vlib.md +++ b/docs/gettingstarted/developers/vlib.md @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ Graph dispatcher internals -------------------------- This section may be safely skipped. It's not necessary to understand -graph dispatcher internals to create graph nodes. +graph dispatcher internals to create graph nodes. Vector Data Structure --------------------- @@ -161,10 +161,10 @@ Here is the code in .../src/vlib/main.c:vlib_main_or_worker_loop() which processes frames: ```c - /* + /* * Input nodes may have added work to the pending vector. * Process pending vector until there is nothing left. - * All pending vectors will be processed from input -> output. + * All pending vectors will be processed from input -> output. */ for (i = 0; i < _vec_len (nm->pending_frames); i++) cpu_time_now = dispatch_pending_node (vm, i, cpu_time_now); @@ -245,14 +245,14 @@ indicated next node. After some scuffling around - two levels of macros - processing reaches vlib\_get\_next\_frame_internal (...). Get-next-frame-internal digs up the vlib\_next\_frame\_t corresponding to the desired graph -arc. +arc. The next frame data structure amounts to a graph-arc-centric frame cache. Once a node finishes adding element to a frame, it will acquire a vlib_pending_frame_t and end up on the graph dispatcher's run-queue. But there's no guarantee that more vector elements won't be added to the underlying frame from the same (source\_node, -next\_index) arc or from a different (source\_node, next\_index) arc. +next\_index) arc or from a different (source\_node, next\_index) arc. Maintaining consistency of the arc-to-frame cache is necessary. The first step in maintaining consistency is to make sure that only one @@ -260,7 +260,7 @@ graph node at a time thinks it "owns" the target vlib\_frame\_t. Back to the graph node dispatch function. In the usual case, a certain number of packets will be added to the vlib\_frame\_t acquired by -calling vlib\_get\_next\_frame (...). +calling vlib\_get\_next\_frame (...). Before a dispatch function returns, it's required to call vlib\_put\_next\_frame (...) for all of the graph arcs it actually @@ -274,12 +274,12 @@ dispatch\_pending\_node actions ------------------------------- The main graph dispatch loop calls dispatch pending node as shown -above. +above. Dispatch\_pending\_node recovers the pending frame, and the graph node runtime / dispatch function. Further, it recovers the next\_frame currently associated with the vlib\_frame\_t, and detaches the -vlib\_frame\_t from the next\_frame. +vlib\_frame\_t from the next\_frame. In .../src/vlib/main.c:dispatch\_pending\_node(...), note this stanza: @@ -349,7 +349,7 @@ to use. Here is a typical example: vlib_main_t *vm = &vlib_global_main; uword event_type, * event_data = 0; - while (1) + while (1) { vlib_process_wait_for_event_or_clock (vm, 5.0 /* seconds */); @@ -362,7 +362,7 @@ to use. Here is a typical example: case EVENT2: handle_event2s (event_data); - break; + break; case ~0: /* 5-second idle/periodic */ handle_idle (); @@ -471,7 +471,7 @@ Here is a complete example: } /* *INDENT-OFF* */ - static VLIB_CLI_COMMAND (show_ip_tuple_command) = + static VLIB_CLI_COMMAND (show_ip_tuple_command) = { .path = "show ip tuple match", .short_help = "Show ip 5-tuple match-and-broadcast tables", @@ -494,3 +494,109 @@ code elsewhere to unpack the data and finally print the answer. If a certain cli command has the potential to hurt packet processing performance by running for too long, do the work incrementally in a process node. The client can wait. + +Handing off buffers between threads +----------------------------------- + +Vlib includes an easy-to-use mechanism for handing off buffers between +worker threads. A typical use-case: software ingress flow hashing. At +a high level, one creates a per-worker-thread queue which sends packets +to a specific graph node in the indicated worker thread. With the +queue in hand, enqueue packets to the worker thread of your choice. + +### Initialize a handoff queue + +Simple enough, call vlib_frame_queue_main_init: + +```c + main_ptr->frame_queue_index + = vlib_frame_queue_main_init (dest_node.index, frame_queue_size); +``` + +Frame_queue_size means what it says: the number of frames which may be +queued. Since frames contain 1...256 packets, frame_queue_size should +be a reasonably small number (32...64). If the frame queue producer(s) +are faster than the frame queue consumer(s), congestion will +occur. Suggest letting the enqueue operator deal with queue +congestion, as shown in the enqueue example below. + +Under the floorboards, vlib_frame_queue_main_init creates an input queue +for each worker thread. + +Please do NOT create frame queues until it's clear that they will be +used. Although the main dispatch loop is reasonably smart about how +often it polls the (entire set of) frame queues, polling unused frame +queues is a waste of clock cycles. + +### Hand off packets + +The actual handoff mechanics are simple, and integrate nicely with +a typical graph-node dispatch function: + +```c + always_inline uword + do_handoff_inline (vlib_main_t * vm, + vlib_node_runtime_t * node, vlib_frame_t * frame, + int is_ip4, int is_trace) + { + u32 n_left_from, *from; + vlib_buffer_t *bufs[VLIB_FRAME_SIZE], **b; + u16 thread_indices [VLIB_FRAME_SIZE]; + u16 nexts[VLIB_FRAME_SIZE], *next; + u32 n_enq; + htest_main_t *hmp = &htest_main; + int i; + + from = vlib_frame_vector_args (frame); + n_left_from = frame->n_vectors; + + vlib_get_buffers (vm, from, bufs, n_left_from); + next = nexts; + b = bufs; + + /* + * Typical frame traversal loop, details vary with + * use case. Make sure to set thread_indices[i] with + * the desired destination thread index. You may + * or may not bother to set next[i]. + */ + + for (i = 0; i < frame->n_vectors; i++) + { + <snip> + /* Pick a thread to handle this packet */ + thread_indices[i] = f (packet_data_or_whatever); + <snip> + + b += 1; + next += 1; + n_left_from -= 1; + } + + /* Enqueue buffers to threads */ + n_enq = + vlib_buffer_enqueue_to_thread (vm, hmp->frame_queue_index, + from, thread_indices, frame->n_vectors, + 1 /* drop on congestion */); + /* Typical counters, + if (n_enq < frame->n_vectors) + vlib_node_increment_counter (vm, node->node_index, + XXX_ERROR_CONGESTION_DROP, + frame->n_vectors - n_enq); + vlib_node_increment_counter (vm, node->node_index, + XXX_ERROR_HANDED_OFF, n_enq); + return frame->n_vectors; +} +``` + +Notes about calling vlib_buffer_enqueue_to_thread(...): + +* If you pass "drop on congestion" non-zero, all packets in the +inbound frame will be consumed one way or the other. This is the +recommended setting. + +* In the drop-on-congestion case, please don't try to "help" in the +enqueue node by freeing dropped packets, or by pushing them to +"error-drop." Either of those actions would be a severe error. + +* It's perfectly OK to enqueue packets to the current thread. |