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VPP still needs to use packet type recognition in vRX path of the
ixgbe driver so ip packet can bypass ethernet-input node processing
for better performance. The shortcoming of packet type recognition
in the vRX path does not affect VPP.
Change-Id: Ibc96021c50402a75a8bc4f80125c664714276cef
Signed-off-by: John Lo <loj@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I0626c2650eba7961a15b1e87a664b57bef5503a2
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I6aef98252e6134fd2f1a30a8407086ab98285a53
Signed-off-by: Florin Coras <fcoras@cisco.com>
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Add API methods to create, delete and show GRE tunnels.
Also add missing CLI functionality for deleting and listing
configured tunnels.
Change-Id: I7565966037d94ade07938e4ff0d9333419716857
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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Thanks to Chris Luke for reporting.
Change-Id: I4f2ac5bb0eb565738755ddb00e8c918134ff67b6
Signed-off-by: Florin Coras <fcoras@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I3ffb2e3cef63cbc9f2abc81bbdedabb34b9b3408
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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format_ip46_address() does not take a 2nd argument indicating the
address family. Harmless since the extra argument is simply not
consumed.
(noticed while adding gre to this module)
Change-Id: I692883872eedb4a8e3c0be7680d03b4b257ba6f9
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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By setting the flag in used table, guest is
prevented from kicking the host when it adds
buffers. This results in 100% performance improvement
when tested throughput using iperf3.
Change-Id: Iefaf5b97d1444c216bb373998732a437d333d521
Signed-off-by: Shesha Sreenivasamurthy <shesha@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I20e4abcc82c00e43dd441f1882cb6be531b6876e
Signed-off-by: Hongjun Ni <hongjun.ni@intel.com>
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Change-Id: I045bb9d51c9a82ccba6e792485b9418bd78b8520
Signed-off-by: Hongjun Ni <hongjun.ni@intel.com>
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Change-Id: I9f5efef4c2b821e4c7d76ed6e2c4f52c2495e512
Signed-off-by: Hongjun Ni <hongjun.ni@intel.com>
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With Telnet protocol overhead, the string "xterm-256color", which is the
norm when the terminal is iTerm on a Mac, is longer than the 16 byte
lookahead overflow guard in the Telnet protocol processor.
This extends it to 24 bytes.
This guard is designed to encourage the protocol processor to quit
waiting for bytes indefinitely if those already in the buffer do not
form a complete message. Whilst this is unlikely, extending the guard
length would mean more bytes need to be received before it gives up.
Change-Id: Ibaa3d35b78bfd298fe0e4f4c6e508440f122e916
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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Change-Id: Ifce3f2bdcba099157a42d0b694f3161b9f700ed2
Signed-off-by: Filip Tehlar <ftehlar@cisco.com>
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The implementation mimics that of the ip4 data-plane. Therefore, a new
lgpe-ip6-lookup lookup node is introduced for ip6 source lookups, a
lisp-gpe-ip6-input node for decapsulating ip6 encapsulated packets and
the tx function of the lisp-gpe interface is updated to support any mix
of v4 and v6 in underlay and overlay.
Change-Id: Ib3a6e339b8cd7618a940acf0dd8e61c042fd83dd
Signed-off-by: Florin Coras <fcoras@cisco.com>
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The stats thread was sharing the main mheap when we started at least
one worker or I/O thread, but ran on its own mheap when we started 0
worker + io threads.
Net of this change; if a VLIB_REGISTER_THREAD instance specifies a
per-thread mheap, a per-thread mheap will be provided. Otherwise,
threads share the main heap.
The stats thread now uses the main heap. Simpler is better.
Change-Id: I1fff0dd66ae8f7dfe44923f702734e2832b55b09
Signed-off-by: Dave Barach <dbarach@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I17ae3c7031a820746a3785a35b440e17430d0ac5
Signed-off-by: Ed Warnicke <eaw@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I50d2946df8f5de0142b76f4023d8bd60ee6d2f0d
Signed-off-by: Andrej Kozemcak <akozemca@cisco.com>
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Refactors the VXLAN node to work with both IPv4 and IPv6 transports.
There is a discussion thread for this change at
https://lists.fd.io/pipermail/vpp-dev/2016-March/000279.html
Note that this changes the binary configuration API to support both
address families; each address uses the same memory for either address
type and a flag to indicate which is in use. This also includes changes
to the Java API to support both address families.
The CLI and VAT syntax remains unchanged; the code detects whether an
IPv4 or an IPv6 address was given.
Configuration examples:
IPv4 CLI: create vxlan tunnel src 192.168.1.1 dst 192.168.1.2
vni 10 encap-vrf-id 0 decap-next l2
IPv6 CLI: create vxlan tunnel src 2620:124:9000::1 dst 2620:124:9000::2
vni 16 encap-vrf-id 0 decap-next l2
IPv4 VAT: vxlan_add_del_tunnel src 192.168.1.1 dst 192.168.1.2
vni 10 encap-vrf-id 0 decap-next l2
IPv6 VAT: vxlan_add_del_tunnel src 2620:124:9000::1 dst 2620:124:9000::2
vni 16 encap-vrf-id 0 decap-next l2
TODO: The encap path is not as optimal as it could be.
Change-Id: I87be8bf0501e0c9cd7e401be4542bb599f1b6e47
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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The vlib_node_runtime can change after the thread starts up.
Change-Id: Id5bc248c009ef9be26213b36a0115938b61cb8c4
Signed-off-by: Todd Foggoa (tfoggoa) <tfoggoa@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I3767a1bbe55452600863e145cbc12b114d6d1024
Signed-off-by: Todd Foggoa (tfoggoa) <tfoggoa@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Ia81713a72e3c48b1d97bbf3f20a908bbc4ebd3b1
Signed-off-by: Maros Marsalek <mmarsale@cisco.com>
Signed-off-by: Marek Gradzki <mgradzki@cisco.com>
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Display it via "show frame histogram" CLI.
Change-Id: I436a2125f391af85d1743cf8765e5f27fa0ca809
Signed-off-by: Todd Foggoa (tfoggoa) <tfoggoa@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I1e39970bc6ded9e6da64385b2289321ba43bebfd
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
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Adds flags to the packet buffer to track the number of VLANs in
the current Ethernet frame. We use two bits to signify 0, 1 or
2 VLANs. The value 3 signififies an unknown quantity of VLANs,
which includes "three or more" which is not widely supported.
We place the bits in the vlib_buffer section; that is not the
opaque section, so that all subordinate nodes can use it.
For background, see the discussion thread at
https://lists.fd.io/pipermail/vpp-dev/2016-March/000354.html
The helper macro ethernet_buffer_header_size(buffer) uses
these bits stored in "buffer" to calculate the Ethernet header
size.
The macro ethernet_buffer_set_vlan_count(buffer, count) sets the
appropriate bit values based on the number in "count".
By current frame we are referring to the case where a packet
that arrives from the wire is carrying an encapsulated Ethernet
packet. Once decapsulated that inner packet becomes the current
frame.
There are two places where this value is set; For most Ethernet
frames this will be in the "ethernet-input" node when that node
parses the Ethernet header. The second place is whenever
vnet_update_l2_len() is used to update the layer 2 opaque data.
Typically this function is used by nodes just before they send
a packet into l2-input.
These bits are zeroed in vlib_buffer_init_for_free_list()
meaning that wherever the buffer comes from they have a reasonable
value (eg, if ip4/ip6 generates the packet.)
Primarily this VLAN counter is used by nodes below "ethernet-
input" and "l2-input" to determine where the start of the
current Ethernet header is. There is opaque data set by
"ethernet-input" storing the offset of the current Ethernet
header but, since this is opaque, it's not usable by downstream
nodes. Previously several nodes have made assumptions regarding
the location of the Ethernet header, including that it is always
at the start of the packet buffer (incorrect when we have
encapsulated packets) or that it is exactly
sizeof(ethernet_header_t) away (incorrect when we have VLAN tags.)
One notable case where this functionality is required is in
ip6_neighbor when it generates a response to a received neighbor
soliciation request; it reuses the incoming Ethernet header
in-situ and thus needs to reliably know where that header begins.
Also, at the suggestion of Dave Barach, this patch removes
definition of HGSHM bits in the buffer flags since they are
unused and unlikely to ever be.
Change-Id: I00e4b9ced5ef814a776020c395d1774aba6185b3
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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Change-Id: I29d8cc839565999e2fabe09d29c40e09aa1ea784
Signed-off-by: Thomas F Herbert <therbert@redhat.com>
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Change-Id: Iaac12e63e4a5ee026276638afd5d5ba3b9503a40
Signed-off-by: Florin Coras <fcoras@cisco.com>
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In some cases, the packet header size with IPv6 and a tunnel can
overflow the buffer used for packet tracing. This patch increases
this buffer a little to avoid truncated header information in the
trace.
Change-Id: Ib800e3b908ebe7e80bae4428a94541a803b40b8c
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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Change-Id: I896925ea2208d318d353d486707b97f295c78426
Signed-off-by: John Lo <loj@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I7f50074a4ed5b62bef4584190eb849d90e90e592
Signed-off-by: Dave Barach <dave@barachs.net>
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duplicate code by CLI to create TAPs.
Change-Id: Ib6b30e3dc20ddad7c78d2038955df7af020f0671
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I9397ac756290953a14e3adfe5b7c980ecf92bac2
Signed-off-by: John Lo <loj@cisco.com>
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Buffers output from CLI commands as it arrives and allows the terminal to
view this buffer one page at a time.
- View of the buffer is moved with space/enter/up/down/page-up/page-down/
home/end.
- At the end of the CLI command if less than one page of output was
generated then the pager is not engaged.
- 'q' to quit the pager, or scroll off the bottom.
- Pager prompt displays the current view aperture line numbers and total
number of lines buffered.
- Can be disabled at runtime with "no-cli-pager" in the unix configuration.
- The number of lines that will be stored in the buffer is limited to
prevent excessive memory use; this limit is configurable with
"cli-pager-buffer-limit" in the unix configuration.
- Both these options can also be set in the console with "set terminal
pager [on|off] [limit <lines>]".
Limitations:
- Does not yet implement a search function.
- Whilst the terminal size is detected and tracked, changing the terminal
size when the pager is being used will not cause a redraw of the page.
- Lines that wrap the right most column are not yet handled gracefully.
Change-Id: I69548c1464eff79c53e122668f25758266daf1c2
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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- Remove the '?' mechanism that previously only worked on telnet
connections in favor of a more shell-like "history" command.
The '?' approach had strange side-effects, like executing what
was already in the command buffer.
Change-Id: I043086b7f400c66c332a32dbd06ef580ecb18ee8
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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_______ _ _ _____ ___
__/ __/ _ \ (_)__ | | / / _ \/ _ \
_/ _// // / / / _ \ | |/ / ___/ ___/
/_/ /____(_)_/\___/ |___/_/ /_/
- For terminals that look like they support ANSI output the FD.io
part is colored red.
- This is only shown at the start of a debug CLI or a telnet CLI
session.
- This banner can be disabled with "cli-no-banner" in the "unix"
section of the startup config file.
Change-Id: I085b3780dcca3eae546859dbde6c1c34c8258b9f
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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A fairly comprehensive re-work of the built-in debug and telnet CLI
to add various command line editing features and to add command history
to the debug CLI.
This may seem like a large change but a good amount of it is merely
reworking the existing CLI code (which changed its indent level).
The features this patch enables include:
- Enable history in the debug CLI.
- Put both stdin and telnet connections in char-by-char mode.
- Echo from the server, not the client, for more control.
- Add a mostly no-op but fairly complete Telnet protocol processor.
- Perform control code parsing on the input byte stream to match strings
of both control codes and ANSI/VT100 escape sequences.
- Up/down keys scroll through the history (like ^P/^N).
- Do CRLF output cooking (\n -> \r\n) for connections that need it.
- Left/right cursor movements, insert/erase at cursor.
- Home/end cursor jumps.
- Jump left/right word at a time (Ctrl-left/right).
- Negotiate the terminal type from Telnet clients. (well, the code doesn’t
really negotiate, it demands it, but the client is led to believe it
was a negotiation)
- Read terminal type from TERM variable for the local debug CLI.
- Delete from cursor to end of line (^K). Delete char-right (^D/Del).
- Clear screen (^L) and repaint prompt/current command (on non-ANSI
terminals it just newlines and repaints the line).
Change-Id: Id274b56ccfd4cc8c19ddc0f478890f21f284262a
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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Some of the *details structures defined in vpe.api did
not have the context parameter that is used for request<->reply
matching. Without the context, it is difficult for upper
layers (users of vpp binary apis) to identify which reply
or details message belongs to which request
Tested manually using vat
Change-Id: I5fda54a891b68349f80c87fae06009791a028147
Signed-off-by: Maros Marsalek <mmarsale@cisco.com>
Signed-off-by: Marek Gradzki <mgradzki@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I79bef6dc94b3ad688564a409d14d63ca3125a305
Signed-off-by: Shesha Sreenivasamurthy <shesha@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Ia504ccdac1deac20f20cf7fb76f78b2d8c505474
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I7a4bc4678fea723c35bbeac1b893c5c52235aa67
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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This patch introduces standard command line 'set interface mtu' for setting the MTU
for tap devices. It allows user to set the mtu in between 68 to 65535 bytes
aligned to what linux kernel supports for tun/tap devices.
Right now tapcli set the same MTU size for each tap interface. But it should be set
and configure to per interface rather than per tap instance.
Change-Id: I81b7f3ad95ca56d585907ff8f51d9935a428e01b
Signed-off-by: Mohsin Kazmi <sykazmi@cisco.com>
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For using clang as a compiler it is enough
to specify CC=clang in the make command line
Change-Id: I06f1c1d418b68768f8119de5bdc8748c51f90c02
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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This patch is more or less a port of I71f3ba0c8192 to IPv6.
In practice it allows creating a route via a neighbor which is not resolved yet.
It also adds static flag to IPv6 neighbor entries.
And as Damjan suggested, it formalizes ip46_address_t by using
the IPv4 embedded IPv6 address format.
Change-Id: Ifa7328a03380ea4ff118b7ca4897b4ab23a3e57c
Signed-off-by: Pierre Pfister <ppfister@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I7c5c93b6490baa05b9b203b6d065d9c31f36d531
Signed-off-by: Hongjun Ni <hongjun.ni@intel.com>
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Change-Id: I82cdd82213517c51064eb439c44068d8977e5619
Signed-off-by: Dave Barach <dave@barachs.net>
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DPDK 16.04 introduced new config parameter RTE_ARCH_X86
which was missing in the dpdk/Makefile
That caused issues with virtio devices on older kernels
(observed on 3.13.0).
This patch changes the source of generated config so
it will also include all defines in config/defconfig_TARGET
file.
Change-Id: Idc6ccbef1d01da84235281ea1078c081846446de
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I3fb9441fb7272072aba9721ca729d6ce5f2c00af
Signed-off-by: John Lo <loj@cisco.com>
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Enabling these features breaks L4 traffic when a VHOST
interface is bridged with a hardware interface which
does not support such offloading. (Eg: enic)
Change-Id: Ife3d292a8860eb60b82f1473e2d0dd7329e51d5e
Signed-off-by: Shesha Sreenivasamurthy <shesha@cisco.com>
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virtio-vhost driver was specifying wrong prefetch
size. This caused VPP to assert in DBG mode.
Change-Id: Icbe3d5574bd2463b98dfc618a001b16198ab82be
Signed-off-by: Shesha Sreenivasamurthy <shesha@cisco.com>
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In order to make it easier for folks who have existing
Centos or Ubuntu boxes to utilize the same
'Getting started' scripting that is used in Vagrant,
as well as enable us to use that scripting in CI,
broke up bootstrap.sh into
update.sh - Things like apt-get update
build.sh - Install any dependencies and build vpp
clearinterfaces.sh - Clean off any non-default gateway
interfaces. Used by vagrant.
run.sh - Start vpp as a service on the box.
A user (or CI) just wanting to get going and build
on an existing Ubuntu or Centos image (ie, not via
vagrant) can simply run
build.sh
Change-Id: I8f19342f163cad07c6c05def943a5fb8e394b879
Signed-off-by: Ed Warnicke <eaw@cisco.com>
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This is first drop of native NETMAP driver.
It is mainly tested with NETMAP pipes but also
support for native interfaces should work.
New CLI:
create netmap [<intf name>|valeXXX:YYY] [hw-addr <mac>] [pipe]
[master|slave]
Following example creates NETMAP pipe where VPP acts as master:
create netmap name vale00:vpp1 pipe master
then NETMAP pkt-gen tool can be used to send traffic:
pkt-gen -i vale00:vpp1}0 -f tx
Change-Id: Ie0ddaa5facc75285b78467420e8a9f9c8dfc39e5
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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