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Ticket: VPP-1821
Type: fix
Fixes: 6dfd3785e4
When a bond interface is administratively down but the slaves are
up, process inbound LACP packets received over the slaves. This
was the old behavior with bond interfaces in LACP mode and was
altered unintentionally by another change. Restore the old behavior.
Change-Id: I61b0b700211dea4859b6ee447ab83b33197d9d11
Signed-off-by: Matthew Smith <mgsmith@netgate.com>
(cherry picked from commit 854eb6e3ff87ace211a45a8053424d8432bd5755)
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For active-backup mode, we transmit on one and only one interface. However,
we might still receive traffic on the backup interface. We should drop them
and strictly process incoming traffic on only the active interface.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: Idb6b798b30033e84044b151c616be3c157329731
(cherry picked from commit 6dfd3785e4d65418f4330a73bf837912c37b8ec2)
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In bond RX quad loop, when all packets within the frame have the same incoming
interface, we cannot skip calling bond_update_next because that function calls
vnet_feature_next() to update the b->current_config_index. The next node needs
the correct b->current_config_index to work with.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I3d8b3d4e0f95490f406fae7638f0c43c301ce664
(cherry picked from commit 71e5b4710258376873c62428cb4a81b2a650fc26)
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Virtual interfaces may be part of the bonding like physical interfaces. The
difference is virtual interfaces may disappear dynamically. As an example,
the following CLI sequence may crash the debug image
create vhost-user socket /tmp/sock1
create bond mode lacp
bond add BondEthernet0 VirtualEthernet0/0/0
delete vhost-user VirtualEhernet0/0/0
Notice the virtual interface is deleted without first doing bond delete.
The proper order is to first remove the slave interface from the bond prior
to deleting the virtual interface as shown below. But we should handle it
anyway.
create vhost-user socket /tmp/sock1
create bond mode lacp
bond add BondEthernet0 VirtualEthernet0/0/0
bond del VirtualEthernet0/0/0 <-----
delete vhost-user VirtualEhernet0/0/0
The fix is to register for VNET_SW_INTERFACE_ADD_DEL_FUNCTION and remove
the slave interface from the bond if the to-be-deleted interface is part of
the bond. We check the interface that it is actually up before we send
the lacp pdu. Up means both hw and sw admin up.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: If4d2da074338b16aab0df54e00d719e55c45221a
(cherry picked from commit bac326cb7c5f8856786ca046df8cfa3be9f53926)
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show interface does not display the RX counters for the bond
interfaces. It displays rx-no-buf instead.
The problem is VNET_INTERFACE_COUNTER_RX is a combined counter,
not a simple counter. Change the code to use
vlib_increment_combined_counter passing it with n_rx_packets and
n_rx_bytes.
Type: fix
Change-Id: I8121ad7e546447049fa13da62481b6c8f5575bec
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
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-fno-common makes sure we do not have multiple declarations of the same
global symbol across compilation units. It helps debug nasty linkage
bugs by guaranteeing that all reference to a global symbol use the same
underlying object.
It also helps avoiding benign mistakes such as declaring enum as global
objects instead of types in headers (hence the minor fixes scattered
across the source).
Change-Id: I55c16406dc54ff8a6860238b90ca990fa6b179f1
Signed-off-by: Benoît Ganne <bganne@cisco.com>
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We register callback for VNET_HW_INTERFACE_LINK_UP_DOWN_FUNCTION and
VNET_SW_INTERFACE_ADMIN_UP_DOWN_FUNCTION to add and remove the slave
interface from the bond interface accordingly. For static bonding without
lacp, one would think that it is good enough to put the slave interface into
the ective slave set as soon as it is configured. Wrong, sometimes the slave
interface is configured to be part of the bonding without ever bringing up the
hardware carrier or setting the admin state to up. In that case, we send
traffic to the "dead" slave interface.
The fix is to make sure both the carrier and admin state are up before we put
the slave into the active set for forwarding traffic.
Change-Id: I93b1c36d5481ca76cc8b87e8ca1b375ca3bd453b
Signed-off-by: Steven <sluong@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Iba750a41262cc028ad0363fff78cc219e4a33538
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Id4f37f5d4a03160572954a416efa1ef9b3d79ad1
Signed-off-by: Dave Barach <dave@barachs.net>
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This significantly reduces need for
...
in multiarch code. Simply constructor macros will jost create static unused
entry if CLIB_MARCH_VARIANT is defined and that will be optimized out by
compiler.
Change-Id: I17d1c4ac0c903adcfadaa4a07de1b854c7ab14ac
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Ieb8b53977fc8484c19780941e232ee072b667de3
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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It is cheaper to get thread index from vlib_main_t if available...
Change-Id: I4582e160d06d9d7fccdc54271912f0635da79b50
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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- Modify the API send_ip6_na and send_ip4_garp to take sw_if_index instead
of vnet_hw_interface_t and add call to build_ethernet_rewrite to support
subinterface/vlan
- Add code to bonding driver to send an event to bond_process when the first
interface becomes active or when the active interface is down
- Create a bond_process to walk the interface and the corresponding
subinterfaces to send garp/ip6_na when an event is received.
- Minor cleanup in bonding/node.c
Note: dpdk bonding driver does not send garp/ip6_na for subinterfaces. There is
no attempt to fix it here. But the infra is now done and should be easy to
add the support.
Change-Id: If3ecc4cd0fb3051330f7fa11ca0dab3e18557ce1
Signed-off-by: Steven <sluong@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I00fc4a4553dabed7ef099227b8253ed4916ea5e4
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Ibab5e27277f618ceb2d543b9d6a1a5f191e7d1db
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Old code ~25 clocks/packet, new ~10.
Change-Id: I202cd6cbafb1ab2296939634d674f7ffd28253fc
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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- hash is great. But it is a bit too slow for the DP. Use direct array indexing
to quickly retrieve the slave interface.
- the algorithm used by flow hash is great. But it is a bit too slow for the DP.
Use l2_hash_hash() extracted from lb_hash.h which ECMP is using. It makes use
of intrinsic crc32 instruction set.
- shortcut modulo arithmetic when the operand is 2**x (where x up to 4) to
avoid division instruction.
- special case for link count == 1 in bond_tx_fn()
- use clib_mem_unaligned to access data for the packet to avoid alignment error
- Fix some typos for packet tracing.
Change-Id: I8eae3ad497061c5473aa675ba894ee0211120d25
Signed-off-by: Steven <sluong@cisco.com>
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[VPP-1251]
Problem:
When the bond subinterface is removed, it was observed that we lost the lacp
partner. Show hardware shows rx counter goes up, but show interface does not
for the slave interfaces.
Cause:
We reset the interface promiscuous mode when the bond subinterface is deleted.
This causes dpdk not to accept any packet. Leave the interface in promiscuous
mode fixes the problem.
Other fixes:
There are few places we use hw_if_index as if they are sw_if_index. But they
don't necessarily have the same value. As soon as a subinterface is created,
they start to diverge. The fix is to use the correct API for the hw_if_index
and sw_if_index.
Change-Id: I1e6b8bca0a4aae396d217a141271cbf968500c91
Signed-off-by: Steven <sluong@cisco.com>
(cherry picked from commit 42c6599bf3057a7e8f4f00f5b6a9dd72af48d283)
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For the debug image, if the interface is removed and the trace was
collected prior to the interface delete, show trace may cause a crash.
This is because vnet_get_sw_interface_name and vnet_get_sup_hw_interface
are not safe if the interface is deleted.
The fix is to use format_vnet_sw_if_index_name if all we need is to
get the interface name in the trace to display. It would show "DELETED"
which is better than a crash.
Change-Id: I912402d3e71592ece9f49d36c8a6b7af97f3b69e
Signed-off-by: Steven <sluong@cisco.com>
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Add bonding driver to support creation of bond interface which composes of
multiple slave interfaces. The slave interfaces could be physical interfaces,
or just any virtual interfaces. For example, memif interfaces.
The syntax to create a bond interface is
create bond mode <lacp | xor | acitve-backup | broadcast | round-robin>
To enslave an interface to the bond interface,
enslave interface TenGigabitEthernet6/0/0 to BondEthernet0
Please see src/plugins/lacp/lacp_doc.md for more examples and additional
options.
LACP is a control plane protocol which manages and monitors the status of
the slave interfaces. The protocol is part of 802.3ad standard. This patch
implements LACPv1. LACPv2 is not supported.
To enable LACP on the bond interface, specify "mode lacp" when the bond
interface is created. The syntax to enslave a slave interface is the same as
other bonding modes.
Change-Id: I06581d3b87635972f9f0e1ec50b67560fc13e26c
Signed-off-by: Steven <sluong@cisco.com>
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