Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Type: improvement
Bond link state is being maintained inconsistently. It is initially set to
up. If the bond interface admin state is set to down, the link state is
set to down. If the bond interface admin state is set to up, the link
state is only set to up if there are active slave interfaces at that point.
If slaves become active at some later time, it does not get updated. Its
next chance to be updated is the next time the bond interface is set to
admin up.
To address this, do not set the link state to up after creating a bond.
Adjust the link state as slave interfaces are attached or detached
based on whether the bond is getting its first active slave or losing
its last one.
Unit test added to verify correct maintenance of link state.
Change-Id: I31f17321f7f0e727e1ab1e01713423af6566dad9
Signed-off-by: Matthew Smith <mgsmith@netgate.com>
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Cleanup L2/L3 mode switch to not redirect to/from ethernet-input node
as it is no longer necessary.
L2 patch should use sw_if_index for device feature enable/disable.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: John Lo <loj@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I0f24161d027b07c188fd1e05276146f94c075710
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Type: fix
Only add GSO and Checksum offload flags when gso is
enabled.
Change-Id: I58945a4ffbb9a0e6a8640fc01424c63feef16306
Signed-off-by: Mohsin Kazmi <sykazmi@cisco.com>
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facilitates use of papi beyond the tests.
Type: improvement
Change-Id: I3d502d9130b81a7fb65ee69bb06fe55802b28a27
Signed-off-by: Paul Vinciguerra <pvinci@vinciconsulting.com>
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Add GSO support, configurable from the CLI.
Type: feature
Ticket: VPP-1820
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I65885a071b24c74437e6cfe5eff237b01bc1744b
(cherry picked from commit a06f68556e506a6ff7f31a617a036614c84f71c0)
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Type: fix
Ticket: VPP-1837
Signed-off-by: Dave Barach <dave@barachs.net>
Change-Id: I402b1b06db736b2a7a242ce70ffd409c7c0a4fc2
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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>
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Type: fix
Fixes: 6b32b4aad
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I8bd6bb95135dc280565f357aa5850292f66979a1
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
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Type: docs
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I53522a60122014741d1c6533a0456bf31445529a
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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
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Type: feature
- ip-neighbour: generic neighbour handling; APIs, DBs, event handling,
aging
- arp: ARP protocol implementation
- ip6-nd; IPv6 neighbor discovery implementation; separate ND,
MLD, RA
- ip6-link; manage link-local addresses
- l2-arp-term; events separated from IP neighbours, since they are not
the same.
vnet retains just enough education to perform ND/ARP packet
construction.
arp and ip6-nd to be moved to plugins soon.
Change-Id: I88dedd0006b299344f4c7024a0aa5baa6b9a8bbe
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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We already had /if/lacp/<bond-sw_if_index>/<slave-sw_if_index>/state in
the stats segment. Add also the partner-state to be complete.
Change to populate stats segment with the states at startup, after processing
an lacp pdu, and after timer expiration.
Unit test
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sudo vpp_get_stats dump | grep /if/lacp
63.00 /if/lacp/3/1/state
61.00 /if/lacp/3/1/partner-state
63.00 /if/lacp/3/2/state
61.00 /if/lacp/3/2/partner-state
Type: feature
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: Ib7b8e1183d572bb6e422a846aaa2b7b3559a0dc7
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Type: feature
Signed-off-by: Dave Barach <dave@barachs.net>
Change-Id: I2272521d6e69edcd385ef684af6dd4eea5eaa953
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Type: feature
Add a callback to the bond device class which allows a secondary
mac address to be added/deleted.
The desired operation is performed on all the hardware interfaces
which belong to the bond interface. This allows virtual MAC
addresses to be used on bond interfaces without requiring the
hardware interfaces to have promiscuous mode enabled.
When a hardware interface is added or removed from a bond, if there
are any secondary MAC addresses configured on the bond, they are
added or removed from the hardware interface.
Change-Id: If9488078b4d7869ecc56ef6853f3cc9891211860
Signed-off-by: Matthew Smith <mgsmith@netgate.com>
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Type: fix
Change-Id: Iea7d73a304236b525b95bdad3bfdb41e711f8cdb
Signed-off-by: Benoît Ganne <bganne@cisco.com>
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In a rare event, we may be skipping processing lacp pdu's when the it is
not in steady state.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I3595d22dbff8a97dce9fb4d4452d2051bcf6f523
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Copy sw_if_index value instead of using pointers to original
bif->slaves content which could be overriden by eg. vec_del1().
Type: feature
Change-Id: I37e458effd6b2367479574f7bd3facd4e93bada4
Signed-off-by: Benoît Ganne <bganne@cisco.com>
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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
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vnet_feature_enable_disable takes sw_if_index, not hw_if_index. If there
is a subinterface created prior to the slave interface is created,
sw_if_index and hw_if_index start to diverge and the problem will happen.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I11e1f099378832f83b748526c6cbeb56960fad3c
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Missing an increment in the while loop. Hashes not stored in the array.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I603027f5a7305478f48a102ac8035ffde9102c53
(cherry picked from commit 0471cdbd3fe04a88a8b70b5f0eff0c378e19abf7)
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Type: fix
Change-Id: Ibb7ba878b049b8b18e890c43fdd6324cb88d63b8
Signed-off-by: Benoît Ganne <bganne@cisco.com>
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Type: feature
Change-Id: I913f08383ee1c24d610c3d2aac07cef402570e2c
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Use consistent API types.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: Jakub Grajciar <jgrajcia@cisco.com>
Change-Id: Idbba4ab6a412b75338e3149e51476693f0862f16
Signed-off-by: Jakub Grajciar <jgrajcia@cisco.com>
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Not all interfaces have the same characteristics within the bonding group.
For active-backup mode, we should do our best to select the slave that
performs the best as the primary slave. We already did that by preferring
the slave that is local numa. Sometimes, this is not enough. For example,
when all are local numas, the selection is arbitrary. Some slave interfaces
may have higher speed or better qos than the others. But this is hard to
infer.
One rule does not fit all. So we let the operator to optionally specify the
weight for each slave interface. Our primary slave selection rule is now
1. biggest weight
2. is local numa
3. current primary slave (to avoid churn)
4. lowest sw_if_index (for deterministic behavior)
This selection rule only applies to active-backup mode which only one slave
is used for forwarding traffic until it becomes unreachable. At that time,
the next "best" slave candidate is automatically promoted. The slaves are
sorted according to the preference rule when they are up. So there is no need
to find the next best candidate when the primary slave goes down.
Another good thing about this rule is when the down slave comes back up, it
is selected as the primary slave again unless there is indeed a "better"
slave than this down slave that were added during that period.
To set the weight for the slave interface, do this after the interface is
enslaved
set interface bond <interface-name> weight <value>
Type: feature
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I59ced6d20ce1dec532e667dbe1afd1b4243e04f9
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Add /if/lacp/<bond-sw_if_index>/<slave-sw_if_index>/state
<bond-sw_if_index> is a vector of the bond sw_if_index
<slave-sw_if_index> is a vector of the slave sw_if_index
Content is the integer value of the lacp actor state. The state is actually
a bitfield as described in the lacp protocol spec.
Type: feature
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: Ic6eca8ce2a1acd2d858e4e50b7eac1d000ea08e5
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
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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
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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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Type: feature
Change-Id: Icd718c98ba2fa900cafaf1a59dfb100ee9914ec9
Signed-off-by: Mohsin Kazmi <sykazmi@cisco.com>
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1. "numa-only" is optional and is disabled by default for lacp mode.
2. update lacp doc.
Type: fix
Change-Id: I6a3a8423ef31ad9980353a796957693cd6205d73
Signed-off-by: Zhiyong Yang <zhiyong.yang@intel.com>
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If numa-only is set, Only slaves on local numa node
transmit pkts if have at least one, otherwise the bond
interface works as usual.
CLI change:
create bond mode lacp [load-balance { l2 | l23 | l34 } {numa-only}]
[hw-addr <mac-address>] [id <if-id>]
The new member "u8 numa_only;" is also added to bond_create_if_args_t.
Type: feature
Change-Id: Icdccedafb0738d8c9d4a5acce909ce562428c071
Signed-off-by: Zhiyong Yang <zhiyong.yang@intel.com>
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Type: style
Change-Id: I28908756019f8ca54c50334c470d8eded5621ade
Signed-off-by: Zhiyong Yang <zhiyong.yang@intel.com>
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This patch enables bonding numa awareness on multi-socket
server working in active-backeup mode.
The VPP adds capability for automatically preferring slave
with local numa node in order to reduces the load on the
QPI-bus and improve system overall performance in multi-socket
use cases. Users doesn't need to add any extra operation as
usual.
Change-Id: Iec267375fc399a9a0c0a7dca649fadb994d36671
Signed-off-by: Zhiyong Yang <zhiyong.yang@intel.com>
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1. remove unnecessary cast for void * pointer.
2. remove the unused input parameter.
Change-Id: Ic0324364fc0c772200d30fb18a0ba959ed4f7ea4
Signed-off-by: Zhiyong Yang <zhiyong.yang@intel.com>
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This reverts commit 5d0d5494db58422eb528c0f8b39a86ea966505e9.
The csit crash was actually due to the test image missing the patch
https://gerrit.fd.io/r/#/c/17731/
It was a mistake to revert the original patch
https://gerrit.fd.io/r/#/c/15577/
Change-Id: I7fc563981aa13d308d55b25194fee21475ebc57d
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
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Some API action handlers called vl_msg_ai_send_shmem()
directly. That breaks Unix domain socket API transport.
A couple (bond / vhost) also tried to send a sw_interface_event
directly, but did not send the message to all that had
registred interest. That scheme never worked correctly.
Refactored and improved the interface event code.
Change-Id: Idb90edfd8703c6ae593b36b4eeb4d3ed7da5c808
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
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By definition, passive mode means the node does not start sending lacp pdu until
it first hears from the partner or remote.
- Rename ptx machine's BEGIN state to NO_PERIODIC state.
- Put periodic machine in NO_PERIDOIC state when the interface is enabled for
lacp. ptx machine will transition out of NO_PERIODIC state when the local node
hears from the remote or when the local node is configured for active mode.
- Also add send and receive statistics for debugging.
Change-Id: I747953b9595ed31328b2f4f3e7a8d15d01e04d7f
Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I53ab8d17914e6563110354e4052109ac02bf8f3b
Signed-off-by: Paul Vinciguerra <pvinci@vinciconsulting.com>
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This reverts commit e63325e3ca03c847963863446345e6c80a2c0cfd.
Allow time for CSIT to accommodate.
Change-Id: I59435e4ab5e05e36a2796c3bf44889b5d4823cc2
Signed-off-by: ot@cisco.com
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Use of consistent API types for interface.api
Change-Id: Ieb54cebb4ac96b432a3f0b41596718aa2f34885b
Signed-off-by: Jakub Grajciar <jgrajcia@cisco.com>
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During CSIT testing we discovered that LACP tests were failing and
producing coredumps. Reverting this patch fix the problem with VPP
crashing.
This reverts commit f23890138e02d4218c828c427f687f8ecdb0e165.
Change-Id: Icf97053ce1473350add885cbebe591f7f3efcbea
Signed-off-by: Peter Mikus <pmikus@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: I78fe58144fa3ba2e1c7135897a13a2541f235c91
Signed-off-by: Alexander Chernavin <achernavin@netgate.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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Typically we have scalar_size == 0, so it doesn't matter
but vlib_frame_args was providing pointer to scalar frame
data, not vector data. To avoid future confusion function
is renamed to vlib_frame_scalar_args(...)
Change-Id: I48b75523b46d487feea24f3f3cb10c528dde516f
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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when the last interface is removed from l2 in the bonding group, we should
invoke ethernet_set_rx_direct to allow ip packets to go directly to
ip4-input.
Change-Id: I43b3cd64e2c119762edd0c295bb9348732adab45
Signed-off-by: Steven <sluong@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Ied34720ca5a6e6e717eea4e86003e854031b6eab
Signed-off-by: Dave Barach <dave@barachs.net>
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Break up bond tx function into multiple small workloads:
1. parse the packet header and hash it based on the configured algorithm
2. optionally, trace the packet
3. convert the hash value from (1) to the slave port
4. update the buffers with the slave sw_if_index
5. Add the buffers to the queues
6. Create and send the frames
old numbers
-----------
Time 5.3, average vectors/node 223.74, last 128 main loops 40.00 per node 222.61
vector rates in 3.3627e6, out 6.6574e6, drop 3.3964e4, punt 0.0000e0
Name State Calls Vectors Suspends Clocks Vectors/Call
BondEthernet0-output active 68998 17662979 0 1.89e1 255.99
BondEthernet0-tx active 68998 17662979 0 2.60e1 255.99
TenGigabitEthernet3/0/1-output active 68998 8797416 0 1.03e1 127.50
TenGigabitEthernet3/0/1-tx active 68998 8797416 0 7.85e1 127.50
TenGigabitEthernet7/0/1-output active 68996 8865563 0 1.02e1 128.49
TenGigabitEthernet7/0/1-tx active 68996 8865563 0 7.65e1 128.49
new numbers
-----------
BondEthernet0-output active 304064 77840384 0 2.29e1 256.00
BondEthernet0-tx active 304064 77840384 0 2.47e1 256.00
TenGigabitEthernet3/0/1-output active 304064 38765525 0 1.03e1 127.49
TenGigabitEthernet3/0/1-tx active 304064 38765525 0 7.66e1 127.49
TenGigabitEthernet7/0/1-output active 304064 39074859 0 1.01e1 128.51
Change-Id: I3ef9a52bfe235559dae09d055c03c5612c08a0f7
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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active-backup mode is using l2 load balance algo. It should be using
active-backup. Also notice that the output is missing a character.
vpp# create bond mode active-backup
create bond mode active-backup
vpp# sh bond
sh bond
interface name sw_if_index mode load balance active slaves slaves
BondEthernet0 6 xor l34 2 2
BondEthernet1 9 xor l34 1 1
BondEthernet2 10 active-backu l2 0 0
vpp#
Change-Id: If5ed0cc6c25f6c2ddabec15ff6188b34923d38e3
Signed-off-by: Steven <sluong@cisco.com>
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