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847bf383 |
| 10-Jul-2015 |
Luigi Rizzo <luigi@FreeBSD.org> |
Sync netmap sources with the version in our private tree. This commit contains large contributions from Giuseppe Lettieri and Stefano Garzarella, is partly supported by grants from Verisign and Cisco
Sync netmap sources with the version in our private tree. This commit contains large contributions from Giuseppe Lettieri and Stefano Garzarella, is partly supported by grants from Verisign and Cisco, and brings in the following:
- fix zerocopy monitor ports and introduce copying monitor ports (the latter are lower performance but give access to all traffic in parallel with the application)
- exclusive open mode, useful to implement solutions that recover from crashes of the main netmap client (suggested by Patrick Kelsey)
- revised memory allocator in preparation for the 'passthrough mode' (ptnetmap) recently presented at bsdcan. ptnetmap is described in S. Garzarella, G. Lettieri, L. Rizzo; Virtual device passthrough for high speed VM networking, ACM/IEEE ANCS 2015, Oakland (CA) May 2015 http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/research.html
- fix rx CRC handing on ixl
- add module dependencies for netmap when building drivers as modules
- minor simplifications to device-specific routines (*txsync, *rxsync)
- general code cleanup (remove unused variables, introduce macros to access rings and remove duplicate code,
Applications do not need to be recompiled, unless of course they want to use the new features (monitors and exclusive open).
Those willing to try this code on stable/10 can just update the sys/dev/netmap/*, sys/net/netmap* with the version in HEAD and apply the small patches to individual device drivers.
MFC after: 1 month Sponsored by: (partly) Verisign, Cisco
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416ba5c7 |
| 22-Jun-2015 |
Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> |
Catch up with HEAD (r280229-r284686).
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37a48d40 |
| 28-May-2015 |
Glen Barber <gjb@FreeBSD.org> |
MFH: r282615-r283655
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
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98e0ffae |
| 27-May-2015 |
Simon J. Gerraty <sjg@FreeBSD.org> |
Merge sync of head
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dd4fcbc5 |
| 15-May-2015 |
Patrick Kelsey <pkelsey@FreeBSD.org> |
When a netmap process terminates without the full set of buffers it was granted via rings and ni_bufs_list_head represented in those rings and lists (e.g., via SIGKILL), those buffers are no longer a
When a netmap process terminates without the full set of buffers it was granted via rings and ni_bufs_list_head represented in those rings and lists (e.g., via SIGKILL), those buffers are no longer available for subsequent users for the lifetime of the system. To mitigate this resource leak, reset the allocator state when the last ref to that allocator is released.
Note that this only recovers leaked resources for an allocator when there are no longer any users of that allocator, so there remain circumstances in which leaked allocator resources may not ever be recovered - consider a set of multiple netmap processes that are all using the same allocator (say, the global allocator) where members of that set may be killed and restarted over time but at any given point there is one member of that set running.
Based on intial work by adrian@.
Reviewed by: Giuseppe Lettieri (g.lettieri@iet.unipi.it), luigi Approved by: jmallett (mentor) MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
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9268022b |
| 19-Nov-2014 |
Simon J. Gerraty <sjg@FreeBSD.org> |
Merge from head@274682
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Revision tags: release/10.1.0 |
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4e27d36d |
| 17-Sep-2014 |
Neel Natu <neel@FreeBSD.org> |
IFC @r271694
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246e7a2b |
| 02-Sep-2014 |
Neel Natu <neel@FreeBSD.org> |
IFC @r269962
Submitted by: Anish Gupta (akgupt3@gmail.com)
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832fd780 |
| 23-Aug-2014 |
Alexander V. Chernikov <melifaro@FreeBSD.org> |
Sync to HEAD@r270409.
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ee7b0571 |
| 19-Aug-2014 |
Simon J. Gerraty <sjg@FreeBSD.org> |
Merge head from 7/28
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4bf50f18 |
| 16-Aug-2014 |
Luigi Rizzo <luigi@FreeBSD.org> |
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate.
Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.
Update to the current version of netmap. Mostly bugfixes or features developed in the past 6 months, so this is a 10.1 candidate.
Basically no user API changes (some bugfixes in sys/net/netmap_user.h).
In detail:
1. netmap support for virtio-net, including in netmap mode. Under bhyve and with a netmap backend [2] we reach over 1Mpps with standard APIs (e.g. libpcap), and 5-8 Mpps in netmap mode.
2. (kernel) add support for multiple memory allocators, so we can better partition physical and virtual interfaces giving access to separate users. The most visible effect is one additional argument to the various kernel functions to compute buffer addresses. All netmap-supported drivers are affected, but changes are mechanical and trivial
3. (kernel) simplify the prototype for *txsync() and *rxsync() driver methods. All netmap drivers affected, changes mostly mechanical.
4. add support for netmap-monitor ports. Think of it as a mirroring port on a physical switch: a netmap monitor port replicates traffic present on the main port. Restrictions apply. Drive carefully.
5. if_lem.c: support for various paravirtualization features, experimental and disabled by default. Most of these are described in our ANCS'13 paper [1]. Paravirtualized support in netmap mode is new, and beats the numbers in the paper by a large factor (under qemu-kvm, we measured gues-host throughput up to 10-12 Mpps).
A lot of refactoring and additional documentation in the files in sys/dev/netmap, but apart from #2 and #3 above, almost nothing of this stuff is visible to other kernel parts.
Example programs in tools/tools/netmap have been updated with bugfixes and to support more of the existing features.
This is meant to go into 10.1 so we plan an MFC before the Aug.22 deadline.
A lot of this code has been contributed by my colleagues at UNIPI, including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Stefano Garzarella.
MFC after: 3 days.
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Revision tags: release/9.3.0 |
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43ed1d3c |
| 05-Jun-2014 |
Luigi Rizzo <luigi@FreeBSD.org> |
whitespace change: remove trailing whitespace
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6cec9cad |
| 03-Jun-2014 |
Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org> |
MFC @ r266724
An SVM update will follow this.
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3b8f0845 |
| 28-Apr-2014 |
Simon J. Gerraty <sjg@FreeBSD.org> |
Merge head
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84e51a1b |
| 23-Apr-2014 |
Alan Somers <asomers@FreeBSD.org> |
IFC @264767
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bf775ebb |
| 25-Feb-2014 |
Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org> |
MFC @ r259635
This brings in the "-w" option from bhyve to ignore unknown MSRs. It will make debugging Linux guests a bit easier.
Suggested by: Willem Jan Withagen (wjw at digiware nl)
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c98bb15d |
| 21-Feb-2014 |
Glen Barber <gjb@FreeBSD.org> |
MFH: tracking commit
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
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5748b897 |
| 19-Feb-2014 |
Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org> |
Merge head up to r262222 (last merge was incomplete).
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f0ea3689 |
| 15-Feb-2014 |
Luigi Rizzo <luigi@FreeBSD.org> |
This new version of netmap brings you the following:
- netmap pipes, providing bidirectional blocking I/O while moving 100+ Mpps between processes using shared memory channels (no mistake: over
This new version of netmap brings you the following:
- netmap pipes, providing bidirectional blocking I/O while moving 100+ Mpps between processes using shared memory channels (no mistake: over one hundred million. But mind you, i said *moving* not *processing*);
- kqueue support (BHyVe needs it);
- improved user library. Just the interface name lets you select a NIC, host port, VALE switch port, netmap pipe, and individual queues. The upcoming netmap-enabled libpcap will use this feature.
- optional extra buffers associated to netmap ports, for applications that need to buffer data yet don't want to make copies.
- segmentation offloading for the VALE switch, useful between VMs.
and a number of bug fixes and performance improvements.
My colleagues Giuseppe Lettieri and Vincenzo Maffione did a substantial amount of work on these features so we owe them a big thanks.
There are some external repositories that can be of interest:
https://code.google.com/p/netmap our public repository for netmap/VALE code, including linux versions and other stuff that does not belong here, such as python bindings.
https://code.google.com/p/netmap-libpcap a clone of the libpcap repository with netmap support. With this any libpcap client has access to most netmap feature with no recompilation. E.g. tcpdump can filter packets at 10-15 Mpps.
https://code.google.com/p/netmap-ipfw a userspace version of ipfw+dummynet which uses netmap to send/receive packets. Speed is up in the 7-10 Mpps range per core for simple rulesets.
Both netmap-libpcap and netmap-ipfw will be merged upstream at some point, but while this happens it is useful to have access to them.
And yes, this code will be merged soon. It is infinitely better than the version currently in 10 and 9.
MFC after: 3 days
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485ac45a |
| 04-Feb-2014 |
Peter Grehan <grehan@FreeBSD.org> |
MFC @ r259205 in preparation for some SVM updates. (for real this time)
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4f18ae67 |
| 19-Jan-2014 |
Glen Barber <gjb@FreeBSD.org> |
MFH: Tracking commit (r260891)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
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Revision tags: release/10.0.0 |
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f6c2a31f |
| 10-Jan-2014 |
Luigi Rizzo <luigi@FreeBSD.org> |
sync with our internal repo - small change in debugging messages
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e01ff621 |
| 09-Jan-2014 |
Glen Barber <gjb@FreeBSD.org> |
MFH: tracking commit (head@r260486)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
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17885a7b |
| 06-Jan-2014 |
Luigi Rizzo <luigi@FreeBSD.org> |
It is 2014 and we have a new version of netmap. Most relevant features:
- netmap emulation on any NIC, even those without native netmap support.
On the ixgbe we have measured about 4Mpps/core/que
It is 2014 and we have a new version of netmap. Most relevant features:
- netmap emulation on any NIC, even those without native netmap support.
On the ixgbe we have measured about 4Mpps/core/queue in this mode, which is still a lot more than with sockets/bpf.
- seamless interconnection of VALE switch, NICs and host stack.
If you disable accelerations on your NIC (say em0)
ifconfig em0 -txcsum -txcsum
you can use the VALE switch to connect the NIC and the host stack:
vale-ctl -h valeXX:em0
allowing sharing the NIC with other netmap clients.
- THE USER API HAS SLIGHTLY CHANGED (head/cur/tail pointers instead of pointers/count as before). This was unavoidable to support, in the future, multiple threads operating on the same rings. Netmap clients require very small source code changes to compile again. On the plus side, the new API should be easier to understand and the internals are a lot simpler.
The manual page has been updated extensively to reflect the current features and give some examples.
This is the result of work of several people including Giuseppe Lettieri, Vincenzo Maffione, Michio Honda and myself, and has been financially supported by EU projects CHANGE and OPENLAB, from NetApp University Research Fund, NEC, and of course the Universita` di Pisa.
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f9790aeb |
| 15-Dec-2013 |
Luigi Rizzo <luigi@FreeBSD.org> |
split netmap code according to functions: - netmap.c base code - netmap_freebsd.c FreeBSD-specific code - netmap_generic.c emulate netmap over standard drivers - netmap_mbq.c simple mbuf tailq - ne
split netmap code according to functions: - netmap.c base code - netmap_freebsd.c FreeBSD-specific code - netmap_generic.c emulate netmap over standard drivers - netmap_mbq.c simple mbuf tailq - netmap_mem2.c memory management - netmap_vale.c VALE switch
simplify devce-specific code
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