1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3====== 4AF_XDP 5====== 6 7Overview 8======== 9 10AF_XDP is an address family that is optimized for high performance 11packet processing. 12 13This document assumes that the reader is familiar with BPF and XDP. If 14not, the Cilium project has an excellent reference guide at 15http://cilium.readthedocs.io/en/latest/bpf/. 16 17Using the XDP_REDIRECT action from an XDP program, the program can 18redirect ingress frames to other XDP enabled netdevs, using the 19bpf_redirect_map() function. AF_XDP sockets enable the possibility for 20XDP programs to redirect frames to a memory buffer in a user-space 21application. 22 23An AF_XDP socket (XSK) is created with the normal socket() 24syscall. Associated with each XSK are two rings: the RX ring and the 25TX ring. A socket can receive packets on the RX ring and it can send 26packets on the TX ring. These rings are registered and sized with the 27setsockopts XDP_RX_RING and XDP_TX_RING, respectively. It is mandatory 28to have at least one of these rings for each socket. An RX or TX 29descriptor ring points to a data buffer in a memory area called a 30UMEM. RX and TX can share the same UMEM so that a packet does not have 31to be copied between RX and TX. Moreover, if a packet needs to be kept 32for a while due to a possible retransmit, the descriptor that points 33to that packet can be changed to point to another and reused right 34away. This again avoids copying data. 35 36The UMEM consists of a number of equally sized chunks. A descriptor in 37one of the rings references a frame by referencing its addr. The addr 38is simply an offset within the entire UMEM region. The user space 39allocates memory for this UMEM using whatever means it feels is most 40appropriate (malloc, mmap, huge pages, etc). This memory area is then 41registered with the kernel using the new setsockopt XDP_UMEM_REG. The 42UMEM also has two rings: the FILL ring and the COMPLETION ring. The 43FILL ring is used by the application to send down addr for the kernel 44to fill in with RX packet data. References to these frames will then 45appear in the RX ring once each packet has been received. The 46COMPLETION ring, on the other hand, contains frame addr that the 47kernel has transmitted completely and can now be used again by user 48space, for either TX or RX. Thus, the frame addrs appearing in the 49COMPLETION ring are addrs that were previously transmitted using the 50TX ring. In summary, the RX and FILL rings are used for the RX path 51and the TX and COMPLETION rings are used for the TX path. 52 53The socket is then finally bound with a bind() call to a device and a 54specific queue id on that device, and it is not until bind is 55completed that traffic starts to flow. 56 57The UMEM can be shared between processes, if desired. If a process 58wants to do this, it simply skips the registration of the UMEM and its 59corresponding two rings, sets the XDP_SHARED_UMEM flag in the bind 60call and submits the XSK of the process it would like to share UMEM 61with as well as its own newly created XSK socket. The new process will 62then receive frame addr references in its own RX ring that point to 63this shared UMEM. Note that since the ring structures are 64single-consumer / single-producer (for performance reasons), the new 65process has to create its own socket with associated RX and TX rings, 66since it cannot share this with the other process. This is also the 67reason that there is only one set of FILL and COMPLETION rings per 68UMEM. It is the responsibility of a single process to handle the UMEM. 69 70How is then packets distributed from an XDP program to the XSKs? There 71is a BPF map called XSKMAP (or BPF_MAP_TYPE_XSKMAP in full). The 72user-space application can place an XSK at an arbitrary place in this 73map. The XDP program can then redirect a packet to a specific index in 74this map and at this point XDP validates that the XSK in that map was 75indeed bound to that device and ring number. If not, the packet is 76dropped. If the map is empty at that index, the packet is also 77dropped. This also means that it is currently mandatory to have an XDP 78program loaded (and one XSK in the XSKMAP) to be able to get any 79traffic to user space through the XSK. 80 81AF_XDP can operate in two different modes: XDP_SKB and XDP_DRV. If the 82driver does not have support for XDP, or XDP_SKB is explicitly chosen 83when loading the XDP program, XDP_SKB mode is employed that uses SKBs 84together with the generic XDP support and copies out the data to user 85space. A fallback mode that works for any network device. On the other 86hand, if the driver has support for XDP, it will be used by the AF_XDP 87code to provide better performance, but there is still a copy of the 88data into user space. 89 90Concepts 91======== 92 93In order to use an AF_XDP socket, a number of associated objects need 94to be setup. These objects and their options are explained in the 95following sections. 96 97For an overview on how AF_XDP works, you can also take a look at the 98Linux Plumbers paper from 2018 on the subject: 99http://vger.kernel.org/lpc_net2018_talks/lpc18_paper_af_xdp_perf-v2.pdf. Do 100NOT consult the paper from 2017 on "AF_PACKET v4", the first attempt 101at AF_XDP. Nearly everything changed since then. Jonathan Corbet has 102also written an excellent article on LWN, "Accelerating networking 103with AF_XDP". It can be found at https://lwn.net/Articles/750845/. 104 105UMEM 106---- 107 108UMEM is a region of virtual contiguous memory, divided into 109equal-sized frames. An UMEM is associated to a netdev and a specific 110queue id of that netdev. It is created and configured (chunk size, 111headroom, start address and size) by using the XDP_UMEM_REG setsockopt 112system call. A UMEM is bound to a netdev and queue id, via the bind() 113system call. 114 115An AF_XDP is socket linked to a single UMEM, but one UMEM can have 116multiple AF_XDP sockets. To share an UMEM created via one socket A, 117the next socket B can do this by setting the XDP_SHARED_UMEM flag in 118struct sockaddr_xdp member sxdp_flags, and passing the file descriptor 119of A to struct sockaddr_xdp member sxdp_shared_umem_fd. 120 121The UMEM has two single-producer/single-consumer rings that are used 122to transfer ownership of UMEM frames between the kernel and the 123user-space application. 124 125Rings 126----- 127 128There are a four different kind of rings: FILL, COMPLETION, RX and 129TX. All rings are single-producer/single-consumer, so the user-space 130application need explicit synchronization of multiple 131processes/threads are reading/writing to them. 132 133The UMEM uses two rings: FILL and COMPLETION. Each socket associated 134with the UMEM must have an RX queue, TX queue or both. Say, that there 135is a setup with four sockets (all doing TX and RX). Then there will be 136one FILL ring, one COMPLETION ring, four TX rings and four RX rings. 137 138The rings are head(producer)/tail(consumer) based rings. A producer 139writes the data ring at the index pointed out by struct xdp_ring 140producer member, and increasing the producer index. A consumer reads 141the data ring at the index pointed out by struct xdp_ring consumer 142member, and increasing the consumer index. 143 144The rings are configured and created via the _RING setsockopt system 145calls and mmapped to user-space using the appropriate offset to mmap() 146(XDP_PGOFF_RX_RING, XDP_PGOFF_TX_RING, XDP_UMEM_PGOFF_FILL_RING and 147XDP_UMEM_PGOFF_COMPLETION_RING). 148 149The size of the rings need to be of size power of two. 150 151UMEM Fill Ring 152~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 153 154The FILL ring is used to transfer ownership of UMEM frames from 155user-space to kernel-space. The UMEM addrs are passed in the ring. As 156an example, if the UMEM is 64k and each chunk is 4k, then the UMEM has 15716 chunks and can pass addrs between 0 and 64k. 158 159Frames passed to the kernel are used for the ingress path (RX rings). 160 161The user application produces UMEM addrs to this ring. Note that, if 162running the application with aligned chunk mode, the kernel will mask 163the incoming addr. E.g. for a chunk size of 2k, the log2(2048) LSB of 164the addr will be masked off, meaning that 2048, 2050 and 3000 refers 165to the same chunk. If the user application is run in the unaligned 166chunks mode, then the incoming addr will be left untouched. 167 168 169UMEM Completion Ring 170~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 171 172The COMPLETION Ring is used transfer ownership of UMEM frames from 173kernel-space to user-space. Just like the FILL ring, UMEM indices are 174used. 175 176Frames passed from the kernel to user-space are frames that has been 177sent (TX ring) and can be used by user-space again. 178 179The user application consumes UMEM addrs from this ring. 180 181 182RX Ring 183~~~~~~~ 184 185The RX ring is the receiving side of a socket. Each entry in the ring 186is a struct xdp_desc descriptor. The descriptor contains UMEM offset 187(addr) and the length of the data (len). 188 189If no frames have been passed to kernel via the FILL ring, no 190descriptors will (or can) appear on the RX ring. 191 192The user application consumes struct xdp_desc descriptors from this 193ring. 194 195TX Ring 196~~~~~~~ 197 198The TX ring is used to send frames. The struct xdp_desc descriptor is 199filled (index, length and offset) and passed into the ring. 200 201To start the transfer a sendmsg() system call is required. This might 202be relaxed in the future. 203 204The user application produces struct xdp_desc descriptors to this 205ring. 206 207Libbpf 208====== 209 210Libbpf is a helper library for eBPF and XDP that makes using these 211technologies a lot simpler. It also contains specific helper functions 212in tools/lib/bpf/xsk.h for facilitating the use of AF_XDP. It 213contains two types of functions: those that can be used to make the 214setup of AF_XDP socket easier and ones that can be used in the data 215plane to access the rings safely and quickly. To see an example on how 216to use this API, please take a look at the sample application in 217samples/bpf/xdpsock_usr.c which uses libbpf for both setup and data 218plane operations. 219 220We recommend that you use this library unless you have become a power 221user. It will make your program a lot simpler. 222 223XSKMAP / BPF_MAP_TYPE_XSKMAP 224============================ 225 226On XDP side there is a BPF map type BPF_MAP_TYPE_XSKMAP (XSKMAP) that 227is used in conjunction with bpf_redirect_map() to pass the ingress 228frame to a socket. 229 230The user application inserts the socket into the map, via the bpf() 231system call. 232 233Note that if an XDP program tries to redirect to a socket that does 234not match the queue configuration and netdev, the frame will be 235dropped. E.g. an AF_XDP socket is bound to netdev eth0 and 236queue 17. Only the XDP program executing for eth0 and queue 17 will 237successfully pass data to the socket. Please refer to the sample 238application (samples/bpf/) in for an example. 239 240Configuration Flags and Socket Options 241====================================== 242 243These are the various configuration flags that can be used to control 244and monitor the behavior of AF_XDP sockets. 245 246XDP_COPY and XDP_ZEROCOPY bind flags 247------------------------------------ 248 249When you bind to a socket, the kernel will first try to use zero-copy 250copy. If zero-copy is not supported, it will fall back on using copy 251mode, i.e. copying all packets out to user space. But if you would 252like to force a certain mode, you can use the following flags. If you 253pass the XDP_COPY flag to the bind call, the kernel will force the 254socket into copy mode. If it cannot use copy mode, the bind call will 255fail with an error. Conversely, the XDP_ZEROCOPY flag will force the 256socket into zero-copy mode or fail. 257 258XDP_SHARED_UMEM bind flag 259------------------------- 260 261This flag enables you to bind multiple sockets to the same UMEM. It 262works on the same queue id, between queue ids and between 263netdevs/devices. In this mode, each socket has their own RX and TX 264rings as usual, but you are going to have one or more FILL and 265COMPLETION ring pairs. You have to create one of these pairs per 266unique netdev and queue id tuple that you bind to. 267 268Starting with the case were we would like to share a UMEM between 269sockets bound to the same netdev and queue id. The UMEM (tied to the 270fist socket created) will only have a single FILL ring and a single 271COMPLETION ring as there is only on unique netdev,queue_id tuple that 272we have bound to. To use this mode, create the first socket and bind 273it in the normal way. Create a second socket and create an RX and a TX 274ring, or at least one of them, but no FILL or COMPLETION rings as the 275ones from the first socket will be used. In the bind call, set he 276XDP_SHARED_UMEM option and provide the initial socket's fd in the 277sxdp_shared_umem_fd field. You can attach an arbitrary number of extra 278sockets this way. 279 280What socket will then a packet arrive on? This is decided by the XDP 281program. Put all the sockets in the XSK_MAP and just indicate which 282index in the array you would like to send each packet to. A simple 283round-robin example of distributing packets is shown below: 284 285.. code-block:: c 286 287 #include <linux/bpf.h> 288 #include "bpf_helpers.h" 289 290 #define MAX_SOCKS 16 291 292 struct { 293 __uint(type, BPF_MAP_TYPE_XSKMAP); 294 __uint(max_entries, MAX_SOCKS); 295 __uint(key_size, sizeof(int)); 296 __uint(value_size, sizeof(int)); 297 } xsks_map SEC(".maps"); 298 299 static unsigned int rr; 300 301 SEC("xdp_sock") int xdp_sock_prog(struct xdp_md *ctx) 302 { 303 rr = (rr + 1) & (MAX_SOCKS - 1); 304 305 return bpf_redirect_map(&xsks_map, rr, XDP_DROP); 306 } 307 308Note, that since there is only a single set of FILL and COMPLETION 309rings, and they are single producer, single consumer rings, you need 310to make sure that multiple processes or threads do not use these rings 311concurrently. There are no synchronization primitives in the 312libbpf code that protects multiple users at this point in time. 313 314Libbpf uses this mode if you create more than one socket tied to the 315same UMEM. However, note that you need to supply the 316XSK_LIBBPF_FLAGS__INHIBIT_PROG_LOAD libbpf_flag with the 317xsk_socket__create calls and load your own XDP program as there is no 318built in one in libbpf that will route the traffic for you. 319 320The second case is when you share a UMEM between sockets that are 321bound to different queue ids and/or netdevs. In this case you have to 322create one FILL ring and one COMPLETION ring for each unique 323netdev,queue_id pair. Let us say you want to create two sockets bound 324to two different queue ids on the same netdev. Create the first socket 325and bind it in the normal way. Create a second socket and create an RX 326and a TX ring, or at least one of them, and then one FILL and 327COMPLETION ring for this socket. Then in the bind call, set he 328XDP_SHARED_UMEM option and provide the initial socket's fd in the 329sxdp_shared_umem_fd field as you registered the UMEM on that 330socket. These two sockets will now share one and the same UMEM. 331 332In this case, it is possible to use the NIC's packet steering 333capabilities to steer the packets to the right queue. This is not 334possible in the previous example as there is only one queue shared 335among sockets, so the NIC cannot do this steering as it can only steer 336between queues. 337 338In libxdp (or libbpf prior to version 1.0), you need to use the 339xsk_socket__create_shared() API as it takes a reference to a FILL ring 340and a COMPLETION ring that will be created for you and bound to the 341shared UMEM. You can use this function for all the sockets you create, 342or you can use it for the second and following ones and use 343xsk_socket__create() for the first one. Both methods yield the same 344result. 345 346Note that a UMEM can be shared between sockets on the same queue id 347and device, as well as between queues on the same device and between 348devices at the same time. It is also possible to redirect to any 349socket as long as it is bound to the same umem with XDP_SHARED_UMEM. 350 351XDP_USE_NEED_WAKEUP bind flag 352----------------------------- 353 354This option adds support for a new flag called need_wakeup that is 355present in the FILL ring and the TX ring, the rings for which user 356space is a producer. When this option is set in the bind call, the 357need_wakeup flag will be set if the kernel needs to be explicitly 358woken up by a syscall to continue processing packets. If the flag is 359zero, no syscall is needed. 360 361If the flag is set on the FILL ring, the application needs to call 362poll() to be able to continue to receive packets on the RX ring. This 363can happen, for example, when the kernel has detected that there are no 364more buffers on the FILL ring and no buffers left on the RX HW ring of 365the NIC. In this case, interrupts are turned off as the NIC cannot 366receive any packets (as there are no buffers to put them in), and the 367need_wakeup flag is set so that user space can put buffers on the 368FILL ring and then call poll() so that the kernel driver can put these 369buffers on the HW ring and start to receive packets. 370 371If the flag is set for the TX ring, it means that the application 372needs to explicitly notify the kernel to send any packets put on the 373TX ring. This can be accomplished either by a poll() call, as in the 374RX path, or by calling sendto(). 375 376An example of how to use this flag can be found in 377samples/bpf/xdpsock_user.c. An example with the use of libbpf helpers 378would look like this for the TX path: 379 380.. code-block:: c 381 382 if (xsk_ring_prod__needs_wakeup(&my_tx_ring)) 383 sendto(xsk_socket__fd(xsk_handle), NULL, 0, MSG_DONTWAIT, NULL, 0); 384 385I.e., only use the syscall if the flag is set. 386 387We recommend that you always enable this mode as it usually leads to 388better performance especially if you run the application and the 389driver on the same core, but also if you use different cores for the 390application and the kernel driver, as it reduces the number of 391syscalls needed for the TX path. 392 393XDP_{RX|TX|UMEM_FILL|UMEM_COMPLETION}_RING setsockopts 394------------------------------------------------------ 395 396These setsockopts sets the number of descriptors that the RX, TX, 397FILL, and COMPLETION rings respectively should have. It is mandatory 398to set the size of at least one of the RX and TX rings. If you set 399both, you will be able to both receive and send traffic from your 400application, but if you only want to do one of them, you can save 401resources by only setting up one of them. Both the FILL ring and the 402COMPLETION ring are mandatory as you need to have a UMEM tied to your 403socket. But if the XDP_SHARED_UMEM flag is used, any socket after the 404first one does not have a UMEM and should in that case not have any 405FILL or COMPLETION rings created as the ones from the shared UMEM will 406be used. Note, that the rings are single-producer single-consumer, so 407do not try to access them from multiple processes at the same 408time. See the XDP_SHARED_UMEM section. 409 410In libbpf, you can create Rx-only and Tx-only sockets by supplying 411NULL to the rx and tx arguments, respectively, to the 412xsk_socket__create function. 413 414If you create a Tx-only socket, we recommend that you do not put any 415packets on the fill ring. If you do this, drivers might think you are 416going to receive something when you in fact will not, and this can 417negatively impact performance. 418 419XDP_UMEM_REG setsockopt 420----------------------- 421 422This setsockopt registers a UMEM to a socket. This is the area that 423contain all the buffers that packet can reside in. The call takes a 424pointer to the beginning of this area and the size of it. Moreover, it 425also has parameter called chunk_size that is the size that the UMEM is 426divided into. It can only be 2K or 4K at the moment. If you have an 427UMEM area that is 128K and a chunk size of 2K, this means that you 428will be able to hold a maximum of 128K / 2K = 64 packets in your UMEM 429area and that your largest packet size can be 2K. 430 431There is also an option to set the headroom of each single buffer in 432the UMEM. If you set this to N bytes, it means that the packet will 433start N bytes into the buffer leaving the first N bytes for the 434application to use. The final option is the flags field, but it will 435be dealt with in separate sections for each UMEM flag. 436 437SO_BINDTODEVICE setsockopt 438-------------------------- 439 440This is a generic SOL_SOCKET option that can be used to tie AF_XDP 441socket to a particular network interface. It is useful when a socket 442is created by a privileged process and passed to a non-privileged one. 443Once the option is set, kernel will refuse attempts to bind that socket 444to a different interface. Updating the value requires CAP_NET_RAW. 445 446XDP_STATISTICS getsockopt 447------------------------- 448 449Gets drop statistics of a socket that can be useful for debug 450purposes. The supported statistics are shown below: 451 452.. code-block:: c 453 454 struct xdp_statistics { 455 __u64 rx_dropped; /* Dropped for reasons other than invalid desc */ 456 __u64 rx_invalid_descs; /* Dropped due to invalid descriptor */ 457 __u64 tx_invalid_descs; /* Dropped due to invalid descriptor */ 458 }; 459 460XDP_OPTIONS getsockopt 461---------------------- 462 463Gets options from an XDP socket. The only one supported so far is 464XDP_OPTIONS_ZEROCOPY which tells you if zero-copy is on or not. 465 466Multi-Buffer Support 467==================== 468 469With multi-buffer support, programs using AF_XDP sockets can receive 470and transmit packets consisting of multiple buffers both in copy and 471zero-copy mode. For example, a packet can consist of two 472frames/buffers, one with the header and the other one with the data, 473or a 9K Ethernet jumbo frame can be constructed by chaining together 474three 4K frames. 475 476Some definitions: 477 478* A packet consists of one or more frames 479 480* A descriptor in one of the AF_XDP rings always refers to a single 481 frame. In the case the packet consists of a single frame, the 482 descriptor refers to the whole packet. 483 484To enable multi-buffer support for an AF_XDP socket, use the new bind 485flag XDP_USE_SG. If this is not provided, all multi-buffer packets 486will be dropped just as before. Note that the XDP program loaded also 487needs to be in multi-buffer mode. This can be accomplished by using 488"xdp.frags" as the section name of the XDP program used. 489 490To represent a packet consisting of multiple frames, a new flag called 491XDP_PKT_CONTD is introduced in the options field of the Rx and Tx 492descriptors. If it is true (1) the packet continues with the next 493descriptor and if it is false (0) it means this is the last descriptor 494of the packet. Why the reverse logic of end-of-packet (eop) flag found 495in many NICs? Just to preserve compatibility with non-multi-buffer 496applications that have this bit set to false for all packets on Rx, 497and the apps set the options field to zero for Tx, as anything else 498will be treated as an invalid descriptor. 499 500These are the semantics for producing packets onto AF_XDP Tx ring 501consisting of multiple frames: 502 503* When an invalid descriptor is found, all the other 504 descriptors/frames of this packet are marked as invalid and not 505 completed. The next descriptor is treated as the start of a new 506 packet, even if this was not the intent (because we cannot guess 507 the intent). As before, if your program is producing invalid 508 descriptors you have a bug that must be fixed. 509 510* Zero length descriptors are treated as invalid descriptors. 511 512* For copy mode, the maximum supported number of frames in a packet is 513 equal to CONFIG_MAX_SKB_FRAGS + 1. If it is exceeded, all 514 descriptors accumulated so far are dropped and treated as 515 invalid. To produce an application that will work on any system 516 regardless of this config setting, limit the number of frags to 18, 517 as the minimum value of the config is 17. 518 519* For zero-copy mode, the limit is up to what the NIC HW 520 supports. Usually at least five on the NICs we have checked. We 521 consciously chose to not enforce a rigid limit (such as 522 CONFIG_MAX_SKB_FRAGS + 1) for zero-copy mode, as it would have 523 resulted in copy actions under the hood to fit into what limit the 524 NIC supports. Kind of defeats the purpose of zero-copy mode. How to 525 probe for this limit is explained in the "probe for multi-buffer 526 support" section. 527 528On the Rx path in copy-mode, the xsk core copies the XDP data into 529multiple descriptors, if needed, and sets the XDP_PKT_CONTD flag as 530detailed before. Zero-copy mode works the same, though the data is not 531copied. When the application gets a descriptor with the XDP_PKT_CONTD 532flag set to one, it means that the packet consists of multiple buffers 533and it continues with the next buffer in the following 534descriptor. When a descriptor with XDP_PKT_CONTD == 0 is received, it 535means that this is the last buffer of the packet. AF_XDP guarantees 536that only a complete packet (all frames in the packet) is sent to the 537application. If there is not enough space in the AF_XDP Rx ring, all 538frames of the packet will be dropped. 539 540If application reads a batch of descriptors, using for example the libxdp 541interfaces, it is not guaranteed that the batch will end with a full 542packet. It might end in the middle of a packet and the rest of the 543buffers of that packet will arrive at the beginning of the next batch, 544since the libxdp interface does not read the whole ring (unless you 545have an enormous batch size or a very small ring size). 546 547An example program each for Rx and Tx multi-buffer support can be found 548later in this document. 549 550Usage 551----- 552 553In order to use AF_XDP sockets two parts are needed. The 554user-space application and the XDP program. For a complete setup and 555usage example, please refer to the sample application. The user-space 556side is xdpsock_user.c and the XDP side is part of libbpf. 557 558The XDP code sample included in tools/lib/bpf/xsk.c is the following: 559 560.. code-block:: c 561 562 SEC("xdp_sock") int xdp_sock_prog(struct xdp_md *ctx) 563 { 564 int index = ctx->rx_queue_index; 565 566 // A set entry here means that the corresponding queue_id 567 // has an active AF_XDP socket bound to it. 568 if (bpf_map_lookup_elem(&xsks_map, &index)) 569 return bpf_redirect_map(&xsks_map, index, 0); 570 571 return XDP_PASS; 572 } 573 574A simple but not so performance ring dequeue and enqueue could look 575like this: 576 577.. code-block:: c 578 579 // struct xdp_rxtx_ring { 580 // __u32 *producer; 581 // __u32 *consumer; 582 // struct xdp_desc *desc; 583 // }; 584 585 // struct xdp_umem_ring { 586 // __u32 *producer; 587 // __u32 *consumer; 588 // __u64 *desc; 589 // }; 590 591 // typedef struct xdp_rxtx_ring RING; 592 // typedef struct xdp_umem_ring RING; 593 594 // typedef struct xdp_desc RING_TYPE; 595 // typedef __u64 RING_TYPE; 596 597 int dequeue_one(RING *ring, RING_TYPE *item) 598 { 599 __u32 entries = *ring->producer - *ring->consumer; 600 601 if (entries == 0) 602 return -1; 603 604 // read-barrier! 605 606 *item = ring->desc[*ring->consumer & (RING_SIZE - 1)]; 607 (*ring->consumer)++; 608 return 0; 609 } 610 611 int enqueue_one(RING *ring, const RING_TYPE *item) 612 { 613 u32 free_entries = RING_SIZE - (*ring->producer - *ring->consumer); 614 615 if (free_entries == 0) 616 return -1; 617 618 ring->desc[*ring->producer & (RING_SIZE - 1)] = *item; 619 620 // write-barrier! 621 622 (*ring->producer)++; 623 return 0; 624 } 625 626But please use the libbpf functions as they are optimized and ready to 627use. Will make your life easier. 628 629Usage Multi-Buffer Rx 630--------------------- 631 632Here is a simple Rx path pseudo-code example (using libxdp interfaces 633for simplicity). Error paths have been excluded to keep it short: 634 635.. code-block:: c 636 637 void rx_packets(struct xsk_socket_info *xsk) 638 { 639 static bool new_packet = true; 640 u32 idx_rx = 0, idx_fq = 0; 641 static char *pkt; 642 643 int rcvd = xsk_ring_cons__peek(&xsk->rx, opt_batch_size, &idx_rx); 644 645 xsk_ring_prod__reserve(&xsk->umem->fq, rcvd, &idx_fq); 646 647 for (int i = 0; i < rcvd; i++) { 648 struct xdp_desc *desc = xsk_ring_cons__rx_desc(&xsk->rx, idx_rx++); 649 char *frag = xsk_umem__get_data(xsk->umem->buffer, desc->addr); 650 bool eop = !(desc->options & XDP_PKT_CONTD); 651 652 if (new_packet) 653 pkt = frag; 654 else 655 add_frag_to_pkt(pkt, frag); 656 657 if (eop) 658 process_pkt(pkt); 659 660 new_packet = eop; 661 662 *xsk_ring_prod__fill_addr(&xsk->umem->fq, idx_fq++) = desc->addr; 663 } 664 665 xsk_ring_prod__submit(&xsk->umem->fq, rcvd); 666 xsk_ring_cons__release(&xsk->rx, rcvd); 667 } 668 669Usage Multi-Buffer Tx 670--------------------- 671 672Here is an example Tx path pseudo-code (using libxdp interfaces for 673simplicity) ignoring that the umem is finite in size, and that we 674eventually will run out of packets to send. Also assumes pkts.addr 675points to a valid location in the umem. 676 677.. code-block:: c 678 679 void tx_packets(struct xsk_socket_info *xsk, struct pkt *pkts, 680 int batch_size) 681 { 682 u32 idx, i, pkt_nb = 0; 683 684 xsk_ring_prod__reserve(&xsk->tx, batch_size, &idx); 685 686 for (i = 0; i < batch_size;) { 687 u64 addr = pkts[pkt_nb].addr; 688 u32 len = pkts[pkt_nb].size; 689 690 do { 691 struct xdp_desc *tx_desc; 692 693 tx_desc = xsk_ring_prod__tx_desc(&xsk->tx, idx + i++); 694 tx_desc->addr = addr; 695 696 if (len > xsk_frame_size) { 697 tx_desc->len = xsk_frame_size; 698 tx_desc->options = XDP_PKT_CONTD; 699 } else { 700 tx_desc->len = len; 701 tx_desc->options = 0; 702 pkt_nb++; 703 } 704 len -= tx_desc->len; 705 addr += xsk_frame_size; 706 707 if (i == batch_size) { 708 /* Remember len, addr, pkt_nb for next iteration. 709 * Skipped for simplicity. 710 */ 711 break; 712 } 713 } while (len); 714 } 715 716 xsk_ring_prod__submit(&xsk->tx, i); 717 } 718 719Probing for Multi-Buffer Support 720-------------------------------- 721 722To discover if a driver supports multi-buffer AF_XDP in SKB or DRV 723mode, use the XDP_FEATURES feature of netlink in linux/netdev.h to 724query for NETDEV_XDP_ACT_RX_SG support. This is the same flag as for 725querying for XDP multi-buffer support. If XDP supports multi-buffer in 726a driver, then AF_XDP will also support that in SKB and DRV mode. 727 728To discover if a driver supports multi-buffer AF_XDP in zero-copy 729mode, use XDP_FEATURES and first check the NETDEV_XDP_ACT_XSK_ZEROCOPY 730flag. If it is set, it means that at least zero-copy is supported and 731you should go and check the netlink attribute 732NETDEV_A_DEV_XDP_ZC_MAX_SEGS in linux/netdev.h. An unsigned integer 733value will be returned stating the max number of frags that are 734supported by this device in zero-copy mode. These are the possible 735return values: 736 7371: Multi-buffer for zero-copy is not supported by this device, as max 738 one fragment supported means that multi-buffer is not possible. 739 740>=2: Multi-buffer is supported in zero-copy mode for this device. The 741 returned number signifies the max number of frags supported. 742 743For an example on how these are used through libbpf, please take a 744look at tools/testing/selftests/bpf/xskxceiver.c. 745 746Multi-Buffer Support for Zero-Copy Drivers 747------------------------------------------ 748 749Zero-copy drivers usually use the batched APIs for Rx and Tx 750processing. Note that the Tx batch API guarantees that it will provide 751a batch of Tx descriptors that ends with full packet at the end. This 752to facilitate extending a zero-copy driver with multi-buffer support. 753 754Sample application 755================== 756 757There is a xdpsock benchmarking/test application included that 758demonstrates how to use AF_XDP sockets with private UMEMs. Say that 759you would like your UDP traffic from port 4242 to end up in queue 16, 760that we will enable AF_XDP on. Here, we use ethtool for this:: 761 762 ethtool -N p3p2 rx-flow-hash udp4 fn 763 ethtool -N p3p2 flow-type udp4 src-port 4242 dst-port 4242 \ 764 action 16 765 766Running the rxdrop benchmark in XDP_DRV mode can then be done 767using:: 768 769 samples/bpf/xdpsock -i p3p2 -q 16 -r -N 770 771For XDP_SKB mode, use the switch "-S" instead of "-N" and all options 772can be displayed with "-h", as usual. 773 774This sample application uses libbpf to make the setup and usage of 775AF_XDP simpler. If you want to know how the raw uapi of AF_XDP is 776really used to make something more advanced, take a look at the libbpf 777code in tools/lib/bpf/xsk.[ch]. 778 779FAQ 780======= 781 782Q: I am not seeing any traffic on the socket. What am I doing wrong? 783 784A: When a netdev of a physical NIC is initialized, Linux usually 785 allocates one RX and TX queue pair per core. So on a 8 core system, 786 queue ids 0 to 7 will be allocated, one per core. In the AF_XDP 787 bind call or the xsk_socket__create libbpf function call, you 788 specify a specific queue id to bind to and it is only the traffic 789 towards that queue you are going to get on you socket. So in the 790 example above, if you bind to queue 0, you are NOT going to get any 791 traffic that is distributed to queues 1 through 7. If you are 792 lucky, you will see the traffic, but usually it will end up on one 793 of the queues you have not bound to. 794 795 There are a number of ways to solve the problem of getting the 796 traffic you want to the queue id you bound to. If you want to see 797 all the traffic, you can force the netdev to only have 1 queue, queue 798 id 0, and then bind to queue 0. You can use ethtool to do this:: 799 800 sudo ethtool -L <interface> combined 1 801 802 If you want to only see part of the traffic, you can program the 803 NIC through ethtool to filter out your traffic to a single queue id 804 that you can bind your XDP socket to. Here is one example in which 805 UDP traffic to and from port 4242 are sent to queue 2:: 806 807 sudo ethtool -N <interface> rx-flow-hash udp4 fn 808 sudo ethtool -N <interface> flow-type udp4 src-port 4242 dst-port \ 809 4242 action 2 810 811 A number of other ways are possible all up to the capabilities of 812 the NIC you have. 813 814Q: Can I use the XSKMAP to implement a switch between different umems 815 in copy mode? 816 817A: The short answer is no, that is not supported at the moment. The 818 XSKMAP can only be used to switch traffic coming in on queue id X 819 to sockets bound to the same queue id X. The XSKMAP can contain 820 sockets bound to different queue ids, for example X and Y, but only 821 traffic goming in from queue id Y can be directed to sockets bound 822 to the same queue id Y. In zero-copy mode, you should use the 823 switch, or other distribution mechanism, in your NIC to direct 824 traffic to the correct queue id and socket. 825 826 Note that if you are using the XDP_SHARED_UMEM option, it is 827 possible to switch traffic between any socket bound to the same 828 umem. 829 830Q: My packets are sometimes corrupted. What is wrong? 831 832A: Care has to be taken not to feed the same buffer in the UMEM into 833 more than one ring at the same time. If you for example feed the 834 same buffer into the FILL ring and the TX ring at the same time, the 835 NIC might receive data into the buffer at the same time it is 836 sending it. This will cause some packets to become corrupted. Same 837 thing goes for feeding the same buffer into the FILL rings 838 belonging to different queue ids or netdevs bound with the 839 XDP_SHARED_UMEM flag. 840 841Credits 842======= 843 844- Björn Töpel (AF_XDP core) 845- Magnus Karlsson (AF_XDP core) 846- Alexander Duyck 847- Alexei Starovoitov 848- Daniel Borkmann 849- Jesper Dangaard Brouer 850- John Fastabend 851- Jonathan Corbet (LWN coverage) 852- Michael S. Tsirkin 853- Qi Z Zhang 854- Willem de Bruijn 855