Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Masanari Iida
d94436a5d1 samples: bpf: Fix a spelling typo in do_hbm_test.sh
This patch fixes a spelling typo in do_hbm_test.sh

Signed-off-by: Masanari Iida <standby24x7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20210315124454.1744594-1-standby24x7@gmail.com
2021-03-15 22:17:35 -07:00
Daniel T. Lee
c5815ac7e2 samples: bpf: Refactor hbm program with libbpf
This commit refactors the existing cgroup programs with libbpf
bpf loader. Since bpf_program__attach doesn't support cgroup program
attachment, this explicitly attaches cgroup bpf program with
bpf_program__attach_cgroup(bpf_prog, cg1).

Also, to change attach_type of bpf program, this uses libbpf's
bpf_program__set_expected_attach_type helper to switch EGRESS to
INGRESS. To keep bpf program attached to the cgroup hierarchy even
after the exit, this commit uses the BPF_LINK_PINNING to pin the link
attachment even after it is closed.

Besides, this program was broken due to the typo of BPF MAP definition.
But this commit solves the problem by fixing this from 'queue_stats' map
struct hvm_queue_stats -> hbm_queue_stats.

Fixes: 36b5d47113 ("selftests/bpf: samples/bpf: Split off legacy stuff from bpf_helpers.h")
Signed-off-by: Daniel T. Lee <danieltimlee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20201124090310.24374-2-danieltimlee@gmail.com
2020-11-26 19:33:35 -08:00
brakmo
71634d7f92 bpf: Add support for fq's EDT to HBM
Adds support for fq's Earliest Departure Time to HBM (Host Bandwidth
Manager). Includes a new BPF program supporting EDT, and also updates
corresponding programs.

It will drop packets with an EDT of more than 500us in the future
unless the packet belongs to a flow with less than 2 packets in flight.
This is done so each flow has at least 2 packets in flight, so they
will not starve, and also to help prevent delayed ACK timeouts.

It will also work with ECN enabled traffic, where the packets will be
CE marked if their EDT is more than 50us in the future.

The table below shows some performance numbers. The flows are back to
back RPCS. One server sending to another, either 2 or 4 flows.
One flow is a 10KB RPC, the rest are 1MB RPCs. When there are more
than one flow of a given RPC size, the numbers represent averages.

The rate limit applies to all flows (they are in the same cgroup).
Tests ending with "-edt" ran with the new BPF program supporting EDT.
Tests ending with "-hbt" ran on top HBT qdisc with the specified rate
(i.e. no HBM). The other tests ran with the HBM BPF program included
in the HBM patch-set.

EDT has limited value when using DCTCP, but it helps in many cases when
using Cubic. It usually achieves larger link utilization and lower
99% latencies for the 1MB RPCs.
HBM ends up queueing a lot of packets with its default parameter values,
reducing the goodput of the 10KB RPCs and increasing their latency. Also,
the RTTs seen by the flows are quite large.

                         Aggr              10K  10K  10K   1MB  1MB  1MB
         Limit           rate drops  RTT  rate  P90  P99  rate  P90  P99
Test      rate  Flows    Mbps   %     us  Mbps   us   us  Mbps   ms   ms
--------  ----  -----    ---- -----  ---  ---- ---- ----  ---- ---- ----
cubic       1G    2       904  0.02  108   257  511  539   647 13.4 24.5
cubic-edt   1G    2       982  0.01  156   239  656  967   743 14.0 17.2
dctcp       1G    2       977  0.00  105   324  408  744   653 14.5 15.9
dctcp-edt   1G    2       981  0.01  142   321  417  811   660 15.7 17.0
cubic-htb   1G    2       919  0.00 1825    40 2822 4140   879  9.7  9.9

cubic     200M    2       155  0.30  220    81  532  655    74  283  450
cubic-edt 200M    2       188  0.02  222    87 1035 1095   101   84   85
dctcp     200M    2       188  0.03  111    77  912  939   111   76  325
dctcp-edt 200M    2       188  0.03  217    74 1416 1738   114   76   79
cubic-htb 200M    2       188  0.00 5015     8 14ms 15ms   180   48   50

cubic       1G    4       952  0.03  110   165  516  546   262   38  154
cubic-edt   1G    4       973  0.01  190   111 1034 1314   287   65   79
dctcp       1G    4       951  0.00  103   180  617  905   257   37   38
dctcp-edt   1G    4       967  0.00  163   151  732 1126   272   43   55
cubic-htb   1G    4       914  0.00 3249    13  7ms  8ms   300   29   34

cubic       5G    4      4236  0.00  134   305  490  624  1310   10   17
cubic-edt   5G    4      4865  0.00  156   306  425  759  1520   10   16
dctcp       5G    4      4936  0.00  128   485  221  409  1484    7    9
dctcp-edt   5G    4      4924  0.00  148   390  392  623  1508   11   26

v1 -> v2: Incorporated Andrii's suggestions
v2 -> v3: Incorporated Yonghong's suggestions
v3 -> v4: Removed credit update that is not needed

Signed-off-by: Lawrence Brakmo <brakmo@fb.com>
Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-07-03 15:03:00 +02:00
brakmo
ffd81558d5 bpf: Add cn support to hbm_out_kern.c
Update hbm_out_kern.c to support returning cn notifications.
Also updates relevant files to allow disabling cn notifications.

Signed-off-by: Lawrence Brakmo <brakmo@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
2019-05-31 16:41:29 -07:00
brakmo
4ffd44cfd1 bpf: HBM test script
Script for testing HBM (Host Bandwidth Manager) framework.
It creates a cgroup to use for testing and load a BPF program to limit
egress bandwidht. It then uses iperf3 or netperf to create
loads. The output is the goodput in Mbps (unless -D is used).

It can work on a single host using loopback or among two hosts (with netperf).
When using loopback, it is recommended to also introduce a delay of at least
1ms (-d=1), otherwise the assigned bandwidth is likely to be underutilized.

USAGE: $name [out] [-b=<prog>|--bpf=<prog>] [-c=<cc>|--cc=<cc>] [-D]
             [-d=<delay>|--delay=<delay>] [--debug] [-E]
             [-f=<#flows>|--flows=<#flows>] [-h] [-i=<id>|--id=<id >] [-l]
	     [-N] [-p=<port>|--port=<port>] [-P] [-q=<qdisc>]
             [-R] [-s=<server>|--server=<server] [--stats]
	     [-t=<time>|--time=<time>] [-w] [cubic|dctcp]
  Where:
    out               Egress (default egress)
    -b or --bpf       BPF program filename to load and attach.
                      Default is nrm_out_kern.o for egress,
    -c or -cc         TCP congestion control (cubic or dctcp)
    -d or --delay     Add a delay in ms using netem
    -D                In addition to the goodput in Mbps, it also outputs
                      other detailed information. This information is
                      test dependent (i.e. iperf3 or netperf).
    --debug           Print BPF trace buffer
    -E                Enable ECN (not required for dctcp)
    -f or --flows     Number of concurrent flows (default=1)
    -i or --id        cgroup id (an integer, default is 1)
    -l                Do not limit flows using loopback
    -N                Use netperf instead of iperf3
    -h                Help
    -p or --port      iperf3 port (default is 5201)
    -P                Use an iperf3 instance for each flow
    -q                Use the specified qdisc.
    -r or --rate      Rate in Mbps (default 1s 1Gbps)
    -R                Use TCP_RR for netperf. 1st flow has req
                      size of 10KB, rest of 1MB. Reply in all
                      cases is 1 byte.
                      More detailed output for each flow can be found
                      in the files netperf.<cg>.<flow>, where <cg> is the
                      cgroup id as specified with the -i flag, and <flow>
                      is the flow id starting at 1 and increasing by 1 for
                      flow (as specified by -f).
    -s or --server    hostname of netperf server. Used to create netperf
                      test traffic between to hosts (default is within host)
                      netserver must be running on the host.
    --stats           Get HBM stats (marked, dropped, etc.)
    -t or --time      duration of iperf3 in seconds (default=5)
    -w                Work conserving flag. cgroup can increase its
                      bandwidth beyond the rate limit specified
                      while there is available bandwidth. Current
                      implementation assumes there is only one NIC
                      (eth0), but can be extended to support multiple
                      NICs. This is just a proof of concept.
    cubic or dctcp    specify TCP CC to use

Examples:
 ./do_hbm_test.sh -l -d=1 -D --stats
     Runs a 5 second test, using a single iperf3 flow and with the default
     rate limit of 1Gbps and a delay of 1ms (using netem) using the default
     TCP congestion control on the loopback device (hence we use "-l" to
     enforce bandwidth limit on loopback device). Since no direction is
     specified, it defaults to egress. Since no TCP CC algorithm is
     specified it uses the system default (Cubic for this test).
     With no -D flag, only the value of the AGGREGATE OUTPUT would show.
     id refers to the cgroup id and is useful when running multi cgroup
     tests (supported by a future patch).
     This patchset does not support calling TCP's congesion window
     reduction, even when packets are dropped by the BPF program, resulting
     in a large number of packets dropped. It is recommended that the  current
     HBM implemenation only be used with ECN enabled flows. A future patch
     will add support for reducing TCP's cwnd and will increase the
     performance of non-ECN enabled flows.
   Output:
     Details for HBM in cgroup 1
     id:1
     rate_mbps:493
     duration:4.8 secs
     packets:11355
     bytes_MB:590
     pkts_dropped:4497
     bytes_dropped_MB:292
     pkts_marked_percent: 39.60
     bytes_marked_percent: 49.49
     pkts_dropped_percent: 39.60
     bytes_dropped_percent: 49.49
     PING AVG DELAY:2.075
     AGGREGATE_GOODPUT:505

./do_nrm_test.sh -l -d=1 -D --stats dctcp
     Same as above but using dctcp. Note that fewer bytes are dropped
     (0.01% vs. 49%).
   Output:
     Details for HBM in cgroup 1
     id:1
     rate_mbps:945
     duration:4.9 secs
     packets:16859
     bytes_MB:578
     pkts_dropped:1
     bytes_dropped_MB:0
     pkts_marked_percent: 28.74
     bytes_marked_percent: 45.15
     pkts_dropped_percent:  0.01
     bytes_dropped_percent:  0.01
     PING AVG DELAY:2.083
     AGGREGATE_GOODPUT:965

./do_nrm_test.sh -d=1 -D --stats
     As first example, but without limiting loopback device (i.e. no
     "-l" flag). Since there is no bandwidth limiting, no details for
     HBM are printed out.
   Output:
     Details for HBM in cgroup 1
     PING AVG DELAY:2.019
     AGGREGATE_GOODPUT:42655

./do_hbm.sh -l -d=1 -D --stats -f=2
     Uses iper3 and does 2 flows
./do_hbm.sh -l -d=1 -D --stats -f=4 -P
     Uses iperf3 and does 4 flows, each flow as a separate process.
./do_hbm.sh -l -d=1 -D --stats -f=4 -N
     Uses netperf, 4 flows
./do_hbm.sh -f=1 -r=2000 -t=5 -N -D --stats dctcp -s=<server-name>
     Uses netperf between two hosts. The remote host name is specified
     with -s= and you need to start the program netserver manually on
     the remote host. It will use 1 flow, a rate limit of 2Gbps and dctcp.
./do_hbm.sh -f=1 -r=2000 -t=5 -N -D --stats -w dctcp \
     -s=<server-name>
     As previous, but allows use of extra bandwidth. For this test the
     rate is 8Gbps vs. 1Gbps of the previous test.

Signed-off-by: Lawrence Brakmo <brakmo@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
2019-03-02 10:48:27 -08:00