Spdk/doc/vpp_integration.md
Liang Yan 985169456b doc/vpp: update vpp document and configuration
Update the configure and doc for VPP.

Change-Id: I922c02de108abd4bd4ac0c853b49080e449539cd
Signed-off-by: Liang Yan <liang.z.yan@intel.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.gerrithub.io/c/spdk/spdk/+/453758
Tested-by: SPDK CI Jenkins <sys_sgci@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Darek Stojaczyk <dariusz.stojaczyk@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Shuhei Matsumoto <shuhei.matsumoto.xt@hitachi.com>
Reviewed-by: Ben Walker <benjamin.walker@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ziye Yang <ziye.yang@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Luse <paul.e.luse@intel.com>
2019-06-07 18:27:53 +00:00

4.6 KiB

Vector Packet Processing

VPP (part of Fast Data - Input/Output project) is an extensible userspace framework providing networking functionality. It is built around the concept of packet processing graph (see What is VPP?).

Detailed instructions for simplified steps 1-3 below, can be found on VPP Quick Start Guide.

SPDK supports VPP version 18.01.1.

1. Building VPP (optional)

Please skip this step if using already built packages.

Clone and checkout VPP

git clone https://gerrit.fd.io/r/vpp && cd vpp
git checkout v18.01.1

Install VPP build dependencies

make install-dep

Build and create .rpm packages

make pkg-rpm

Alternatively, build and create .deb packages

make bootstrap && make pkg-deb

Packages can be found in vpp/build-root/ directory.

For more in depth instructions please see Building section in VPP documentation

Please note: VPP 18.01.1 does not support OpenSSL 1.1. It is suggested to install a compatibility package for compilation time.

sudo dnf install -y --allowerasing compat-openssl10-devel

Then reinstall latest OpenSSL devel package:

sudo dnf install -y --allowerasing openssl-devel

2. Installing VPP

Packages can be installed from a distribution repository or built in previous step. Minimal set of packages consists of vpp, vpp-lib and vpp-devel.

Note: Please remove or modify /etc/sysctl.d/80-vpp.conf file with appropriate values dependent on number of hugepages that will be used on system.

3. Running VPP

VPP takes over any network interfaces that were bound to userspace driver, for details please see DPDK guide on Binding and Unbinding Network Ports to/from the Kernel Modules.

VPP is installed as service and disabled by default. To start VPP with default config:

sudo systemctl start vpp

Alternatively, use vpp binary directly

sudo vpp unix {cli-listen /run/vpp/cli.sock}

A usefull tool is vppctl, that allows to control running VPP instance. Either by entering VPP configuration prompt

sudo vppctl

Or, by sending single command directly. For example to display interfaces within VPP:

sudo vppctl show interface

Example: Tap interfaces on single host

For functional test purposes a virtual tap interface can be created, so no additional network hardware is required. This will allow network communication between SPDK iSCSI target using VPP end of tap and kernel iSCSI initiator using the kernel part of tap. A single host is used in this scenario.

Create tap interface via VPP

    vppctl tap connect tap0
    vppctl set interface state tapcli-0 up
    vppctl set interface ip address tapcli-0 10.0.0.1/24
    vppctl show int addr

Assign address on kernel interface

    sudo ip addr add 10.0.0.2/24 dev tap0
    sudo ip link set tap0 up

To verify connectivity

    ping 10.0.0.1

4. Building SPDK with VPP

Support for VPP can be built into SPDK by using configuration option.

configure --with-vpp

Alternatively, directory with built libraries can be pointed at and will be used for compilation instead of installed packages.

configure --with-vpp=/path/to/vpp/repo/build-root/rpmbuild/vpp-18.01.1.0/build-root/install-vpp-native/vpp

Alternatively, in Debian/Ubuntu system, the vpp path is different.

configure --with-vpp=/path/to/vpp/repo/build-root/install-vpp-native/vpp

5. Running SPDK with VPP

VPP application has to be started before SPDK application, in order to enable usage of network interfaces. For example, if you use SPDK iSCSI target or NVMe-oF target, after the initialization finishes, interfaces configured within VPP will be available to be configured as portal addresses.

Moreover, you do not need to specifiy which TCP sock implementation (e.g., posix, VPP) to be used through configuration file or RPC call. Since SPDK program automatically determines the protocol according to the configured portal addresses info. For example, you can specify a Listen address in NVMe-oF subsystem configuration such as "Listen TCP 10.0.0.1:4420". SPDK programs automatically uses different implemenation to listen this provided portal info via posix or vpp implemenation(if compiled in SPDK program), and only one implementation can successfully listen on the provided portal.