MD026 Trailing punctuation in header This rule is triggered on any header that has a punctuation character as the last character in the line Signed-off-by: Karol Latecki <karol.latecki@intel.com> Change-Id: I3ab4894092ef6b5f920d89b74e43c2e46e9581c0 Reviewed-on: https://review.spdk.io/gerrit/c/spdk/spdk/+/657 Tested-by: SPDK CI Jenkins <sys_sgci@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Jim Harris <james.r.harris@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Shuhei Matsumoto <shuhei.matsumoto.xt@hitachi.com>
238 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
238 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
# Vector Packet Processing {#vpp_integration}
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VPP (part of [Fast Data - Input/Output](https://fd.io/) project) is an extensible
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userspace framework providing networking functionality. It is built around the concept of
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packet processing graph (see [What is VPP?](https://wiki.fd.io/view/VPP/What_is_VPP?)).
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Detailed instructions for **simplified steps 1-3** below, can be found on
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VPP [Quick Start Guide](https://wiki.fd.io/view/VPP).
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*SPDK supports VPP version 19.04.2.*
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# 1. Building VPP (optional) {#vpp_build}
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*Please skip this step if using already built packages.*
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Clone and checkout VPP
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~~~
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git clone https://gerrit.fd.io/r/vpp && cd vpp
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git checkout v19.04.2
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~~~
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Install VPP build dependencies
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~~~
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make install-dep
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~~~
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Build and create .rpm packages
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~~~
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make pkg-rpm
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~~~
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Alternatively, build and create .deb packages
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~~~
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make bootstrap && make pkg-deb
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~~~
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Packages can be found in `vpp/build-root/` directory.
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For more in depth instructions please see Building section in
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[VPP documentation](https://wiki.fd.io/view/VPP/Pulling,_Building,_Running,_Hacking_and_Pushing_VPP_Code#Building)
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# 2. Installing VPP {#vpp_install}
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Packages can be installed from a distribution repository or built in previous step.
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Minimal set of packages consists of `vpp`, `vpp-lib` and `vpp-devel`.
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*Note: Please remove or modify /etc/sysctl.d/80-vpp.conf file with appropriate values
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dependent on number of hugepages that will be used on system.*
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# 3. Running VPP {#vpp_run}
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VPP takes over any network interfaces that were bound to userspace driver,
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for details please see DPDK guide on
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[Binding and Unbinding Network Ports to/from the Kernel Modules](http://dpdk.org/doc/guides/linux_gsg/linux_drivers.html#binding-and-unbinding-network-ports-to-from-the-kernel-modules).
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VPP is installed as service and disabled by default. To start VPP with default config:
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~~~
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sudo systemctl start vpp
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~~~
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Alternatively, use `vpp` binary directly
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~~~
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sudo vpp unix {cli-listen /run/vpp/cli.sock} session { evt_qs_memfd_seg } socksvr { socket-name /run/vpp-api.sock }
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~~~
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# 4. Configure VPP {#vpp_config}
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VPP can be configured using a VPP startup file and the `vppctl` command; By default, the VPP startup file is `/etc/vpp/startup.conf`, however, you can pass any file with the `-c` vpp command argument.
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## Startup configuration
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Some key values from iSCSI point of view includes:
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CPU section (`cpu`):
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- `main-core <lcore>` -- logical CPU core used for main thread.
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- `corelist-workers <lcore list>` -- logical CPU cores where worker threads are running.
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DPDK section (`dpdk`):
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- `num-rx-queues <num>` -- number of receive queues.
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- `num-tx-queues <num>` -- number of transmit queues.
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- `dev <PCI address>` -- whitelisted device.
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Session section (`session`):
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- `evt_qs_memfd_seg` -- uses a memfd segment for event queues. This is required for SPDK.
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Socket server session (`socksvr`):
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- `socket-name <path>` -- configure API socket filename (curently SPDK uses default path `/run/vpp-api.sock`).
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Plugins section (`plugins`):
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- `plugin <plugin name> { [enable|disable] }` -- enable or disable VPP plugin.
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### Example
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~~~
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unix {
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nodaemon
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cli-listen /run/vpp/cli.sock
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}
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cpu {
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main-core 1
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}
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session {
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evt_qs_memfd_seg
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}
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socksvr {
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socket-name /run/vpp-api.sock
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}
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plugins {
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plugin default { disable }
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plugin dpdk_plugin.so { enable }
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}
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~~~
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## vppctl command tool
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The `vppctl` command tool allows users to control VPP at runtime via a command prompt
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~~~
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sudo vppctl
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~~~
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Or, by sending single command directly. For example to display interfaces within VPP:
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~~~
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sudo vppctl show interface
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~~~
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Useful commands:
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- `show interface` -- show interfaces settings, state and some basic statistics.
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- `show interface address` -- show interfaces state and assigned addresses.
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- `set interface ip address <VPP interface> <Address>` -- set interfaces IP address.
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- `set interface state <VPP interface> [up|down]` -- bring interface up or down.
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- `show errors` -- show error counts.
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## Example: Configure two interfaces to be available via VPP
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We want to configure two DPDK ports with PCI addresses 0000:09:00.1 and 0000:0b:00.1
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to be used as portals 10.0.0.1/24 and 10.10.0.1/24.
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In the VPP startup file (e.g. `/etc/vpp/startup.conf`), whitelist the interfaces
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by specifying PCI addresses in section dpdk:
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~~~
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dev 0000:09:00.1
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dev 0000:0b:00.1
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~~~
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Bind PCI NICs to UIO driver (`igb_uio` or `uio_pci_generic`).
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Restart vpp and use vppctl tool to verify interfaces.
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~~~
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$ vppctl show interface
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Name Idx State MTU (L3/IP4/IP6/MPLS) Counter Count
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FortyGigabitEthernet9/0/1 1 down 9000/0/0/0
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FortyGigabitEthernetb/0/1 2 down 9000/0/0/0
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~~~
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Set appropriate addresses and bring interfaces up:
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~~~
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$ vppctl set interface ip address FortyGigabitEthernet9/0/1 10.0.0.1/24
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$ vppctl set interface state FortyGigabitEthernet9/0/1 up
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$ vppctl set interface ip address FortyGigabitEthernetb/0/1 10.10.0.1/24
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$ vppctl set interface state FortyGigabitEthernetb/0/1 up
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~~~
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Verify configuration:
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~~~
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$ vppctl show interface address
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FortyGigabitEthernet9/0/1 (up):
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L3 10.0.0.1/24
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FortyGigabitEthernetb/0/1 (up):
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L3 10.10.0.1/24
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~~~
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Now, both interfaces are ready to use. To verify conectivity you can ping
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10.0.0.1 and 10.10.0.1 addresses from another machine.
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## Example: Tap interfaces on single host
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For functional test purposes a virtual tap interface can be created,
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so no additional network hardware is required.
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This will allow network communication between SPDK iSCSI target using VPP end of tap
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and kernel iSCSI initiator using the kernel part of tap. A single host is used in this scenario.
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Create tap interface via VPP
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~~~
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vppctl tap connect tap0
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vppctl set interface state tapcli-0 up
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vppctl set interface ip address tapcli-0 10.0.0.1/24
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vppctl show int addr
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~~~
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Assign address on kernel interface
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~~~
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sudo ip addr add 10.0.0.2/24 dev tap0
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sudo ip link set tap0 up
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~~~
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To verify connectivity
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~~~
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ping 10.0.0.1
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~~~
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# 5. Building SPDK with VPP {#vpp_built_into_spdk}
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Support for VPP can be built into SPDK by using configuration option.
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~~~
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configure --with-vpp
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~~~
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Alternatively, directory with built libraries can be pointed at
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and will be used for compilation instead of installed packages.
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~~~
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configure --with-vpp=/path/to/vpp/repo/build-root/install-vpp-native/vpp
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~~~
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# 6. Running SPDK with VPP {#vpp_running_with_spdk}
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VPP application has to be started before SPDK application, in order to enable
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usage of network interfaces. For example, if you use SPDK iSCSI target or
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NVMe-oF target, after the initialization finishes, interfaces configured within
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VPP will be available to be configured as portal addresses.
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Moreover, you do not need to specifiy which TCP sock implementation (e.g., posix,
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VPP) to be used through configuration file or RPC call. Since SPDK program
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automatically determines the protocol according to the configured portal addresses
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info. For example, you can specify a Listen address in NVMe-oF subsystem
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configuration such as "Listen TCP 10.0.0.1:4420". SPDK programs automatically
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uses different implemenation to listen this provided portal info via posix or
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vpp implemenation(if compiled in SPDK program), and only one implementation can
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successfully listen on the provided portal.
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