On 1 May 2015 at 00:41, Santosh Shukla <[email protected]> wrote: > On 30 April 2015 at 09:18, Mike Holmes <[email protected]> wrote: >> Is this a good result ? >> > Nope, and it looks like - they are more functional, perhaps lava > integrable material. He's using emulated nic. > We did talked about it in one of our odp-virt call.
Right. > >> Are you able to get a comparison to the native platform SDK for the machine >> you ran on - if this was x86 can we run native DPDK ? >> If this was x86 I assume you used odp-dpdk but maybe you used linux-generic >> which will not perform well. >> > > I ran odp-dpdk in guest mode long back. It gives close to line rate > however lesser than plain dpdk running in guest. And we know the > root-cause. Venky, In very early days did highlighted in his report. > But that(s) a different problem and I guess odp-dpdk work likely to > address them. > > However, Hongbo can anyways create a lava setup where odp-dpdk (on x86 > box, using dpdk favorable nic) doing l2fwd at guest. And that setup > shows result in pps, vcpu-utilization and if possible -rtt (i guess: > its not there, we'll have to write em). > Yes ,I would like to start a new discuss about setting l2fwd in guest in Lava, there are somethings needs to be discussed/confirmed before I take further actions. > HTH! > >> On 30 April 2015 at 08:42, Hongbo Zhang <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Hi, >>> I set up a test to run odp in vm guest to get the odp throughput in it, >>> idea is: >>> in the host run odp_generator to send pkt from host br0 to guest eth0, >>> and in the guest, run odp_l2fwd to forward packets from its eth0 to >>> eth1, and then in host, run odp_generator to get these packets form >>> br1. >>> >>> Here are steps of my test: >>> 0. install tools and compile odp in guest and host. >>> 1. host network interface preparation: >>> sudo tunctl -u root >>> sudo tunctl -u root >>> sudo ifconfig tap0 0.0.0.0 up >>> sudo ifconfig tap1 0.0.0.0 up >>> sudo brctl addbr br0 >>> sudo brctl addbr br1 >>> sudo brctl addif br0 tap0 eth2 >>> sudo brctl addif br1 tap1 eth3 >>> sudo ifconfig eth2 0.0.0.0 >>> sudo ifconfig br0 10.0.3.15/24 up >>> sudo ifconfig eth3 0.0.0.0 >>> sudo ifconfig br1 10.0.4.15/24 up >>> 2. launch the qemu vm >>> sudo qemu-system-i386 -hda debian_wheezy_i386_standard.qcow2 -net >>> nic,vlan=0 -net tap,vlan=0,ifname=tap0,script=no,downscript=no -net >>> nic,vlan=1 -net tap,vlan=1,ifname=tap1,script=no,downscript=no -smp 2 >>> 3. guest network interface configuraton >>> ifconfig eth0 10.0.3.16/24 up >>> ifconfig eth1 10.0.4.16/24 up >>> 4. in the host, in one terminal: >>> sudo ./example/generator/odp_generator -m r -I br1 >>> in another terminal: >>> sudo ./example/generator/odp_generator --srcmac 08:00:27:28:3e:ec >>> --dstmac 52:54:00:12:34:5-I br0 -m u --srcip 10.0.3.15 --dstip >>> 10.0.4.255 >>> 5. in the guest, start l2fwd: >>> ./test/performance/odp_l2fwd - eth0,eth1 -m 0 -t 30 >>> >>> Here are part of results log of l2fwd in guest: >>> ...... >>> 1280 pps, 3158 max pps, 0 total drops >>> 1216 pps, 3158 max pps, 0 total drops >>> 2016 pps, 3158 max pps, 0 total drops >>> 1680 pps, 3158 max pps, 0 total drops >>> TEST RESULT: 3158 maximum packets per second. >>> _______________________________________________ >>> lng-odp mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> https://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/lng-odp >> >> >> >> >> -- >> Mike Holmes >> Technical Manager - Linaro Networking Group >> Linaro.org │ Open source software for ARM SoCs >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> lng-odp mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/lng-odp >> _______________________________________________ lng-odp mailing list [email protected] https://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/lng-odp
