Steven Luong d294b98c1d devices: vhost not reading packets from vring
In a rare event, after the vhost protocol message exchange has finished and
the interface had been brought up successfully, the driver MAY still change
its mind about the memory regions by sending new memory maps via
SET_MEM_TABLE. Upon processing SET_MEM_TABLE, VPP invalidates the old memory
regions and the descriptor tables. But it does not re-compute the new
descriptor tables based on the new memory maps. Since VPP does not have the
descriptor tables, it does not read the packets from the vring.

In the normal working case, after SET_MEM_TABLE, the driver follows up with
SET_VRING_ADDRESS which VPP computes the descriptor tables.

The fix is to stash away the descriptor table addresses from
SET_VRING_ADDRESS. Re-compute the new descriptor tables when processing
SET_MEM_TABLE if descriptor table addresses are known.

Type: fix
Ticket: VPP-1784

Signed-off-by: Steven Luong <sluong@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I3361f14c3a0372b8d07943eb6aa4b3a3f10708f9
(cherry picked from commit 61b8ba69f7a9540ed00576504528ce439f0286f5)
2019-10-14 11:12:37 +00:00
2019-08-01 18:01:57 +00:00
2018-08-31 12:03:31 +00:00
2018-08-03 17:40:05 +00:00
2019-09-18 16:36:13 +00:00

Vector Packet Processing

Introduction

The VPP platform is an extensible framework that provides out-of-the-box production quality switch/router functionality. It is the open source version of Cisco's Vector Packet Processing (VPP) technology: a high performance, packet-processing stack that can run on commodity CPUs.

The benefits of this implementation of VPP are its high performance, proven technology, its modularity and flexibility, and rich feature set.

For more information on VPP and its features please visit the FD.io website and What is VPP? pages.

Changes

Details of the changes leading up to this version of VPP can be found under @ref release_notes.

Directory layout

Directory name Description
build-data Build metadata
build-root Build output directory
doxygen Documentation generator configuration
dpdk DPDK patches and build infrastructure
@ref extras/libmemif Client library for memif
@ref src/examples VPP example code
@ref src/plugins VPP bundled plugins directory
@ref src/svm Shared virtual memory allocation library
src/tests Standalone tests (not part of test harness)
src/vat VPP API test program
@ref src/vlib VPP application library
@ref src/vlibapi VPP API library
@ref src/vlibmemory VPP Memory management
@ref src/vnet VPP networking
@ref src/vpp VPP application
@ref src/vpp-api VPP application API bindings
@ref src/vppinfra VPP core library
@ref src/vpp/api Not-yet-relocated API bindings
test Unit tests and Python test harness

Getting started

In general anyone interested in building, developing or running VPP should consult the VPP wiki for more complete documentation.

In particular, readers are recommended to take a look at [Pulling, Building, Running, Hacking, Pushing](https://wiki.fd.io/view/VPP/Pulling,_Building,_Run ning,_Hacking_and_Pushing_VPP_Code) which provides extensive step-by-step coverage of the topic.

For the impatient, some salient information is distilled below.

Quick-start: On an existing Linux host

To install system dependencies, build VPP and then install it, simply run the build script. This should be performed a non-privileged user with sudo access from the project base directory:

./extras/vagrant/build.sh

If you want a more fine-grained approach because you intend to do some development work, the Makefile in the root directory of the source tree provides several convenience shortcuts as make targets that may be of interest. To see the available targets run:

make

Quick-start: Vagrant

The directory extras/vagrant contains a VagrantFile and supporting scripts to bootstrap a working VPP inside a Vagrant-managed Virtual Machine. This VM can then be used to test concepts with VPP or as a development platform to extend VPP. Some obvious caveats apply when using a VM for VPP since its performance will never match that of bare metal; if your work is timing or performance sensitive, consider using bare metal in addition or instead of the VM.

For this to work you will need a working installation of Vagrant. Instructions for this can be found [on the Setting up Vagrant wiki page] (https://wiki.fd.io/view/DEV/Setting_Up_Vagrant).

More information

Several modules provide documentation, see @subpage user_doc for more end-user-oriented information. Also see @subpage dev_doc for developer notes.

Visit the VPP wiki for details on more advanced building strategies and other development notes.

Test Framework

There is PyDoc generated documentation available for the VPP test framework. See @ref test_framework_doc for details.

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