* [dpdk-dev] TX-packet counter increased when no packets were actually sent
@ 2015-08-06 12:46 Stefan Binna
2015-08-10 10:28 ` Bruce Richardson
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Stefan Binna @ 2015-08-06 12:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: dev
Hi,
I have created a little testbed for DPDK testing.
NIC: Intel Gigabit 82574L (1-port)
The testbed for DPDK has following structure:
1) al40-118 (10.100.40.118/24): DUT running the DPDK application
2) al40-119 (10.100.40.119/24): Used for sending traffic to al40-118
3) al40-111 (10.100.40.111/24): Used to sniff the traffic send on the
network
All three devices are connected via a hub and use the network
10.100.40.1/24.
*Test:* Ping the DUT and review network traffic
At al40-119 an ARP-Table-Entry was created and the device al40-118 was
pinged:
arp -s 10.100.40.118 68:05:ca:37:51:75
ping 10.100.40.118
On al40-118 the application testpmd was started with following parameters:
./x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc/build/app/test-pmd/testpmd -c 0xf -n 4 -- -i --portmask=0x1 --nb-cores=2 --port-topology=chained
After start of the testpmd application the ports were started and after
a while stopped:
start #wait a while due to testduration
stop
What's interesting is, that the TX-packet counter in the output of the
"stop" command had the same value as the RX-packet counter. But the
actual traffic on the network sniffed with Wireshark only showed the
ping request but never a response on any layer (not even L2).
Sample output of the "stop" command:
Telling cores to stop...
Waiting for lcores to finish...
---------------------- Forward statistics for port 0 ----------------------
RX-packets: 2 RX-dropped: 0 RX-total: 2
TX-packets: 2 TX-dropped: 0 TX-total: 2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++++++++++++++ Accumulated forward statistics for all ports+++++++++++++++
RX-packets: 2 RX-dropped: 0 RX-total: 2
TX-packets: 2 TX-dropped: 0 TX-total: 2
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Done.
Stopping port 0...done
Could you tell me why the TX-packet counter increased when actually no
packets were sent out to the 10.100.40.1 network or in other words,
where have the packets been sent out?
And is it even possible to set the same port for RX and TX?
Thanks!
Regards, Stefan.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] TX-packet counter increased when no packets were actually sent
2015-08-06 12:46 [dpdk-dev] TX-packet counter increased when no packets were actually sent Stefan Binna
@ 2015-08-10 10:28 ` Bruce Richardson
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Bruce Richardson @ 2015-08-10 10:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stefan Binna; +Cc: dev
On Thu, Aug 06, 2015 at 02:46:53PM +0200, Stefan Binna wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have created a little testbed for DPDK testing.
>
> NIC: Intel Gigabit 82574L (1-port)
>
> The testbed for DPDK has following structure:
>
> 1) al40-118 (10.100.40.118/24): DUT running the DPDK application
> 2) al40-119 (10.100.40.119/24): Used for sending traffic to al40-118
> 3) al40-111 (10.100.40.111/24): Used to sniff the traffic send on the
> network
>
> All three devices are connected via a hub and use the network
> 10.100.40.1/24.
>
> *Test:* Ping the DUT and review network traffic
>
The use of ping implies the presence of an IP protocol stack to respond to
that ping. Testpmd included no protocol stack support so can't respond to the
ping request.
> At al40-119 an ARP-Table-Entry was created and the device al40-118 was
> pinged:
>
> arp -s 10.100.40.118 68:05:ca:37:51:75
> ping 10.100.40.118
>
> On al40-118 the application testpmd was started with following parameters:
>
> ./x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc/build/app/test-pmd/testpmd -c 0xf -n 4 -- -i --portmask=0x1 --nb-cores=2 --port-topology=chained
>
> After start of the testpmd application the ports were started and after a
> while stopped:
>
> start #wait a while due to testduration
> stop
>
> What's interesting is, that the TX-packet counter in the output of the
> "stop" command had the same value as the RX-packet counter. But the actual
> traffic on the network sniffed with Wireshark only showed the ping request
> but never a response on any layer (not even L2).
>
> Sample output of the "stop" command:
>
> Telling cores to stop...
> Waiting for lcores to finish...
>
> ---------------------- Forward statistics for port 0 ----------------------
> RX-packets: 2 RX-dropped: 0 RX-total: 2
> TX-packets: 2 TX-dropped: 0 TX-total: 2
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> +++++++++++++++ Accumulated forward statistics for all ports+++++++++++++++
> RX-packets: 2 RX-dropped: 0 RX-total: 2
> TX-packets: 2 TX-dropped: 0 TX-total: 2
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>
> Done.
> Stopping port 0...done
>
> Could you tell me why the TX-packet counter increased when actually no
> packets were sent out to the 10.100.40.1 network or in other words, where
> have the packets been sent out?
Packets were sent out by the DUT. However, those packets weren't ping responses,
they were the ping requests themselves being forwarded. That's why they showed
up in your wireshark track on the receiving side.
/Bruce
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