New upstream version 18.02
[deb_dpdk.git] / doc / guides / prog_guide / packet_framework.rst
1 ..  SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
2     Copyright(c) 2010-2014 Intel Corporation.
3
4 Packet Framework
5 ================
6
7 Design Objectives
8 -----------------
9
10 The main design objectives for the DPDK Packet Framework are:
11
12 *   Provide standard methodology to build complex packet processing pipelines.
13     Provide reusable and extensible templates for the commonly used pipeline functional blocks;
14
15 *   Provide capability to switch between pure software and hardware-accelerated implementations for the same pipeline functional block;
16
17 *   Provide the best trade-off between flexibility and performance.
18     Hardcoded pipelines usually provide the best performance, but are not flexible,
19     while developing flexible frameworks is never a problem, but performance is usually low;
20
21 *   Provide a framework that is logically similar to Open Flow.
22
23 Overview
24 --------
25
26 Packet processing applications are frequently structured as pipelines of multiple stages,
27 with the logic of each stage glued around a lookup table.
28 For each incoming packet, the table defines the set of actions to be applied to the packet,
29 as well as the next stage to send the packet to.
30
31 The DPDK Packet Framework minimizes the development effort required to build packet processing pipelines
32 by defining a standard methodology for pipeline development,
33 as well as providing libraries of reusable templates for the commonly used pipeline blocks.
34
35 The pipeline is constructed by connecting the set of input ports with the set of output ports
36 through the set of tables in a tree-like topology.
37 As result of lookup operation for the current packet in the current table,
38 one of the table entries (on lookup hit) or the default table entry (on lookup miss)
39 provides the set of actions to be applied on the current packet,
40 as well as the next hop for the packet, which can be either another table, an output port or packet drop.
41
42 An example of packet processing pipeline is presented in :numref:`figure_figure32`:
43
44 .. _figure_figure32:
45
46 .. figure:: img/figure32.*
47
48    Example of Packet Processing Pipeline where Input Ports 0 and 1
49    are Connected with Output Ports 0, 1 and 2 through Tables 0 and 1
50
51
52 Port Library Design
53 -------------------
54
55 Port Types
56 ~~~~~~~~~~
57
58 :numref:`table_qos_19` is a non-exhaustive list of ports that can be implemented with the Packet Framework.
59
60 .. _table_qos_19:
61
62 .. table:: Port Types
63
64    +---+------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
65    | # | Port type        | Description                                                                           |
66    |   |                  |                                                                                       |
67    +===+==================+=======================================================================================+
68    | 1 | SW ring          | SW circular buffer used for message passing between the application threads. Uses     |
69    |   |                  | the DPDK rte_ring primitive. Expected to be the most commonly used type of            |
70    |   |                  | port.                                                                                 |
71    |   |                  |                                                                                       |
72    +---+------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
73    | 2 | HW ring          | Queue of buffer descriptors used to interact with NIC, switch or accelerator ports.   |
74    |   |                  | For NIC ports, it uses the DPDK rte_eth_rx_queue or rte_eth_tx_queue                  |
75    |   |                  | primitives.                                                                           |
76    |   |                  |                                                                                       |
77    +---+------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
78    | 3 | IP reassembly    | Input packets are either IP fragments or complete IP datagrams. Output packets are    |
79    |   |                  | complete IP datagrams.                                                                |
80    |   |                  |                                                                                       |
81    +---+------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
82    | 4 | IP fragmentation | Input packets are jumbo (IP datagrams with length bigger than MTU) or non-jumbo       |
83    |   |                  | packets. Output packets are non-jumbo packets.                                        |
84    |   |                  |                                                                                       |
85    +---+------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
86    | 5 | Traffic manager  | Traffic manager attached to a specific NIC output port, performing congestion         |
87    |   |                  | management and hierarchical scheduling according to pre-defined SLAs.                 |
88    |   |                  |                                                                                       |
89    +---+------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
90    | 6 | KNI              | Send/receive packets to/from Linux kernel space.                                      |
91    |   |                  |                                                                                       |
92    +---+------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
93    | 7 | Source           | Input port used as packet generator. Similar to Linux kernel /dev/zero character      |
94    |   |                  | device.                                                                               |
95    |   |                  |                                                                                       |
96    +---+------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
97    | 8 | Sink             | Output port used to drop all input packets. Similar to Linux kernel /dev/null         |
98    |   |                  | character device.                                                                     |
99    |   |                  |                                                                                       |
100    +---+------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
101
102 Port Interface
103 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
104
105 Each port is unidirectional, i.e. either input port or output port.
106 Each input/output port is required to implement an abstract interface that
107 defines the initialization and run-time operation of the port.
108 The port abstract interface is described in.
109
110 .. _table_qos_20:
111
112 .. table:: 20 Port Abstract Interface
113
114    +---+----------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
115    | # | Port Operation | Description                                                                             |
116    |   |                |                                                                                         |
117    +===+================+=========================================================================================+
118    | 1 | Create         | Create the low-level port object (e.g. queue). Can internally allocate memory.          |
119    |   |                |                                                                                         |
120    +---+----------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
121    | 2 | Free           | Free the resources (e.g. memory) used by the low-level port object.                     |
122    |   |                |                                                                                         |
123    +---+----------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
124    | 3 | RX             | Read a burst of input packets. Non-blocking operation. Only defined for input ports.    |
125    |   |                |                                                                                         |
126    +---+----------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
127    | 4 | TX             | Write a burst of input packets. Non-blocking operation. Only defined for output ports.  |
128    |   |                |                                                                                         |
129    +---+----------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
130    | 5 | Flush          | Flush the output buffer. Only defined for output ports.                                 |
131    |   |                |                                                                                         |
132    +---+----------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
133
134 Table Library Design
135 --------------------
136
137 Table Types
138 ~~~~~~~~~~~
139
140 :numref:`table_qos_21` is a non-exhaustive list of types of tables that can be implemented with the Packet Framework.
141
142 .. _table_qos_21:
143
144 .. table:: Table Types
145
146    +---+----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
147    | # | Table Type                 | Description                                                                 |
148    |   |                            |                                                                             |
149    +===+============================+=============================================================================+
150    | 1 | Hash table                 | Lookup key is n-tuple based.                                                |
151    |   |                            |                                                                             |
152    |   |                            | Typically, the lookup key is hashed to produce a signature that is used to  |
153    |   |                            | identify a bucket of entries where the lookup key is searched next.         |
154    |   |                            |                                                                             |
155    |   |                            | The signature associated with the lookup key of each input packet is either |
156    |   |                            | read from the packet descriptor (pre-computed signature) or computed at     |
157    |   |                            | table lookup time.                                                          |
158    |   |                            |                                                                             |
159    |   |                            | The table lookup, add entry and delete entry operations, as well as any     |
160    |   |                            | other pipeline block that pre-computes the signature all have to use the    |
161    |   |                            | same hashing algorithm to generate the signature.                           |
162    |   |                            |                                                                             |
163    |   |                            | Typically used to implement flow classification tables, ARP caches, routing |
164    |   |                            | table for tunnelling protocols, etc.                                        |
165    |   |                            |                                                                             |
166    +---+----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
167    | 2 | Longest Prefix Match (LPM) | Lookup key is the IP address.                                               |
168    |   |                            |                                                                             |
169    |   |                            | Each table entries has an associated IP prefix (IP and depth).              |
170    |   |                            |                                                                             |
171    |   |                            | The table lookup operation selects the IP prefix that is matched by the     |
172    |   |                            | lookup key; in case of multiple matches, the entry with the longest prefix  |
173    |   |                            | depth wins.                                                                 |
174    |   |                            |                                                                             |
175    |   |                            | Typically used to implement IP routing tables.                              |
176    |   |                            |                                                                             |
177    +---+----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
178    | 3 | Access Control List (ACLs) | Lookup key is 7-tuple of two VLAN/MPLS labels, IP destination address,      |
179    |   |                            | IP source addresses, L4 protocol, L4 destination port, L4 source port.      |
180    |   |                            |                                                                             |
181    |   |                            | Each table entry has an associated ACL and priority. The ACL contains bit   |
182    |   |                            | masks for the VLAN/MPLS labels, IP prefix for IP destination address, IP    |
183    |   |                            | prefix for IP source addresses, L4 protocol and bitmask, L4 destination     |
184    |   |                            | port and bit mask, L4 source port and bit mask.                             |
185    |   |                            |                                                                             |
186    |   |                            | The table lookup operation selects the ACL that is matched by the lookup    |
187    |   |                            | key; in case of multiple matches, the entry with the highest priority wins. |
188    |   |                            |                                                                             |
189    |   |                            | Typically used to implement rule databases for firewalls, etc.              |
190    |   |                            |                                                                             |
191    +---+----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
192    | 4 | Pattern matching search    | Lookup key is the packet payload.                                           |
193    |   |                            |                                                                             |
194    |   |                            | Table is a database of patterns, with each pattern having a priority        |
195    |   |                            | assigned.                                                                   |
196    |   |                            |                                                                             |
197    |   |                            | The table lookup operation selects the patterns that is matched by the      |
198    |   |                            | input packet; in case of multiple matches, the matching pattern with the    |
199    |   |                            | highest priority wins.                                                      |
200    |   |                            |                                                                             |
201    +---+----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
202    | 5 | Array                      | Lookup key is the table entry index itself.                                 |
203    |   |                            |                                                                             |
204    +---+----------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
205
206 Table Interface
207 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
208
209 Each table is required to implement an abstract interface that defines the initialization
210 and run-time operation of the table.
211 The table abstract interface is described in :numref:`table_qos_29_1`.
212
213 .. _table_qos_29_1:
214
215 .. table:: Table Abstract Interface
216
217    +---+-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
218    | # | Table operation | Description                                                                            |
219    |   |                 |                                                                                        |
220    +===+=================+========================================================================================+
221    | 1 | Create          | Create the low-level data structures of the lookup table. Can internally allocate      |
222    |   |                 | memory.                                                                                |
223    |   |                 |                                                                                        |
224    +---+-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
225    | 2 | Free            | Free up all the resources used by the lookup table.                                    |
226    |   |                 |                                                                                        |
227    +---+-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
228    | 3 | Add entry       | Add new entry to the lookup table.                                                     |
229    |   |                 |                                                                                        |
230    +---+-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
231    | 4 | Delete entry    | Delete specific entry from the lookup table.                                           |
232    |   |                 |                                                                                        |
233    +---+-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
234    | 5 | Lookup          | Look up a burst of input packets and return a bit mask specifying the result of the    |
235    |   |                 | lookup operation for each packet: a set bit signifies lookup hit for the corresponding |
236    |   |                 | packet, while a cleared bit a lookup miss.                                             |
237    |   |                 |                                                                                        |
238    |   |                 | For each lookup hit packet, the lookup operation also returns a pointer to the table   |
239    |   |                 | entry that was hit, which contains the actions to be applied on the packet and any     |
240    |   |                 | associated metadata.                                                                   |
241    |   |                 |                                                                                        |
242    |   |                 | For each lookup miss packet, the actions to be applied on the packet and any           |
243    |   |                 | associated metadata are specified by the default table entry preconfigured for lookup  |
244    |   |                 | miss.                                                                                  |
245    |   |                 |                                                                                        |
246    +---+-----------------+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
247
248
249 Hash Table Design
250 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
251
252 Hash Table Overview
253 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
254
255 Hash tables are important because the key lookup operation is optimized for speed:
256 instead of having to linearly search the lookup key through all the keys in the table,
257 the search is limited to only the keys stored in a single table bucket.
258
259 **Associative Arrays**
260
261 An associative array is a function that can be specified as a set of (key, value) pairs,
262 with each key from the possible set of input keys present at most once.
263 For a given associative array, the possible operations are:
264
265 #.  *add (key, value)*: When no value is currently associated with *key*, then the (key, *value* ) association is created.
266     When *key* is already associated value *value0*, then the association (*key*, *value0*) is removed
267     and association *(key, value)* is created;
268
269 #.  *delete key*: When no value is currently associated with *key*, this operation has no effect.
270     When *key* is already associated  *value*, then association  *(key, value)* is removed;
271
272 #.  *lookup key*: When no value is currently associated with  *key*, then this operation returns void value (lookup miss).
273     When *key* is associated with *value*, then this operation returns *value*.
274     The *(key, value)* association is not changed.
275
276 The matching criterion used to compare the input key against the keys in the associative array is *exact match*,
277 as the key size (number of bytes) and the key value (array of bytes) have to match exactly for the two keys under comparison.
278
279 **Hash Function**
280
281 A hash function deterministically maps data of variable length (key) to data of fixed size (hash value or key signature).
282 Typically, the size of the key is bigger than the size of the key signature.
283 The hash function basically compresses a long key into a short signature.
284 Several keys can share the same signature (collisions).
285
286 High quality hash functions have uniform distribution.
287 For large number of keys, when dividing the space of signature values into a fixed number of equal intervals (buckets),
288 it is desirable to have the key signatures evenly distributed across these intervals (uniform distribution),
289 as opposed to most of the signatures going into only a few of the intervals
290 and the rest of the intervals being largely unused (non-uniform distribution).
291
292 **Hash Table**
293
294 A hash table is an associative array that uses a hash function for its operation.
295 The reason for using a hash function is to optimize the performance of the lookup operation
296 by minimizing the number of table keys that have to be compared against the input key.
297
298 Instead of storing the (key, value) pairs in a single list, the hash table maintains multiple lists (buckets).
299 For any given key, there is a single bucket where that key might exist, and this bucket is uniquely identified based on the key signature.
300 Once the key signature is computed and the hash table bucket identified,
301 the key is either located in this bucket or it is not present in the hash table at all,
302 so the key search can be narrowed down from the full set of keys currently in the table
303 to just the set of keys currently in the identified table bucket.
304
305 The performance of the hash table lookup operation is greatly improved,
306 provided that the table keys are evenly distributed among the hash table buckets,
307 which can be achieved by using a hash function with uniform distribution.
308 The rule to map a key to its bucket can simply be to use the key signature (modulo the number of table buckets) as the table bucket ID:
309
310     *bucket_id = f_hash(key) % n_buckets;*
311
312 By selecting the number of buckets to be a power of two, the modulo operator can be replaced by a bitwise AND logical operation:
313
314     *bucket_id = f_hash(key) & (n_buckets - 1);*
315
316 considering *n_bits* as the number of bits set in *bucket_mask = n_buckets - 1*,
317 this means that all the keys that end up in the same hash table bucket have the lower *n_bits* of their signature identical.
318 In order to reduce the number of keys in the same bucket (collisions), the number of hash table buckets needs to be increased.
319
320 In packet processing context, the sequence of operations involved in hash table operations is described in :numref:`figure_figure33`:
321
322 .. _figure_figure33:
323
324 .. figure:: img/figure33.*
325
326    Sequence of Steps for Hash Table Operations in a Packet Processing Context
327
328
329
330 Hash Table Use Cases
331 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
332
333 **Flow Classification**
334
335 *Description:* The flow classification is executed at least once for each input packet.
336 This operation maps each incoming packet against one of the known traffic flows in the flow database that typically contains millions of flows.
337
338 *Hash table name:* Flow classification table
339
340 *Number of keys:* Millions
341
342 *Key format:* n-tuple of packet fields that uniquely identify a traffic flow/connection.
343 Example: DiffServ 5-tuple of (Source IP address, Destination IP address, L4 protocol, L4 protocol source port, L4 protocol destination port).
344 For IPv4 protocol and L4 protocols like TCP, UDP or SCTP, the size of the DiffServ 5-tuple is 13 bytes, while for IPv6 it is 37 bytes.
345
346 *Key value (key data):* actions and action meta-data describing what processing to be applied for the packets of the current flow.
347 The size of the data associated with each traffic flow can vary from 8 bytes to kilobytes.
348
349 **Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)**
350
351 *Description:* Once a route has been identified for an IP packet (so the output interface and the IP address of the next hop station are known),
352 the MAC address of the next hop station is needed in order to send this packet onto the next leg of the journey
353 towards its destination (as identified by its destination IP address).
354 The MAC address of the next hop station becomes the destination MAC address of the outgoing Ethernet frame.
355
356 *Hash table name:* ARP table
357
358 *Number of keys:* Thousands
359
360 *Key format:* The pair of (Output interface, Next Hop IP address), which is typically 5 bytes for IPv4 and 17 bytes for IPv6.
361
362 *Key value (key data):* MAC address of the next hop station (6 bytes).
363
364 Hash Table Types
365 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
366
367 :numref:`table_qos_22` lists the hash table configuration parameters shared by all different hash table types.
368
369 .. _table_qos_22:
370
371 .. table:: Configuration Parameters Common for All Hash Table Types
372
373    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
374    | # | Parameter                 | Details                                                                      |
375    |   |                           |                                                                              |
376    +===+===========================+==============================================================================+
377    | 1 | Key size                  | Measured as number of bytes. All keys have the same size.                    |
378    |   |                           |                                                                              |
379    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
380    | 2 | Key value (key data) size | Measured as number of bytes.                                                 |
381    |   |                           |                                                                              |
382    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
383    | 3 | Number of buckets         | Needs to be a power of two.                                                  |
384    |   |                           |                                                                              |
385    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
386    | 4 | Maximum number of keys    | Needs to be a power of two.                                                  |
387    |   |                           |                                                                              |
388    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
389    | 5 | Hash function             | Examples: jhash, CRC hash, etc.                                              |
390    |   |                           |                                                                              |
391    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
392    | 6 | Hash function seed        | Parameter to be passed to the hash function.                                 |
393    |   |                           |                                                                              |
394    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
395    | 7 | Key offset                | Offset of the lookup key byte array within the packet meta-data stored in    |
396    |   |                           | the packet buffer.                                                           |
397    |   |                           |                                                                              |
398    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
399
400 Bucket Full Problem
401 """""""""""""""""""
402
403 On initialization, each hash table bucket is allocated space for exactly 4 keys.
404 As keys are added to the table, it can happen that a given bucket already has 4 keys when a new key has to be added to this bucket.
405 The possible options are:
406
407 #.  **Least Recently Used (LRU) Hash Table.**
408     One of the existing keys in the bucket is deleted and the new key is added in its place.
409     The number of keys in each bucket never grows bigger than 4. The logic to pick the key to be dropped from the bucket is LRU.
410     The hash table lookup operation maintains the order in which the keys in the same bucket are hit, so every time a key is hit,
411     it becomes the new Most Recently Used (MRU) key, i.e. the last candidate for drop.
412     When a key is added to the bucket, it also becomes the new MRU key.
413     When a key needs to be picked and dropped, the first candidate for drop, i.e. the current LRU key, is always picked.
414     The LRU logic requires maintaining specific data structures per each bucket.
415
416 #.  **Extendable Bucket Hash Table.**
417     The bucket is extended with space for 4 more keys.
418     This is done by allocating additional memory at table initialization time,
419     which is used to create a pool of free keys (the size of this pool is configurable and always a multiple of 4).
420     On key add operation, the allocation of a group of 4 keys only happens successfully within the limit of free keys,
421     otherwise the key add operation fails.
422     On key delete operation, a group of 4 keys is freed back to the pool of free keys
423     when the key to be deleted is the only key that was used within its group of 4 keys at that time.
424     On key lookup operation, if the current bucket is in extended state and a match is not found in the first group of 4 keys,
425     the search continues beyond the first group of 4 keys, potentially until all keys in this bucket are examined.
426     The extendable bucket logic requires maintaining specific data structures per table and per each bucket.
427
428 .. _table_qos_23:
429
430 .. table:: Configuration Parameters Specific to Extendable Bucket Hash Table
431
432    +---+---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
433    | # | Parameter                 | Details                                          |
434    |   |                           |                                                  |
435    +===+===========================+==================================================+
436    | 1 | Number of additional keys | Needs to be a power of two, at least equal to 4. |
437    |   |                           |                                                  |
438    +---+---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
439
440
441 Signature Computation
442 """""""""""""""""""""
443
444 The possible options for key signature computation are:
445
446 #.  **Pre-computed key signature.**
447     The key lookup operation is split between two CPU cores.
448     The first CPU core (typically the CPU core that performs packet RX) extracts the key from the input packet,
449     computes the key signature and saves both the key and the key signature in the packet buffer as packet meta-data.
450     The second CPU core reads both the key and the key signature from the packet meta-data
451     and performs the bucket search step of the key lookup operation.
452
453 #.  **Key signature computed on lookup ("do-sig" version).**
454     The same CPU core reads the key from the packet meta-data, uses it to compute the key signature
455     and also performs the bucket search step of the key lookup operation.
456
457 .. _table_qos_24:
458
459 .. table:: Configuration Parameters Specific to Pre-computed Key Signature Hash Table
460
461    +---+------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
462    | # | Parameter        | Details                                                               |
463    |   |                  |                                                                       |
464    +===+==================+=======================================================================+
465    | 1 | Signature offset | Offset of the pre-computed key signature within the packet meta-data. |
466    |   |                  |                                                                       |
467    +---+------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
468
469 Key Size Optimized Hash Tables
470 """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""
471
472 For specific key sizes, the data structures and algorithm of key lookup operation can be specially handcrafted for further performance improvements,
473 so following options are possible:
474
475 #.  **Implementation supporting configurable key size.**
476
477 #.  **Implementation supporting a single key size.**
478     Typical key sizes are 8 bytes and 16 bytes.
479
480 Bucket Search Logic for Configurable Key Size Hash Tables
481 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
482
483 The performance of the bucket search logic is one of the main factors influencing the performance of the key lookup operation.
484 The data structures and algorithm are designed to make the best use of Intel CPU architecture resources like:
485 cache memory space, cache memory bandwidth, external memory bandwidth, multiple execution units working in parallel,
486 out of order instruction execution, special CPU instructions, etc.
487
488 The bucket search logic handles multiple input packets in parallel.
489 It is built as a pipeline of several stages (3 or 4), with each pipeline stage handling two different packets from the burst of input packets.
490 On each pipeline iteration, the packets are pushed to the next pipeline stage: for the 4-stage pipeline,
491 two packets (that just completed stage 3) exit the pipeline,
492 two packets (that just completed stage 2) are now executing stage 3, two packets (that just completed stage 1) are now executing stage 2,
493 two packets (that just completed stage 0) are now executing stage 1 and two packets (next two packets to read from the burst of input packets)
494 are entering the pipeline to execute stage 0.
495 The pipeline iterations continue until all packets from the burst of input packets execute the last stage of the pipeline.
496
497 The bucket search logic is broken into pipeline stages at the boundary of the next memory access.
498 Each pipeline stage uses data structures that are stored (with high probability) into the L1 or L2 cache memory of the current CPU core and
499 breaks just before the next memory access required by the algorithm.
500 The current pipeline stage finalizes by prefetching the data structures required by the next pipeline stage,
501 so given enough time for the prefetch to complete,
502 when the next pipeline stage eventually gets executed for the same packets,
503 it will read the data structures it needs from L1 or L2 cache memory and thus avoid the significant penalty incurred by L2 or L3 cache memory miss.
504
505 By prefetching the data structures required by the next pipeline stage in advance (before they are used)
506 and switching to executing another pipeline stage for different packets,
507 the number of L2 or L3 cache memory misses is greatly reduced, hence one of the main reasons for improved performance.
508 This is because the cost of L2/L3 cache memory miss on memory read accesses is high, as usually due to data dependency between instructions,
509 the CPU execution units have to stall until the read operation is completed from L3 cache memory or external DRAM memory.
510 By using prefetch instructions, the latency of memory read accesses is hidden,
511 provided that it is preformed early enough before the respective data structure is actually used.
512
513 By splitting the processing into several stages that are executed on different packets (the packets from the input burst are interlaced),
514 enough work is created to allow the prefetch instructions to complete successfully (before the prefetched data structures are actually accessed) and
515 also the data dependency between instructions is loosened.
516 For example, for the 4-stage pipeline, stage 0 is executed on packets 0 and 1 and then,
517 before same packets 0 and 1 are used (i.e. before stage 1 is executed on packets 0 and 1),
518 different packets are used: packets 2 and 3 (executing stage 1), packets 4 and 5 (executing stage 2) and packets 6 and 7 (executing stage 3).
519 By executing useful work while the data structures are brought into the L1 or L2 cache memory, the latency of the read memory accesses is hidden.
520 By increasing the gap between two consecutive accesses to the same data structure, the data dependency between instructions is loosened;
521 this allows making the best use of the super-scalar and out-of-order execution CPU architecture,
522 as the number of CPU core execution units that are active (rather than idle or stalled due to data dependency constraints between instructions) is maximized.
523
524 The bucket search logic is also implemented without using any branch instructions.
525 This avoids the important cost associated with flushing the CPU core execution pipeline on every instance of branch misprediction.
526
527 Configurable Key Size Hash Table
528 """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
529
530 :numref:`figure_figure34`, :numref:`table_qos_25` and :numref:`table_qos_26` detail the main data structures used to implement configurable key size hash tables (either LRU or extendable bucket,
531 either with pre-computed signature or "do-sig").
532
533 .. _figure_figure34:
534
535 .. figure:: img/figure34.*
536
537    Data Structures for Configurable Key Size Hash Tables
538
539
540 .. _table_qos_25:
541
542 .. table:: Main Large Data Structures (Arrays) used for Configurable Key Size Hash Tables
543
544    +---+-------------------------+------------------------------+---------------------------+-------------------------------+
545    | # | Array name              | Number of entries            | Entry size (bytes)        | Description                   |
546    |   |                         |                              |                           |                               |
547    +===+=========================+==============================+===========================+===============================+
548    | 1 | Bucket array            | n_buckets (configurable)     | 32                        | Buckets of the hash table.    |
549    |   |                         |                              |                           |                               |
550    +---+-------------------------+------------------------------+---------------------------+-------------------------------+
551    | 2 | Bucket extensions array | n_buckets_ext (configurable) | 32                        | This array is only created    |
552    |   |                         |                              |                           | for extendable bucket tables. |
553    |   |                         |                              |                           |                               |
554    +---+-------------------------+------------------------------+---------------------------+-------------------------------+
555    | 3 | Key array               | n_keys                       | key_size (configurable)   | Keys added to the hash table. |
556    |   |                         |                              |                           |                               |
557    +---+-------------------------+------------------------------+---------------------------+-------------------------------+
558    | 4 | Data array              | n_keys                       | entry_size (configurable) | Key values (key data)         |
559    |   |                         |                              |                           | associated with the hash      |
560    |   |                         |                              |                           | table keys.                   |
561    |   |                         |                              |                           |                               |
562    +---+-------------------------+------------------------------+---------------------------+-------------------------------+
563
564 .. _table_qos_26:
565
566 .. table:: Field Description for Bucket Array Entry (Configurable Key Size Hash Tables)
567
568    +---+------------------+--------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+
569    | # | Field name       | Field size (bytes) | Description                                                      |
570    |   |                  |                    |                                                                  |
571    +===+==================+====================+==================================================================+
572    | 1 | Next Ptr/LRU     | 8                  | For LRU tables, this fields represents the LRU list for the      |
573    |   |                  |                    | current bucket stored as array of 4 entries of 2 bytes each.     |
574    |   |                  |                    | Entry 0 stores the index (0 .. 3) of the MRU key, while entry 3  |
575    |   |                  |                    | stores the index of the LRU key.                                 |
576    |   |                  |                    |                                                                  |
577    |   |                  |                    | For extendable bucket tables, this field represents the next     |
578    |   |                  |                    | pointer (i.e. the pointer to the next group of 4 keys linked to  |
579    |   |                  |                    | the current bucket). The next pointer is not NULL if the bucket  |
580    |   |                  |                    | is currently extended or NULL otherwise.                         |
581    |   |                  |                    | To help the branchless implementation, bit 0 (least significant  |
582    |   |                  |                    | bit) of this field is set to 1 if the next pointer is not NULL   |
583    |   |                  |                    | and to 0 otherwise.                                              |
584    |   |                  |                    |                                                                  |
585    +---+------------------+--------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+
586    | 2 | Sig[0 .. 3]      | 4 x 2              | If key X (X = 0 .. 3) is valid, then sig X bits 15 .. 1 store    |
587    |   |                  |                    | the most significant 15 bits of key X signature and sig X bit 0  |
588    |   |                  |                    | is set to 1.                                                     |
589    |   |                  |                    |                                                                  |
590    |   |                  |                    | If key X is not valid, then sig X is set to zero.                |
591    |   |                  |                    |                                                                  |
592    +---+------------------+--------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+
593    | 3 | Key Pos [0 .. 3] | 4 x 4              | If key X is valid (X = 0 .. 3), then Key Pos X represents the    |
594    |   |                  |                    | index into the key array where key X is stored, as well as the   |
595    |   |                  |                    | index into the data array where the value associated with key X  |
596    |   |                  |                    | is stored.                                                       |
597    |   |                  |                    |                                                                  |
598    |   |                  |                    | If key X is not valid, then the value of Key Pos X is undefined. |
599    |   |                  |                    |                                                                  |
600    +---+------------------+--------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------+
601
602
603 :numref:`figure_figure35` and :numref:`table_qos_27` detail the bucket search pipeline stages (either LRU or extendable bucket,
604 either with pre-computed signature or "do-sig").
605 For each pipeline stage, the described operations are applied to each of the two packets handled by that stage.
606
607 .. _figure_figure35:
608
609 .. figure:: img/figure35.*
610
611    Bucket Search Pipeline for Key Lookup Operation (Configurable Key Size Hash
612    Tables)
613
614
615 .. _table_qos_27:
616
617 .. table:: Description of the Bucket Search Pipeline Stages (Configurable Key Size Hash Tables)
618
619    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
620    | # | Stage name                | Description                                                                  |
621    |   |                           |                                                                              |
622    +===+===========================+==============================================================================+
623    | 0 | Prefetch packet meta-data | Select next two packets from the burst of input packets.                     |
624    |   |                           |                                                                              |
625    |   |                           | Prefetch packet meta-data containing the key and key signature.              |
626    |   |                           |                                                                              |
627    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
628    | 1 | Prefetch table bucket     | Read the key signature from the packet meta-data (for extendable bucket hash |
629    |   |                           | tables) or read the key from the packet meta-data and compute key signature  |
630    |   |                           | (for LRU tables).                                                            |
631    |   |                           |                                                                              |
632    |   |                           | Identify the bucket ID using the key signature.                              |
633    |   |                           |                                                                              |
634    |   |                           | Set bit 0 of the signature to 1 (to match only signatures of valid keys from |
635    |   |                           | the table).                                                                  |
636    |   |                           |                                                                              |
637    |   |                           | Prefetch the bucket.                                                         |
638    |   |                           |                                                                              |
639    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
640    | 2 | Prefetch table key        | Read the key signatures from the bucket.                                     |
641    |   |                           |                                                                              |
642    |   |                           | Compare the signature of the input key against the 4 key signatures from the |
643    |   |                           | packet. As result, the following is obtained:                                |
644    |   |                           |                                                                              |
645    |   |                           | *match*                                                                      |
646    |   |                           | = equal to TRUE if there was at least one signature match and to FALSE in    |
647    |   |                           | the case of no signature match;                                              |
648    |   |                           |                                                                              |
649    |   |                           | *match_many*                                                                 |
650    |   |                           | = equal to TRUE is there were more than one signature matches (can be up to  |
651    |   |                           | 4 signature matches in the worst case scenario) and to FALSE otherwise;      |
652    |   |                           |                                                                              |
653    |   |                           | *match_pos*                                                                  |
654    |   |                           | = the index of the first key that produced signature match (only valid if    |
655    |   |                           | match is true).                                                              |
656    |   |                           |                                                                              |
657    |   |                           | For extendable bucket hash tables only, set                                  |
658    |   |                           | *match_many*                                                                 |
659    |   |                           | to TRUE if next pointer is valid.                                            |
660    |   |                           |                                                                              |
661    |   |                           | Prefetch the bucket key indicated by                                         |
662    |   |                           | *match_pos*                                                                  |
663    |   |                           | (even if                                                                     |
664    |   |                           | *match_pos*                                                                  |
665    |   |                           | does not point to valid key valid).                                          |
666    |   |                           |                                                                              |
667    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
668    | 3 | Prefetch table data       | Read the bucket key indicated by                                             |
669    |   |                           | *match_pos*.                                                                 |
670    |   |                           |                                                                              |
671    |   |                           | Compare the bucket key against the input key. As result, the following is    |
672    |   |                           | obtained:                                                                    |
673    |   |                           | *match_key*                                                                  |
674    |   |                           | = equal to TRUE if the two keys match and to FALSE otherwise.                |
675    |   |                           |                                                                              |
676    |   |                           | Report input key as lookup hit only when both                                |
677    |   |                           | *match*                                                                      |
678    |   |                           | and                                                                          |
679    |   |                           | *match_key*                                                                  |
680    |   |                           | are equal to TRUE and as lookup miss otherwise.                              |
681    |   |                           |                                                                              |
682    |   |                           | For LRU tables only, use branchless logic to update the bucket LRU list      |
683    |   |                           | (the current key becomes the new MRU) only on lookup hit.                    |
684    |   |                           |                                                                              |
685    |   |                           | Prefetch the key value (key data) associated with the current key (to avoid  |
686    |   |                           | branches, this is done on both lookup hit and miss).                         |
687    |   |                           |                                                                              |
688    +---+---------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
689
690
691 Additional notes:
692
693 #.  The pipelined version of the bucket search algorithm is executed only if there are at least 7 packets in the burst of input packets.
694     If there are less than 7 packets in the burst of input packets,
695     a non-optimized implementation of the bucket search algorithm is executed.
696
697 #.  Once the pipelined version of the bucket search algorithm has been executed for all the packets in the burst of input packets,
698     the non-optimized implementation of the bucket search algorithm is also executed for any packets that did not produce a lookup hit,
699     but have the *match_many* flag set.
700     As result of executing the non-optimized version, some of these packets may produce a lookup hit or lookup miss.
701     This does not impact the performance of the key lookup operation,
702     as the probability of matching more than one signature in the same group of 4 keys or of having the bucket in extended state
703     (for extendable bucket hash tables only) is relatively small.
704
705 **Key Signature Comparison Logic**
706
707 The key signature comparison logic is described in :numref:`table_qos_28`.
708
709 .. _table_qos_28:
710
711 .. table:: Lookup Tables for Match, Match_Many and Match_Pos
712
713    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
714    | #  | mask | match (1 bit) | match_many (1 bit) | match_pos (2 bits) |
715    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
716    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
717    | 0  | 0000 | 0             | 0                  | 00                 |
718    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
719    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
720    | 1  | 0001 | 1             | 0                  | 00                 |
721    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
722    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
723    | 2  | 0010 | 1             | 0                  | 01                 |
724    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
725    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
726    | 3  | 0011 | 1             | 1                  | 00                 |
727    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
728    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
729    | 4  | 0100 | 1             | 0                  | 10                 |
730    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
731    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
732    | 5  | 0101 | 1             | 1                  | 00                 |
733    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
734    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
735    | 6  | 0110 | 1             | 1                  | 01                 |
736    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
737    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
738    | 7  | 0111 | 1             | 1                  | 00                 |
739    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
740    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
741    | 8  | 1000 | 1             | 0                  | 11                 |
742    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
743    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
744    | 9  | 1001 | 1             | 1                  | 00                 |
745    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
746    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
747    | 10 | 1010 | 1             | 1                  | 01                 |
748    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
749    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
750    | 11 | 1011 | 1             | 1                  | 00                 |
751    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
752    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
753    | 12 | 1100 | 1             | 1                  | 10                 |
754    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
755    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
756    | 13 | 1101 | 1             | 1                  | 00                 |
757    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
758    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
759    | 14 | 1110 | 1             | 1                  | 01                 |
760    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
761    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
762    | 15 | 1111 | 1             | 1                  | 00                 |
763    |    |      |               |                    |                    |
764    +----+------+---------------+--------------------+--------------------+
765
766 The input *mask* hash bit X (X = 0 .. 3) set to 1 if input signature is equal to bucket signature X and set to 0 otherwise.
767 The outputs *match*, *match_many* and *match_pos* are 1 bit, 1 bit and 2 bits in size respectively and their meaning has been explained above.
768
769 As displayed in :numref:`table_qos_29`, the lookup tables for *match* and *match_many* can be collapsed into a single 32-bit value and the lookup table for
770 *match_pos* can be collapsed into a 64-bit value.
771 Given the input *mask*, the values for *match*, *match_many* and *match_pos* can be obtained by indexing their respective bit array to extract 1 bit,
772 1 bit and 2 bits respectively with branchless logic.
773
774 .. _table_qos_29:
775
776 .. table:: Collapsed Lookup Tables for Match, Match_Many and Match_Pos
777
778    +------------+------------------------------------------+-------------------+
779    |            | Bit array                                | Hexadecimal value |
780    |            |                                          |                   |
781    +------------+------------------------------------------+-------------------+
782    | match      | 1111_1111_1111_1110                      | 0xFFFELLU         |
783    |            |                                          |                   |
784    +------------+------------------------------------------+-------------------+
785    | match_many | 1111_1110_1110_1000                      | 0xFEE8LLU         |
786    |            |                                          |                   |
787    +------------+------------------------------------------+-------------------+
788    | match_pos  | 0001_0010_0001_0011__0001_0010_0001_0000 | 0x12131210LLU     |
789    |            |                                          |                   |
790    +------------+------------------------------------------+-------------------+
791
792
793 The pseudo-code for match, match_many and match_pos is::
794
795     match = (0xFFFELLU >> mask) & 1;
796
797     match_many = (0xFEE8LLU >> mask) & 1;
798
799     match_pos = (0x12131210LLU >> (mask << 1)) & 3;
800
801 Single Key Size Hash Tables
802 """""""""""""""""""""""""""
803
804 :numref:`figure_figure37`, :numref:`figure_figure38`, :numref:`table_qos_30` and :numref:`table_qos_31` detail the main data structures used to implement 8-byte and 16-byte key hash tables
805 (either LRU or extendable bucket, either with pre-computed signature or "do-sig").
806
807 .. _figure_figure37:
808
809 .. figure:: img/figure37.*
810
811    Data Structures for 8-byte Key Hash Tables
812
813
814 .. _figure_figure38:
815
816 .. figure:: img/figure38.*
817
818    Data Structures for 16-byte Key Hash Tables
819
820
821 .. _table_qos_30:
822
823 .. table:: Main Large Data Structures (Arrays) used for 8-byte and 16-byte Key Size Hash Tables
824
825    +---+-------------------------+------------------------------+----------------------+------------------------------------+
826    | # | Array name              | Number of entries            | Entry size (bytes)   | Description                        |
827    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
828    +===+=========================+==============================+======================+====================================+
829    | 1 | Bucket array            | n_buckets (configurable)     | *8-byte key size:*   | Buckets of the hash table.         |
830    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
831    |   |                         |                              | 64 + 4 x entry_size  |                                    |
832    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
833    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
834    |   |                         |                              | *16-byte key size:*  |                                    |
835    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
836    |   |                         |                              | 128 + 4 x entry_size |                                    |
837    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
838    +---+-------------------------+------------------------------+----------------------+------------------------------------+
839    | 2 | Bucket extensions array | n_buckets_ext (configurable) | *8-byte key size:*   | This array is only created for     |
840    |   |                         |                              |                      | extendable bucket tables.          |
841    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
842    |   |                         |                              | 64 + 4 x entry_size  |                                    |
843    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
844    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
845    |   |                         |                              | *16-byte key size:*  |                                    |
846    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
847    |   |                         |                              | 128 + 4 x entry_size |                                    |
848    |   |                         |                              |                      |                                    |
849    +---+-------------------------+------------------------------+----------------------+------------------------------------+
850
851 .. _table_qos_31:
852
853 .. table:: Field Description for Bucket Array Entry (8-byte and 16-byte Key Hash Tables)
854
855    +---+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
856    | # | Field name    | Field size (bytes) | Description                                                                   |
857    |   |               |                    |                                                                               |
858    +===+===============+====================+===============================================================================+
859    | 1 | Valid         | 8                  | Bit X (X = 0 .. 3) is set to 1 if key X is valid or to 0 otherwise.           |
860    |   |               |                    |                                                                               |
861    |   |               |                    | Bit 4 is only used for extendable bucket tables to help with the              |
862    |   |               |                    | implementation of the branchless logic. In this case, bit 4 is set to 1 if    |
863    |   |               |                    | next pointer is valid (not NULL) or to 0 otherwise.                           |
864    |   |               |                    |                                                                               |
865    +---+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
866    | 2 | Next Ptr/LRU  | 8                  | For LRU tables, this fields represents the LRU list for the current bucket    |
867    |   |               |                    | stored as array of 4 entries of 2 bytes each. Entry 0 stores the index        |
868    |   |               |                    | (0 .. 3) of the MRU key, while entry 3 stores the index of the LRU key.       |
869    |   |               |                    |                                                                               |
870    |   |               |                    | For extendable bucket tables, this field represents the next pointer (i.e.    |
871    |   |               |                    | the pointer to the next group of 4 keys linked to the current bucket). The    |
872    |   |               |                    | next pointer is not NULL if the bucket is currently extended or NULL          |
873    |   |               |                    | otherwise.                                                                    |
874    |   |               |                    |                                                                               |
875    +---+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
876    | 3 | Key [0 .. 3]  | 4 x key_size       | Full keys.                                                                    |
877    |   |               |                    |                                                                               |
878    +---+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
879    | 4 | Data [0 .. 3] | 4 x entry_size     | Full key values (key data) associated with keys 0 .. 3.                       |
880    |   |               |                    |                                                                               |
881    +---+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
882
883 and detail the bucket search pipeline used to implement 8-byte and 16-byte key hash tables (either LRU or extendable bucket,
884 either with pre-computed signature or "do-sig").
885 For each pipeline stage, the described operations are applied to each of the two packets handled by that stage.
886
887 .. _figure_figure39:
888
889 .. figure:: img/figure39.*
890
891    Bucket Search Pipeline for Key Lookup Operation (Single Key Size Hash
892    Tables)
893
894
895 .. _table_qos_32:
896
897 .. table:: Description of the Bucket Search Pipeline Stages (8-byte and 16-byte Key Hash Tables)
898
899    +---+---------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
900    | # | Stage name                | Description                                                                 |
901    |   |                           |                                                                             |
902    +===+===========================+=============================================================================+
903    | 0 | Prefetch packet meta-data | #.  Select next two packets from the burst of input packets.                |
904    |   |                           |                                                                             |
905    |   |                           | #.  Prefetch packet meta-data containing the key and key signature.         |
906    |   |                           |                                                                             |
907    +---+---------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
908    | 1 | Prefetch table bucket     | #.  Read the key signature from the packet meta-data (for extendable bucket |
909    |   |                           |     hash tables) or read the key from the packet meta-data and compute key  |
910    |   |                           |     signature (for LRU tables).                                             |
911    |   |                           |                                                                             |
912    |   |                           | #.  Identify the bucket ID using the key signature.                         |
913    |   |                           |                                                                             |
914    |   |                           | #.  Prefetch the bucket.                                                    |
915    |   |                           |                                                                             |
916    +---+---------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
917    | 2 | Prefetch table data       | #.  Read the bucket.                                                        |
918    |   |                           |                                                                             |
919    |   |                           | #.  Compare all 4 bucket keys against the input key.                        |
920    |   |                           |                                                                             |
921    |   |                           | #.  Report input key as lookup hit only when a match is identified (more    |
922    |   |                           |     than one key match is not possible)                                     |
923    |   |                           |                                                                             |
924    |   |                           | #.  For LRU tables only, use branchless logic to update the bucket LRU list |
925    |   |                           |     (the current key becomes the new MRU) only on lookup hit.               |
926    |   |                           |                                                                             |
927    |   |                           | #.  Prefetch the key value (key data) associated with the matched key (to   |
928    |   |                           |     avoid branches, this is done on both lookup hit and miss).              |
929    |   |                           |                                                                             |
930    +---+---------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
931
932 Additional notes:
933
934 #.  The pipelined version of the bucket search algorithm is executed only if there are at least 5 packets in the burst of input packets.
935     If there are less than 5 packets in the burst of input packets, a non-optimized implementation of the bucket search algorithm is executed.
936
937 #.  For extendable bucket hash tables only,
938     once the pipelined version of the bucket search algorithm has been executed for all the packets in the burst of input packets,
939     the non-optimized implementation of the bucket search algorithm is also executed for any packets that did not produce a lookup hit,
940     but have the bucket in extended state.
941     As result of executing the non-optimized version, some of these packets may produce a lookup hit or lookup miss.
942     This does not impact the performance of the key lookup operation,
943     as the probability of having the bucket in extended state is relatively small.
944
945 Pipeline Library Design
946 -----------------------
947
948 A pipeline is defined by:
949
950 #.  The set of input ports;
951
952 #.  The set of output ports;
953
954 #.  The set of tables;
955
956 #.  The set of actions.
957
958 The input ports are connected with the output ports through tree-like topologies of interconnected tables.
959 The table entries contain the actions defining the operations to be executed on the input packets and the packet flow within the pipeline.
960
961 Connectivity of Ports and Tables
962 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
963
964 To avoid any dependencies on the order in which pipeline elements are created,
965 the connectivity of pipeline elements is defined after all the pipeline input ports,
966 output ports and tables have been created.
967
968 General connectivity rules:
969
970 #.  Each input port is connected to a single table. No input port should be left unconnected;
971
972 #.  The table connectivity to other tables or to output ports is regulated by the next hop actions of each table entry and the default table entry.
973     The table connectivity is fluid, as the table entries and the default table entry can be updated during run-time.
974
975     *   A table can have multiple entries (including the default entry) connected to the same output port.
976         A table can have different entries connected to different output ports.
977         Different tables can have entries (including default table entry) connected to the same output port.
978
979     *   A table can have multiple entries (including the default entry) connected to another table,
980         in which case all these entries have to point to the same table.
981         This constraint is enforced by the API and prevents tree-like topologies from being created (allowing table chaining only),
982         with the purpose of simplifying the implementation of the pipeline run-time execution engine.
983
984 Port Actions
985 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
986
987 Port Action Handler
988 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
989
990 An action handler can be assigned to each input/output port to define actions to be executed on each input packet that is received by the port.
991 Defining the action handler for a specific input/output port is optional (i.e. the action handler can be disabled).
992
993 For input ports, the action handler is executed after RX function. For output ports, the action handler is executed before the TX function.
994
995 The action handler can decide to drop packets.
996
997 Table Actions
998 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
999
1000 Table Action Handler
1001 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1002
1003 An action handler to be executed on each input packet can be assigned to each table.
1004 Defining the action handler for a specific table is optional (i.e. the action handler can be disabled).
1005
1006 The action handler is executed after the table lookup operation is performed and the table entry associated with each input packet is identified.
1007 The action handler can only handle the user-defined actions, while the reserved actions (e.g. the next hop actions) are handled by the Packet Framework.
1008 The action handler can decide to drop the input packet.
1009
1010 Reserved Actions
1011 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1012
1013 The reserved actions are handled directly by the Packet Framework without the user being able to change their meaning
1014 through the table action handler configuration.
1015 A special category of the reserved actions is represented by the next hop actions, which regulate the packet flow between input ports,
1016 tables and output ports through the pipeline.
1017 :numref:`table_qos_33` lists the next hop actions.
1018
1019 .. _table_qos_33:
1020
1021 .. table:: Next Hop Actions (Reserved)
1022
1023    +---+---------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1024    | # | Next hop action     | Description                                                                       |
1025    |   |                     |                                                                                   |
1026    +===+=====================+===================================================================================+
1027    | 1 | Drop                | Drop the current packet.                                                          |
1028    |   |                     |                                                                                   |
1029    +---+---------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1030    | 2 | Send to output port | Send the current packet to specified output port. The output port ID is metadata  |
1031    |   |                     | stored in the same table entry.                                                   |
1032    |   |                     |                                                                                   |
1033    +---+---------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1034    | 3 | Send to table       | Send the current packet to specified table. The table ID is metadata stored in    |
1035    |   |                     | the same table entry.                                                             |
1036    |   |                     |                                                                                   |
1037    +---+---------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1038
1039 User Actions
1040 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
1041
1042 For each table, the meaning of user actions is defined through the configuration of the table action handler.
1043 Different tables can be configured with different action handlers, therefore the meaning of the user actions
1044 and their associated meta-data is private to each table.
1045 Within the same table, all the table entries (including the table default entry) share the same definition
1046 for the user actions and their associated meta-data,
1047 with each table entry having its own set of enabled user actions and its own copy of the action meta-data.
1048 :numref:`table_qos_34` contains a non-exhaustive list of user action examples.
1049
1050 .. _table_qos_34:
1051
1052 .. table:: User Action Examples
1053
1054    +---+-----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
1055    | # | User action                       | Description                                                         |
1056    |   |                                   |                                                                     |
1057    +===+===================================+=====================================================================+
1058    | 1 | Metering                          | Per flow traffic metering using the srTCM and trTCM algorithms.     |
1059    |   |                                   |                                                                     |
1060    +---+-----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
1061    | 2 | Statistics                        | Update the statistics counters maintained per flow.                 |
1062    |   |                                   |                                                                     |
1063    +---+-----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
1064    | 3 | App ID                            | Per flow state machine fed by variable length sequence of packets   |
1065    |   |                                   | at the flow initialization with the purpose of identifying the      |
1066    |   |                                   | traffic type and application.                                       |
1067    |   |                                   |                                                                     |
1068    +---+-----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
1069    | 4 | Push/pop labels                   | Push/pop VLAN/MPLS labels to/from the current packet.               |
1070    |   |                                   |                                                                     |
1071    +---+-----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
1072    | 5 | Network Address Translation (NAT) | Translate between the internal (LAN) and external (WAN) IP          |
1073    |   |                                   | destination/source address and/or L4 protocol destination/source    |
1074    |   |                                   | port.                                                               |
1075    |   |                                   |                                                                     |
1076    +---+-----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
1077    | 6 | TTL update                        | Decrement IP TTL and, in case of IPv4 packets, update the IP        |
1078    |   |                                   | checksum.                                                           |
1079    |   |                                   |                                                                     |
1080    +---+-----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
1081
1082 Multicore Scaling
1083 -----------------
1084
1085 A complex application is typically split across multiple cores, with cores communicating through SW queues.
1086 There is usually a performance limit on the number of table lookups
1087 and actions that can be fitted on the same CPU core due to HW constraints like:
1088 available CPU cycles, cache memory size, cache transfer BW, memory transfer BW, etc.
1089
1090 As the application is split across multiple CPU cores, the Packet Framework facilitates the creation of several pipelines,
1091 the assignment of each such pipeline to a different CPU core
1092 and the interconnection of all CPU core-level pipelines into a single application-level complex pipeline.
1093 For example, if CPU core A is assigned to run pipeline P1 and CPU core B pipeline P2,
1094 then the interconnection of P1 with P2 could be achieved by having the same set of SW queues act like output ports
1095 for P1 and input ports for P2.
1096
1097 This approach enables the application development using the pipeline, run-to-completion (clustered) or hybrid (mixed) models.
1098
1099 It is allowed for the same core to run several pipelines, but it is not allowed for several cores to run the same pipeline.
1100
1101 Shared Data Structures
1102 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1103
1104 The threads performing table lookup are actually table writers rather than just readers.
1105 Even if the specific table lookup algorithm is thread-safe for multiple readers
1106 (e. g. read-only access of the search algorithm data structures is enough to conduct the lookup operation),
1107 once the table entry for the current packet is identified, the thread is typically expected to update the action meta-data stored in the table entry
1108 (e.g. increment the counter tracking the number of packets that hit this table entry), and thus modify the table entry.
1109 During the time this thread is accessing this table entry (either writing or reading; duration is application specific),
1110 for data consistency reasons, no other threads (threads performing table lookup or entry add/delete operations) are allowed to modify this table entry.
1111
1112 Mechanisms to share the same table between multiple threads:
1113
1114 #.  **Multiple writer threads.**
1115     Threads need to use synchronization primitives like semaphores (distinct semaphore per table entry) or atomic instructions.
1116     The cost of semaphores is usually high, even when the semaphore is free.
1117     The cost of atomic instructions is normally higher than the cost of regular instructions.
1118
1119 #.  **Multiple writer threads, with single thread performing table lookup operations and multiple threads performing table entry add/delete operations.**
1120     The threads performing table entry add/delete operations send table update requests to the reader (typically through message passing queues),
1121     which does the actual table updates and then sends the response back to the request initiator.
1122
1123 #.  **Single writer thread performing table entry add/delete operations and multiple reader threads that perform table lookup operations with read-only access to the table entries.**
1124     The reader threads use the main table copy while the writer is updating the mirror copy.
1125     Once the writer update is done, the writer can signal to the readers and busy wait until all readers swaps between the mirror copy (which now becomes the main copy) and
1126     the mirror copy (which now becomes the main copy).
1127
1128 Interfacing with Accelerators
1129 -----------------------------
1130
1131 The presence of accelerators is usually detected during the initialization phase by inspecting the HW devices that are part of the system (e.g. by PCI bus enumeration).
1132 Typical devices with acceleration capabilities are:
1133
1134 *   Inline accelerators: NICs, switches, FPGAs, etc;
1135
1136 *   Look-aside accelerators: chipsets, FPGAs, etc.
1137
1138 Usually, to support a specific functional block, specific implementation of Packet Framework tables and/or ports and/or actions has to be provided for each accelerator,
1139 with all the implementations sharing the same API: pure SW implementation (no acceleration), implementation using accelerator A, implementation using accelerator B, etc.
1140 The selection between these implementations could be done at build time or at run-time (recommended), based on which accelerators are present in the system,
1141 with no application changes required.