Well, yes, there are performance problems, as I predicted.
On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 04:42:17PM -0700, Xuemei Liu wrote: > Let me try to describe it. Suppose the topology is h1-s1-h2, where h1, h2 > are hosts, and s1 is the ovs switch. I add policy in s1 to forward packets > with dstip of h2 to h2. Then I test in two scenarios. > 1. h1 sends 9 packets (3 packet for each of 3 different flows) to h2. With > your methods, userspace in s1 can accept all the packets, and h2 can > receive all the 9 packets. Work perfect. > 2. h1 sends 10000 packets to h2. In this case, h2 receives the same packets > as userspace in s1 does. However, the number of packets received is much > less than 10000. Which means many packets are lost in s1. > Is this clear now? > > Thanks, > Xuemei > > On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 4:18 PM, Ben Pfaff <b...@nicira.com> wrote: > > > That's too vague for me to guess. What packets are getting lost? > > > > On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 04:10:14PM -0700, Xuemei Liu wrote: > > > Hi, Ben, > > > > > > I tried your method, but the switch seems to drop some packets, as it > > does > > > not output the expected packets that I forward to send to it. Any advice? > > > > > > Thanks, > > > Xuemei > > > > > > On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 10:19 AM, Xuemei Liu <lxuemei3...@gmail.com> > > wrote: > > > > > > > Hi, Ben, > > > > > > > > Thanks for your response. > > > > "You realize that this will be terrible for performance, right?" > > > > In fact, I have not got all packets sent to user space. That is the > > > > problem I am facing now. I think performance might be another problem > > after > > > > I can receive all packet in user space. > > > > > > > > Thanks, > > > > Xuemei > > > > > > > > On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 10:13 AM, Ben Pfaff <b...@nicira.com> wrote: > > > > > > > >> On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 10:04:23AM -0700, Xuemei Liu wrote: > > > >> > I am new to ovs, and I am trying to send all packets from kernel > > space > > > >> to > > > >> > user space. I comment the "unlikely(!flow)" in datapath/datapath.c. > > > >> > However, it seems I just receive the first packet of each flow (the > > > >> first > > > >> > packet that match one forwarding rule in the bridge) in user space. > > > >> Could > > > >> > anyone tell me why? and is there other way to achieve my goal? > > > >> > > > >> You realize that this will be terrible for performance, right? > > > >> > > > >> It's kind of a waste to modify the kernel module for this. I'd just > > > >> modify userspace to send all packets to userspace, something like > > this: > > > >> > > > >> diff --git a/ofproto/ofproto-dpif-xlate.c > > b/ofproto/ofproto-dpif-xlate.c > > > >> index 52395a7..a98406a 100644 > > > >> --- a/ofproto/ofproto-dpif-xlate.c > > > >> +++ b/ofproto/ofproto-dpif-xlate.c > > > >> @@ -4777,7 +4777,7 @@ xlate_actions(struct xlate_in *xin, struct > > > >> xlate_out *xout) > > > >> > > > >> ctx.xin = xin; > > > >> ctx.xout = xout; > > > >> - ctx.xout->slow = 0; > > > >> + ctx.xout->slow = SLOW_ACTION; > > > >> ctx.xout->has_learn = false; > > > >> ctx.xout->has_normal = false; > > > >> ctx.xout->has_fin_timeout = false; > > > >> > > > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ discuss mailing list discuss@openvswitch.org http://openvswitch.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss