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This Intel DLB device plugin provides support for Intel DLB devices under Kubernetes.
The DLB device plugin requires a Linux Kernel DLB driver to be installed and enabled to operate. Get DLB software release, build and load the dlb2 driver module following the instruction of 'DLB_Driver_User_Guide.pdf' in the directory 'dlb/docs'.
After successfully loading the module, available dlb device nodes are visible in devfs.
$ ls -1 /dev/dlb*
/dev/dlb0 /dev/dlb1 /dev/dlb2 ...
If you configure SR-IOV/VF (virtual functions), continue the following configurations. This instruction uses DPDK tool to check eventdev devices, unbind a VF device, and bind dlb2 driver to a VF device.
Patch dpdk sources to work with DLB:
$ wget -q https://fast.dpdk.org/rel/dpdk-21.11.tar.xz -O- | tar -Jx
$ wget -q https://downloadmirror.intel.com/734482/dlb_linux_src_release_7.7.0_2022_06_17.txz -O- | tar -Jx
$ cd ./dpdk-*/ && patch -p1 < ../dlb/dpdk/dpdk_dlb_*_diff.patch
$ sed -i 's/270b,2710,2714/270b,2710,2711,2714/g' ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py
List eventdev devices:
$ ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -s | grep -A10 ^Eventdev
Eventdev devices using kernel driver
====================================
0000:6d:00.0 'Device 2710' drv=dlb2 unused=
0000:72:00.0 'Device 2710' drv=dlb2 unused=
...
Enable virtual functions:
$ echo 4 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/sriov_numvfs
Note:: If it fails saying "No such file or directory," it may be bound to vfio-pci driver. Bind the device to dlb2 driver.
Check if new dlb device nodes appear:
$ ls -1 /dev/dlb*
/dev/dlb0 /dev/dlb1 /dev/dlb10 /dev/dlb11 ... /dev/dlb8 /dev/dlb9
Check that new eventdev devices appear:
$ ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -s | grep -A14 ^Eventdev
Eventdev devices using kernel driver
====================================
0000:6d:00.0 'Device 2710' drv=dlb2 unused=
0000:6d:00.1 'Device 2711' drv=dlb2 unused=
0000:6d:00.2 'Device 2711' drv=dlb2 unused=
0000:6d:00.3 'Device 2711' drv=dlb2 unused=
0000:6d:00.4 'Device 2711' drv=dlb2 unused=
0000:72:00.0 'Device 2710' drv=dlb2 unused=
...
Assign PF resources to VF:
Note:: The process below is only for the first vf resource among 4 resources. Repeat for other vfN_resources in /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:6d:00.0/, and then bind dlb2 driver to 0000:6d:00.M that corresponds to vfN_resources.
$ sudo ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --unbind 0000:6d:00.1
$ echo 2048 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_atomic_inflights &&
echo 2048 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_dir_credits &&
echo 64 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_dir_ports &&
echo 2048 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_hist_list_entries &&
echo 8192 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_ldb_credits &&
echo 64 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_ldb_ports &&
echo 32 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_ldb_queues &&
echo 32 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_sched_domains &&
echo 2 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_sn0_slots &&
echo 2 | sudo tee -a /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:6d\:00.0/vf0_resources/num_sn1_slots
$ sudo ./usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --bind dlb2 0000:6d:00.1
Run libdlb example app:
Note:: Alternative way is to use this Dockerfile for running tests.
$ ls
dlb dpdk-21.11
$ cd ./dlb/libdlb/ && make && sudo LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$PWD ./examples/dir_traffic -n 128 -d 1
# For running test for /dev/dlbN, replace 1 with N.
Run dpdk example app:
Note:: Alternative way is to use this Dockerfile for patching and building DPDK and running tests.
$ sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install build-essential meson python3-pyelftools libnuma-dev python3-pip && sudo pip install ninja
# This configuration is based on Ubuntu/Debian distribution. For other distributions that do not use apt, install the dependencies using another way.
$ ls
dlb dpdk-21.11
$ cd ./dpdk-* && meson setup --prefix $(pwd)/installdir builddir && ninja -C builddir install
sudo ./builddir/app/dpdk-test-eventdev --no-huge --vdev='dlb2_event,dev_id=1' -- --test=order_queue --nb_flows 64 --nb_pkts 512 --plcores 1 --wlcores 2-7
# For running test for /dev/dlbN, replace 1 with N.
The following sections detail how to obtain, build, deploy and test the DLB device plugin.
Examples are provided showing how to deploy the plugin either using a DaemonSet or by hand on a per-node basis.
Pre-built images of this component are available on the Docker hub. These images are automatically built and uploaded to the hub from the latest main branch of this repository.
Release tagged images of the components are also available on the Docker hub, tagged with their
release version numbers in the format x.y.z, corresponding to the branches and releases in this
repository. Thus the easiest way to deploy the plugin in your cluster is to run this command
$ kubectl apply -k 'https://github.com/intel/intel-device-plugins-for-kubernetes/deployments/dlb_plugin?ref=<RELEASE_VERSION>'
daemonset.apps/intel-dlb-plugin created
Where <RELEASE_VERSION> needs to be substituted with the desired release tag or main to get devel images.
Nothing else is needed. See the development guide for details if you want to deploy a customized version of the plugin.
You can verify the plugin has been registered with the expected nodes by searching for the relevant resource allocation status on the nodes:
$ kubectl get nodes -o go-template='{{range .items}}{{.metadata.name}}{{"\n"}}{{range $k,$v:=.status.allocatable}}{{" "}}{{$k}}{{": "}}{{$v}}{{"\n"}}{{end}}{{end}}' | grep '^\([^ ]\)\|\( dlb\)'
master
dlb.intel.com/pf: 7
dlb.intel.com/vf: 4
We can test the plugin is working by deploying the provided example test images (dlb-libdlb-demo and dlb-dpdk-demo).
Build a Docker image and create a pod running unit tests off the local Docker image:
$ make dlb-libdlb-demo
...
Successfully tagged intel/dlb-libdlb-demo:devel
$ kubectl apply -f ${INTEL_DEVICE_PLUGINS_SRC}/demo/dlb-libdlb-demo-pod.yaml
pod/dlb-libdlb-demo-pod created
$ make dlb-dpdk-demo
...
Successfully tagged intel/dlb-dpdk-demo:devel
$ kubectl apply -f ${INTEL_DEVICE_PLUGINS_SRC}/demo/dlb-dpdk-demo-pod.yaml
pod/dlb-dpdk-demo-pod created
Wait until pod is completed:
$ kubectl get pods | grep dlb-.*-demo
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
dlb-dpdk-demo 0/2 Completed 0 79m
dlb-libdlb-demo 0/2 Completed 0 18h
Review the job's logs:
$ kubectl logs dlb-libdlb-demo <pf/vf>
<log output>
$ kubectl logs dlb-dpdk-demo <pf/vf>
<log output>
If the pod did not successfully launch, possibly because it could not obtain the DLB
resource, it will be stuck in the Pending status:
$ kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
dlb-dpdk-demo 0/2 Pending 0 3s
dlb-libdlb-demo 0/2 Pending 0 10s
This can be verified by checking the Events of the pod:
$ kubectl describe pod dlb-libdlb-demo | grep -A3 Events:
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Warning FailedScheduling 85s default-scheduler 0/1 nodes are available: 1 Insufficient dlb.intel.com/pf, 1 Insufficient dlb.intel.com/vf.
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