|
|
(201 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) |
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
− | = Abstract = | + | <div class="orbitron"><font size="+3">Welcome to the EJFAT Wiki</font><br></div>('''E'''Snet / '''J'''LaB '''F'''PGA '''A'''ccelerated '''T'''ransport) |
| | | |
− | We describe a collaboration between Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) and Thomas Jefferson National Laboratory (JLab) for proof of concept engineering to program a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) for network data routing of commonly tagged UDP packets to individual and configurable destination endpoints in an end-point compute work load balanced manner, including some additional tagging for stream reassembly at the endpoint. The primary purpose of this FPGA based acceleration is to load balance work to destination compute farm endpoints with low latency and full line rate bandwidth of 100 Gbs with feedback from the destination compute farm. ESnet used P4 programming on the FPGA to process meta-data in the UDP packet stream to route packets with a common tag to dynamically configurable endpoints controlled by the endpoint farm. Control plane programming tasks included work-load status notifications from destination endpoints and notification processing by the FPGA host CPU to dynamically re-configure routing tables for the FPGA P4 code.
| + | <br><hr><br> |
| + | <div class="orbitron"><font size="+1">System Overview:</font></div>''EJFAT is a collaboration between Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) and Thomas Jefferson National Laboratory (JLab) for proof of concept engineering for accelerated load balancer (LB) using dynamic IP4/6 address forwarding. Dynamic because the forwarding address is chosen dynamically from a collection of destination endpoints based on near real-time destination workload conditions, and accelerated because the forwarding is accomplished with low fixed latency at line rates of up to 200Gbps per FPGA, where in general a functioning LB may consist of up to four FPGAs acting as one logical DP for a total bandwidth capacity of over 1 Tbps. The low, fixed latency is achieved by utilization of an appropriately programmed Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) to effect the Data Plane (DP) functions of the LB. |
| | | |
− | = EJFAT Overview = | + | == EJFAT System Status == |
| + | === ejfat-1 === |
| + | # 100Gbps NIC: ejfat-1-daq 129.57.177.8 |
| + | # 10Gbps NIC: ejfat-1 129.57.177.131 |
| + | # U280 FPGA: ejfat-1-dp 129.57.177.{9-16} - '''LAG'd for 200Gbps''' |
| + | # LB CP: ejfat-1 129.57.177.131, latest Stable branch |
| + | # LB: DP latest Stable FW |
| + | # CP Web UI port 8081 |
| | | |
− | This collaboration between ESnet and JLab for FPGA Accelerated Transport (EJFAT) seeks an application specific network data routing capability to dynamically route selected UDP traffic with endpoint feedback.
| + | === ejfat-2 === |
| + | # 100Gbps NIC: ejfat-2-daq 129.57.177.2 |
| + | # 10Gbps NIC: ejfat-2 129.57.177.132 |
| + | # 100Gbps U280 FPGA: ejfat-2-dp 129.57.177.{17-24} |
| + | # LB CP: ejfat-2 129.57.177.132, latest Stable branch |
| + | # LB: DP latest Stable FW |
| + | # CP Web UI port 8082 |
| | | |
− | EJFAT will add meta-data to UDP data streams to be used both by the intervening FPGA, acting as a routing work Load Balancer (LB), to re-direct data packets from multiple logical input streams sharing a common tag and dynamically route to endpoints and for an endpoint Reassembly Engine (RE) to perform custom reassembly resulting from network equipment fragmentation.
| + | === ejfat-3 === |
| + | # 200Gbps NIC: ejfat-3-daq 129.57.177.3 |
| + | # 10Gbps NIC: ejfat-3 129.57.177.133 |
| + | # '''Two U280s installed - LAG'd for 400Gbps''' |
| + | # FW Containers built by Stacey |
| | | |
− | While the routing/reassembly meta-data included in the source data header in the payload is generic in design, it is being first utilized for streamed (non-triggered) data from the JLab DAQ to the back-end compute farm.
| + | === ejfat-4 === |
| + | # 100Gbps NIC: ejfat-4-daq 129.57.177.4 |
| + | # 10Gbps NIC: ejfat-4 129.57.177.134 |
| + | # '''XDP experiments''' |
| + | # 100Gbps U280 FPGA: ejfat-4-dp 129.57.177.{41-48} |
| + | # LB CP: ejfat-4 129.57.177.134, <s>latest Stable branch</s> |
| + | # LB: DP <s>latest Stable FW</s> |
| | | |
− | In the initial JLab deployment context, the FPGA will use a common time-stamp across detector Data Acquisition System (DAQ) channels for the purpose of load balancing work to individual compute farm destinations via dynamically configurable routing strategy in a farm status aware manner (see Figure X in Appendix X).
| + | === ejfat-5 === |
| + | # 200Gbps NIC: ejfat-5-daq 129.57.177.5 |
| + | # 10Gbps NIC: ejfat-5 129.57.177.135 |
| + | # LB CP: ejfat-5 129.57.177.135, <s>latest Stable branch</s> |
| + | # 100Gbps U280 FPGA: ejfat-5-dp 129.57.177.{49-56} |
| + | # LB: DP <s>latest Stable FW</s> |
| + | # '''Optical Taps Installed''' |
| | | |
− | This load balancing of computational work is under direct control of the compute farm via dynamic management of routing information communicated to the FPGA host CPU which is passed on to the FPGA.
| + | === ejfat-6 === |
| + | # 200Gbps NIC: ejfat-6-daq 129.57.177.6 |
| + | # 10Gbps NIC: ejfat-6 129.57.177.136 |
| + | # DAOS experiments |
| + | # '''Using Ubuntu 24.04 LTS''' |
| + | # FW containers built |
| + | # Waiting for podman compose installation |
| | | |
− | As the routed data is opaque to this design, it should be reusable for other data streams with customizable routing needs.
| + | === ejfat-fs === |
| + | # 100Gbps NIC: ejfat-fs-daq 129.57.177.7 |
| + | # 10Gbps NIC: ejfat-fs 129.57.177.130 |
| + | # Hosts NVME memory/disk |
| + | # 100Gbps U280 FPGA: ejfat-fs-dp 129.57.177.{65-72} |
| + | # LB CP: ejfat-fs 129.57.177.130, latest Stable branch |
| + | # LB: DP latest Stable FW |
| + | # CP Web UI port 8080 |
| | | |
− | = Read Out Controller Processing = | + | == Presentations/Papers == |
− | The Read Out Controllers (ROC) of the JLab DAQ system will be enhanced to stream data via UDP and include new meta-data prepended to the original payload that serves the needs of the LB to aggregate data across ROC channels for distinct '''ticks''' and the destination fragmentation RE to reassemble tick aggregated packets into proper sequence. Figure X is a diagram of the new data stream processing requirements for the JLaB DAQ system.
| + | {| class="wikitable" |
| + | |- |
| + | !date |
| + | !presenter |
| + | !Event |
| + | !links |
| + | |- |
| + | |2021-03-01 |
| + | |G. Heyes |
| + | |EJFAT Proposal |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:w:/r/sites/SciComp/_layouts/15/Doc.aspx?sourcedoc=%7B65DA331C-40E4-4761-B643-251BFA309C45%7D&file=20210525%20ASCR%20BRN%20Solicitation%20v4.docx&action=default&mobileredirect=true Word] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2021-10-21 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich |
| + | |Div Brief |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/EJFAT_for_Div.pdf?CT=1638970015731&OR=ItemsView PDF] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2021-11-05 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich |
| + | |Canisius College |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/canisius.pdf?CT=1638970328329&OR=ItemsView PDF] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2021-12-03 |
| + | |S. Sheldon |
| + | |ESnet LB Tutorial |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:v:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/ESnet_EJFAT_Tut.mp4?csf=1&web=1&e=4nDeZ2 MP4] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2021-12-10 |
| + | |Y. Kumar |
| + | |SRO iX Presentation |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:p:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/EJFAT_SRO_iX.pptx?d=w78e41e5ddab04d21a4c26f93ac84b7d6&csf=1&web=1&e=gkaCDS PPTX] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2022-08-05 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich |
| + | |RT-2022 Presentation |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:p:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/JLab%20EJFAT-msg.pptx?d=w7a8e53d19a584fefb1405fa8ff190b1e&csf=1&web=1&e=50bX4g PPTX] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2022-08-05 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich, et al. |
| + | |RT-2022 Proceedings |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:b:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/EJFAT_rt2022.pdf?csf=1&web=1&e=NFHXHM PDF] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2022-10-20 |
| + | |S. Sheldon, et al. |
| + | |INDIS-2022 |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:b:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/Indis_Paper_2022-3.pdf?csf=1&web=1&e=tmhpfA PDF] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2022-10-24 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich |
| + | |ACAT-2022 Presentation |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:p:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/EJFAT-acat2022.pptx?d=wc024332f3cf7440eae15e4f6f3646897&csf=1&web=1&e=QEwIcx PPTX] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2023-03-17 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich, et al. |
| + | |ACAT-2022 Proceedings |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:b:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/EJFAT_ACAT_2022_QL_sub.pdf?csf=1&web=1&e=dR566P PDF] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2023-05-11 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich, et al. |
| + | |CHEP-2023 Presentation |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:p:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/EJFAT-chep2023.pptx?d=w605623a55051446e9d2bcca80f64eda6&csf=1&web=1&e=NHSloC PPTX] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2023-10-12 |
| + | |D. Howard, et al. |
| + | |CHEP-2023 Conference Publication |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:b:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/chep2023_proceedings.pdf?csf=1&web=1&e=FO7f8j PDF] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2024-03-11 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich, et al. |
| + | |ACAT-2024 Presentation |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:p:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/Acat2024.pptx?d=wb4c9cc47a8eb4b299c3dab1aaa379a36&csf=1&web=1&e=Kct82Y} PPTX] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2024-04-10 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich, et al. |
| + | |RT-2024 Presentation |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:p:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/rt2024.pptx?d=w0dba99dbb67f481f9a39907dbec384b8&csf=1&web=1&e=1XISCm} PPTX] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2024-07-31 |
| + | |M. S. Goodrich, et al. |
| + | |ACAT-2024 Proceedings |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:b:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/ACAT_2024.pdf?csf=1&web=1&e=HkQedP PDF] |
| + | |- |
| + | |2024-10-02 |
| + | |S. Veseli, APS/SDM |
| + | |APS/ALS - EJFAT |
| + | |[https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:p:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/AlsEjfatMeeting-20241002.pptx?d=wcaa3a21ffd3a466f979bf3f5fbaab457&csf=1&web=1&e=BSOlI7 PPTX] |
| + | |} |
| | | |
− | This new meta-data, populated by the JLab DAQ system, consists of two parts; the first for the LB and the second for the RE.
| + | == EJFAT Weekly EPSCI Meetings == |
| | | |
− | == Load Balancer Meta-Data ==
| + | [[EJFAT Weekly EPSCI Meetings]] |
− | The LB meta-data (Figure X, cyan section) is 96 bits that in order consists of
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>'''LB Control Word''' is 32 bits (bits 0-31) such that
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>bits 0-7 ASCII character ’L’</li>
| |
− | <li>bits 8-15 ASCII character ’B’</li>
| |
− | <li>bits 16-23 LB '''version number''' starting at 1 (constant for run duration)</li>
| |
− | <li>bits 24-31 '''Protocol Number''' (very useful for protocol decoders e.g., wireshark/tshark )</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>'''Tick''' (Time stamp or equivalent) is a 64 bit quantity (bits 32-95) that for a DAQ run duration
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Monotonically increases</li>
| |
− | <li>Unique</li>
| |
− | <li>Never rolls over</li>
| |
− | <li>Never resets</li>
| |
− | <li>Serves as a common tag across multiple DAQ ROC channels/packets related to the same time-stamped data transfer.</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | </ul>
| |
| | | |
− | In standard IETF RFC format:
| + | == EJFAT Weekly Collaboration Meetings == |
− | <pre>protocol 'L:8,B:8,Version:8,Protocol:8,Tick:64'
| |
− | 0 1 2 3
| |
− | 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
| |
− | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
− | | L | B | Version | Protocol |
| |
− | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
− | | |
| |
− | + Tick +
| |
− | | |
| |
− | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+</pre>
| |
| | | |
− | == Reassembly Engine Meta-Data ==
| + | [[EJFAT Weekly Meetings]] |
− | The '''RE meta-data''' (Figure X, yellow section) is 64 bits and consists of
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>bits 0-3 Version number</li>
| |
− | <li>bits 4-13 Reserved</li>
| |
− | <li>bit 14 indicates first packet</li>
| |
− | <li>bit 15 indicates last packet</li>
| |
− | <li>bits 16-31 ROC Id</li>
| |
− | <li>bits 32-63 packet sequence number or optionally data offset byte number for reassembly</li>
| |
− | </ul>
| |
− | In standard IETF RFC format:
| |
− | <pre>protocol 'Version:4,Rsvd:10,First:1,Last:1,ROC-ID:16,Offset:32'
| |
− | 0 1 2 3
| |
− | 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
| |
− | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
− | |Version| Rsvd |F|L| ROC-ID |
| |
− | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
− | | Offset |
| |
− | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+</pre>
| |
| | | |
− | The resultant DAQ data stream is shown just below the block diagram in Figure X and depicts the stream UDP packet structure from the DAQ system to the LB. Individual packets are meta-data tagged both for the LB, to route based on '''tick''' to the proper compute node, and for the RE with packet '''offset''' spanning the collection of packets for a single '''tick''' for eventual destination reassembly.
| + | == Technical Design Overview == |
| | | |
− | The depicted sequence is only illustrative, and no assumption about the order of packets with respect to either '''tick''' or '''offset''' should be made by the LB or the RE.
| + | [[EJFAT Technical Design Overview]] |
| | | |
− | [[File:Esnet-JLab-network-diagram-v002d-roc.png|border|1600px|link=|"ROC Data Stream Processing"]] | + | [[UDP Packet Header Formats]] |
| | | |
− | = UDP Header =
| + | [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:p:/r/sites/HPDF/_layouts/15/Doc.aspx?sourcedoc=%7BEABA533A-E516-4C57-BE85-BBF594F5E918%7D&file=Jan%2010%20HPDF%20Conceptual%20Machine%20Design%20Concept.pptx&action=edit&mobileredirect=true IRIAD/EJFAT Testbed] |
− | The UDP Header will be populated as follows:
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>: '''Source Port''' = lower 16 bits of Load Balancer '''Tick''' (for LAG switch entropy)</li>
| |
− | <li>: '''Destination Port''' = Value that indicates LB should perform load balancing (else packet is discarded) = 'LB' = 0x4c42</li>
| |
− | </ul>
| |
− | The resultant DAQ data stream is shown below the block diagram and depicts the stream UDP packet structure. Individual packets
| |
| | | |
− | = ROC Aggregation Switch = | + | == UDP Transmission Performance == |
| | | |
− | Individual ROC channels will be aggregated for maximum throughput by a switch using Link Aggregation Protocol (LAG) or similar where the network traffic downstream of the switch will be addressed to the LB FPGA (see (Figure X, Appendix X).
| + | [[EJFAT UDP General Information]] |
| | | |
− | If the LAG configured switch proves to be incapable of meeting line rate throughput (100Gbs), then an additional FPGA(s) can be engineered to subsume this function as depicted in Figure X.
| + | [[EJFAT UDP General Performance Considerations]] |
| | | |
− | [[File:Esnet-JLab-network-diagram-v002a-roc-1.png|border|"ROC Channel Load Balancing"]] | + | [[EJFAT UDP Packet Receiving and Core Switching]] |
| | | |
− | = LB Processing =
| + | [[EJFAT UDP Packet Sending and NUMA Nodes]] |
| | | |
− | The FPGA resident LB aggregates data across all DAQ channels for a single discrete '''tick''' and routes this aggregated data to individual end compute nodes in cooperation with the FPGA host chassis CPU using algorithms designed for the host CPU and feedback received from the end compute node farm, maintaining complete opacity of the UDP payload to the LB (except for the LB meta-data).
| + | [[EJFAT UDP Single Thread Packet Sending and Receiving]] |
| | | |
− | == Data Plane (FPGA) Processing ==
| + | [[Testing Load Balancer Bandwidth]] |
| | | |
− | [[File:LB-data-pln.png|border|"Data Plane Flow Chart"]]
| + | == HOW-TOs == |
| | | |
− | <ul>
| + | [[How to use Control Plane Web UI]] |
− | <li>Packet Parsing Stage
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Headers defined in the previous stage will be parsed and made available for the remaining stages.</li>
| |
− | <li>The Event Payload MUST NOT be parsed by the load balancer.</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Input Packet Filter Stage
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Implemented as a P4 table with the following properties</li>
| |
− | <li>Max Entries: 32</li>
| |
− | <li>Key:
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>(Exact Match) EtherType</li>
| |
− | <li>(Exact Match) (96b 0 <span class="math"> ∥ </span> IPv4 Dst) OR IPv6 Dst</li>
| |
− | <li>(Binary Match) UDP Dst Port</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Value: None</li>
| |
− | <li>A miss in this table MUST result in the packet being discarded since it is not intended for the load balancer.</li>
| |
− | <li>The P4 code in this stage must also check both the Magic and Version fields in the LB Header. A mismatch from the expected values MUST result in the packet being discarded.</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Calendar Epoch Assignment Stage
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Implemented as a P4 table with the following properties</li>
| |
− | <li>Max Entries: 128</li>
| |
− | <li>Key: (Ternary Match) 64b LB Event Number (Timestamp)</li>
| |
− | <li>Value: 32b Calendar Epoch</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Load Balance Calendar to Member Map Stage
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Implemented as a P4 table with the following properties</li>
| |
− | <li>Max Entries: 2048</li>
| |
− | <li>Key:
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>(Exact Match) 32b Calendar Epoch</li>
| |
− | <li>(Exact Match) 9b Calendar Slot (ie. LB Event Number & 0x1FF)</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Value: 16b LB Member ID</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Load Balance Member Info Lookup Stage
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Implemented as a P4 table with the following properties</li>
| |
− | <li>Max Entries: 1K</li>
| |
− | <li>Key:
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>(Exact Match) 16b EtherType (IPv4 or IPv6)</li>
| |
− | <li>(Exact Match) 16b LB Member ID</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Value:
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>8b Action ID
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>1 = IPv4 Rewrite</li>
| |
− | <li>2 = IPv6 Rewrite</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>IPv4 Rewrite Action
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>48b MAC DA (for next-hop router)</li>
| |
− | <li>32b IPv4 Dst</li>
| |
− | <li>16b UDP Dst Port</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>IPv6 Rewrite Action
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>48b MAC DA (for next-hop router)</li>
| |
− | <li>128b IPv6 Dst</li>
| |
− | <li>16b UDP Dst Port</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>'''Note:''' Rewrite Action type must match the input packet’s EtherType. E.g. An Input IPv4 packet cannot use the IPv6 Rewrite Action and vice versa.</li>
| |
− | <li>'''Note:''' Before applying the rewrite actions, the original packet’s MAC DA should be copied into the MAC SA. This will ensure that the outgoing packet will be sent from exactly the MAC address that the original packet was destined to. This will help to keep the MAC FDB entries in the adjacent switches from expiring.</li>
| |
− | <li>'''Note:''' Packets will be transmitted back out the port they were received on.</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | </ul>
| |
| | | |
− | The resultant LB data stream is shown just above the block diagram in Figure X and depicts the stream UDP packet structure from the LB to the RE concerning an arbitrary '''single''' destination compute node. Individual packets here are still meta-data tagged both for the LB and RE. <strong>The RE for a target compute node will see a collection of packets that share a common '''tick'''</strong>.
| + | [[How to Monitor Prometheus]] |
| | | |
− | The depicted sequence is only illustrative, and no assumption about the order of packets with respect to the '''offset''' should be made by the RE.
| + | [https://wiki.jlab.org/epsciwiki/index.php/Install_an_EJFAT_Load_Balancer Install a Load Balancer] |
| | | |
− | == LB Data Plane P4 Code == | + | [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:t:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/lbtest.txt?csf=1&web=1&e=PNz0DM Test a Load Balancer] |
| | | |
− | <pre>
| + | [[How to setup ejfat nodes]] |
− | 1 // -*- Mode: c -*-
| |
− | 2 #include <core.p4>
| |
− | 3 #include <xsa.p4>
| |
− | | |
− | 4 struct intrinsic_metadata_t {
| |
− | 5 bit<64> ingress_global_timestamp;
| |
− | 6 bit<64> egress_global_timestamp;
| |
− | 7 bit<16> mcast_grp;
| |
− | 8 bit<16> egress_rid;
| |
− | 9 }
| |
− | | |
− | 10 header ethernet_t {
| |
− | 11 bit<48> dstAddr;
| |
− | 12 bit<48> srcAddr;
| |
− | 13 bit<16> etherType;
| |
− | 14 }
| |
− | | |
− | 15 header ipv6_t {
| |
− | 16 bit<4> version;
| |
− | 17 bit<8> trafficClass;
| |
− | 18 bit<20> flowLabel;
| |
− | 19 bit<16> payloadLen;
| |
− | 20 bit<8> nextHdr;
| |
− | 21 bit<8> hopLimit;
| |
− | 22 bit<128> srcAddr;
| |
− | 23 bit<128> dstAddr;
| |
− | 24 }
| |
− | | |
− | 25 header ipv4_t {
| |
− | 26 bit<4> version;
| |
− | 27 bit<4> ihl;
| |
− | 28 bit<8> diffserv;
| |
− | 29 bit<16> totalLen;
| |
− | 30 bit<16> identification;
| |
− | 31 bit<3> flags;
| |
− | 32 bit<13> fragOffset;
| |
− | 33 bit<8> ttl;
| |
− | 34 bit<8> protocol;
| |
− | 35 bit<16> hdrChecksum;
| |
− | 36 bit<32> srcAddr;
| |
− | 37 bit<32> dstAddr;
| |
− | 38 }
| |
− | | |
− | 39 header ipv4_opt_t {
| |
− | 40 varbit<320> options; // IPv4 options - length = (ipv4.hdr_len - 5) * 32
| |
− | 41 }
| |
− | | |
− | 42 header udp_t {
| |
− | 43 bit<16> srcPort;
| |
− | 44 bit<16> dstPort;
| |
− | 45 bit<16> totalLen;
| |
− | 46 bit<16> checksum;
| |
− | 47 }
| |
− | | |
− | 48 header udplb_t {
| |
− | 49 bit<16> magic; /* "LB" */
| |
− | 50 bit<8> version; /* version 0 */
| |
− | 51 bit<8> proto;
| |
− | 52 bit<64> tick;
| |
− | 53 }
| |
− | 54 #define SIZEOF_UDPLB_HDR 12
| |
− | | |
− | 55 struct short_metadata {
| |
− | 56 bit<64> ingress_global_timestamp;
| |
− | 57 bit<9> egress_spec;
| |
− | 58 bit<1> processed;
| |
− | 59 bit<16> packet_length;
| |
− | 60 }
| |
− | 61
| |
− | 62 struct headers {
| |
− | 63 ethernet_t ethernet;
| |
− | 64 ipv4_t ipv4;
| |
− | 65 ipv4_opt_t ipv4_opt;
| |
− | 66 ipv6_t ipv6;
| |
− | 67 udp_t udp;
| |
− | 68 udplb_t udplb;
| |
− | 69 }
| |
− | | |
− | 70 // User-defined errors
| |
− | 71 error {
| |
− | 72 InvalidIPpacket,
| |
− | 73 InvalidUDPLBmagic,
| |
− | 74 InvalidUDPLBversion
| |
− | 75 }
| |
− | | |
− | 76 parser ParserImpl(packet_in packet, out headers hdr, inout short_metadata short_meta, inout standard_metadata_t smeta) {
| |
− | 77 state start {
| |
− | 78 transition parse_ethernet;
| |
− | 79 }
| |
− | | |
− | 80 state parse_ethernet {
| |
− | 81 packet.extract(hdr.ethernet);
| |
− | 82 transition select(hdr.ethernet.etherType) {
| |
− | 83 16w0x0800: parse_ipv4;
| |
− | 84 16w0x86dd: parse_ipv6;
| |
− | 85 default: accept;
| |
− | 86 }
| |
− | 87 }
| |
− | 88 state parse_ipv4 {
| |
− | 89 packet.extract(hdr.ipv4);
| |
− | 90 verify(hdr.ipv4.version == 4 && hdr.ipv4.ihl >= 5, error.InvalidIPpacket);
| |
− | 91 packet.extract(hdr.ipv4_opt, (((bit<32>)hdr.ipv4.ihl - 5) * 32));
| |
− | 92 transition select(hdr.ipv4.protocol) {
| |
− | 93 8w17: parse_udp;
| |
− | 94 default: accept;
| |
− | 95 }
| |
− | 96 }
| |
− | 97 state parse_ipv6 {
| |
− | 98 packet.extract(hdr.ipv6);
| |
− | 99 verify(hdr.ipv6.version == 6, error.InvalidIPpacket);
| |
− | 100 transition select(hdr.ipv6.nextHdr) {
| |
− | 101 8w17: parse_udp;
| |
− | 102 default: accept;
| |
− | 103 }
| |
− | 104 }
| |
− | 105 state parse_udp {
| |
− | 106 packet.extract(hdr.udp);
| |
− | 107 transition select(hdr.udp.dstPort) {
| |
− | 108 16w0x4c42: parse_udplb;
| |
− | 109 default: accept;
| |
− | 110 }
| |
− | 111 }
| |
− | | |
− | 112 state parse_udplb {
| |
− | 113 packet.extract(hdr.udplb);
| |
− | 114 verify(hdr.udplb.magic == 0x4c42, error.InvalidUDPLBmagic);
| |
− | 115 verify(hdr.udplb.version == 1, error.InvalidUDPLBversion);
| |
− | 116 transition accept;
| |
− | 117 }
| |
− | 118 }
| |
− | | |
− | 119 control MatchActionImpl(inout headers hdr, inout short_metadata short_meta, inout standard_metadata_t smeta) {
| |
− | | |
− | 120 //
| |
− | 121 // DstFilter - a gate
| |
− | 122 //
| |
− | | |
− | 123 bit<128> meta_ipdst = 128w0;
| |
− | 124
| |
− | 125 action drop() {
| |
− | 126 smeta.drop = 1;
| |
− | 127 }
| |
− | 128
| |
− | 129 table dst_filter_table { // layer 2/3 filter
| |
− | 130 actions = {
| |
− | 131 drop;
| |
− | 132 NoAction;
| |
− | 133 }
| |
− | 134 key = {
| |
− | 135 hdr.ethernet.dstAddr : exact; // this a unicast packet for us at layer 2 (MAC) ?
| |
− | 136 hdr.ethernet.etherType : exact // ipv4 or ipv6
| |
− | 137 meta_ipdst : exact; // normalized 128b IP (not MAC) address from either ipv4/6
| |
− | 138 }
| |
− | 139 size = 32;
| |
− | 140 default_action = drop;
| |
− | 141 }
| |
| | | |
− | 142 //
| + | [[How to install, build and use gRPC]] |
− | 143 // EpochAssign
| |
− | 144 //
| |
| | | |
− | 145 bit<32> meta_epoch = 0;
| + | [[How to install, build and use XDP related packages]] |
− | 146
| |
− | 147 action do_assign_epoch(bit<32> epoch) {
| |
− | 148 meta_epoch = epoch;
| |
− | 149 }
| |
| | | |
− | 150 table epoch_assign_table {
| + | [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:b:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/CP_PID_Sched.pdf?csf=1&web=1&e=JpffJ4 How to Compute Schedule Density from PID Signals] |
− | 151 actions = {
| |
− | 152 do_assign_epoch;
| |
− | 153 drop;
| |
− | 154 }
| |
− | 155 key = {
| |
− | 156 hdr.udplb.tick : lpm; // lpm is the keystone to routing everywhere
| |
− | 157 }
| |
− | 158 size = 128;
| |
− | 159 default_action = drop;
| |
− | 160 }
| |
| | | |
− | 161 //
| + | [https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-enable-jumbo-frames-in-linux Enable Jumbo Frames] |
− | 162 // LoadBalanceCalendar
| |
− | 163 //
| |
| | | |
− | 164 // Use lsbs of tick to select a calendar slot
| + | Network Path MTU Discovery support in the Linux Kernel: |
− | 165 bit<9> calendar_slot = (bit<9>) hdr.udplb.tick & 0x1FF; # 9 bits
| |
− | 166 bit<16> meta_member_id = 0;
| |
| | | |
− | 167 action do_assign_member(bit<16> member_id) {
| |
− | 168 meta_member_id = member_id;
| |
− | 169 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 170 table load_balance_calendar_table {
| |
− | 171 actions = {
| |
− | 172 do_assign_member;
| |
− | 173 drop;
| |
− | 174 }
| |
− | 175 key = {
| |
− | 176 meta_epoch : exact;
| |
− | 177 calendar_slot : exact;
| |
− | 178 }
| |
− | 179 size = 2048;
| |
− | 180 default_action = drop;
| |
− | 181 }
| |
− | 182
| |
− | 183 //
| |
− | 184 // MemberInfoLookup
| |
− | 185 //
| |
− |
| |
− | 186 // Cumulative checksum delta due to field rewrites
| |
− | 187 bit<16> ckd = 0;
| |
− | 188 bit<16> new_udp_dst = 0;
| |
− |
| |
− | 189 action cksum_sub(inout bit<16> cksum, in bit<16> a) {
| |
− | 190 bit<17> sum = (bit<17>) cksum;
| |
− |
| |
− | 191 sum = sum + (bit<17>)(a ^ 0xFFFF);
| |
− | 192 sum = (sum & 0xFFFF) + (sum >> 16);
| |
− |
| |
− | 193 cksum = sum[15:0];
| |
− | 194 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 195 action cksum_add(inout bit<16> cksum, in bit<16> a) {
| |
− | 196 bit<17> sum = (bit<17>) cksum;
| |
− |
| |
− | 197 sum = sum + (bit<17>)a;
| |
− | 198 sum = (sum & 0xFFFF) + (sum >> 16);
| |
− |
| |
− | 199 cksum = sum[15:0];
| |
− | 200 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 201 action cksum_swap(inout bit<16> cksum, in bit<16> old, in bit<16> new) {
| |
− | 202 cksum_sub(cksum, old);
| |
− | 203 cksum_add(cksum, new);
| |
− | 204 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 205 action do_ipv4_member_rewrite(bit<48> mac_dst, bit<32> ip_dst, bit<16> udp_dst) {
| |
− | 206 // Calculate IPv4 and UDP pseudo header checksum delta using rfc1624 method
| |
− |
| |
− | 207 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.ipv4.dstAddr[31:16], ip_dst[31:16]);
| |
− | 208 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.ipv4.dstAddr[15:00], ip_dst[15:00]);
| |
− | 209 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.ipv4.totalLen, hdr.ipv4.totalLen - SIZEOF_UDPLB_HDR);
| |
− |
| |
− | 210 // Apply the accumulated delta to the IPv4 header checksum
| |
− | 211 hdr.ipv4.hdrChecksum = hdr.ipv4.hdrChecksum ^ 0xFFFF;
| |
− | 212 cksum_add(hdr.ipv4.hdrChecksum, ckd);
| |
− | 213 hdr.ipv4.hdrChecksum = hdr.ipv4.hdrChecksum ^ 0xFFFF;
| |
− |
| |
− | 214 hdr.ethernet.dstAddr = mac_dst;
| |
− | 215 hdr.ipv4.dstAddr = ip_dst;
| |
− | 216 hdr.ipv4.totalLen = hdr.ipv4.totalLen - SIZEOF_UDPLB_HDR;
| |
− |
| |
− | 217 new_udp_dst = udp_dst;
| |
− | 218 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 219 action do_ipv6_member_rewrite(bit<48> mac_dst, bit<128> ip_dst, bit<16> udp_dst) {
| |
− | 220 // Calculate UDP pseudo header checksum delta using rfc1624 method
| |
− |
| |
− | 221 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.ipv6.dstAddr[63:48], ip_dst[63:48]);
| |
− | 222 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.ipv6.dstAddr[47:32], ip_dst[47:32]);
| |
− | 223 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.ipv6.dstAddr[31:16], ip_dst[31:16]);
| |
− | 224 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.ipv6.dstAddr[15:00], ip_dst[15:00]);
| |
− |
| |
− | 225 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.ipv6.payloadLen, hdr.ipv6.payloadLen - SIZEOF_UDPLB_HDR);
| |
− |
| |
− | 226 hdr.ethernet.dstAddr = mac_dst;
| |
− | 227 hdr.ipv6.dstAddr = ip_dst;
| |
− | 228 hdr.ipv6.payloadLen = hdr.ipv6.payloadLen - 12;
| |
− | 229 new_udp_dst = udp_dst;
| |
− | 230 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 231 table member_info_lookup_table {
| |
− | 232 actions = {
| |
− | 233 do_ipv4_member_rewrite;
| |
− | 234 do_ipv6_member_rewrite;
| |
− | 235 drop;
| |
− | 236 }
| |
− | 237 key = {
| |
− | 238 hdr.ethernet.etherType : exact;
| |
− | 239 meta_member_id : exact;
| |
− | 240 }
| |
− | 241 size = 1024;
| |
− | 242 default_action = drop;
| |
− | 243 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 244 // Entry Point
| |
− | 245 apply {
| |
− | 246 bool hit;
| |
− |
| |
− | 247 //
| |
− | 248 // DstFilter
| |
− | 249 //
| |
− | 250
| |
− | 251 // Normalized IP destination address for both ipv4 and ipv6
| |
− | 252 if (hdr.ipv4.isValid()) {
| |
− | 253 meta_ipdst = (bit<96>) 0 ++ (bit<32>) hdr.ipv4.dstAddr;
| |
− | 254 } else if (hdr.ipv6.isValid()) {
| |
− | 255 meta_ipdst = hdr.ipv6.dstAddr;
| |
− | 256 }
| |
− | 257
| |
− | 258 // .apply() looks up key and applies action specified by control plane on match
| |
− | 259 hit = dst_filter_table.apply().hit;
| |
− | 260 if (!hit) {
| |
− | 261 return;
| |
− | 262 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 263 //
| |
− | 264 // EpochAssign
| |
− | 265 //
| |
− |
| |
− | 266 if (!hdr.udplb.isValid()) {
| |
− | 267 return;
| |
− | 268 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 269 hit = epoch_assign_table.apply().hit;
| |
− | 270 if (!hit) {
| |
− | 271 return;
| |
− | 272 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 273 //
| |
− | 274 // LoadBalanceCalendar
| |
− | 275 //
| |
− |
| |
− | 276 hit = load_balance_calendar_table.apply().hit;
| |
− | 277 if (!hit) {
| |
− | 278 return;
| |
− | 279 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 280 //
| |
− | 281 // MemberInfoLookup
| |
− | 282 //
| |
− |
| |
− | 283 hit = member_info_lookup_table.apply().hit;
| |
− | 284 if (!hit) {
| |
− | 285 return;
| |
− | 286 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 287 //
| |
− | 288 // UpdateUDPChecksum
| |
− | 289 //
| |
− |
| |
− | 290 // Calculate UDP pseudo header checksum delta using rfc1624 method
| |
− |
| |
− | 291 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.udp.dstPort, new_udp_dst);
| |
− | 292 cksum_swap(ckd, hdr.udp.totalLen, hdr.udp.totalLen - SIZEOF_UDPLB_HDR);
| |
− |
| |
− | 293 // Subtract out the bytes of the UDP load-balance header
| |
− | 294 cksum_sub(ckd, hdr.udplb.magic);
| |
− | 295 cksum_sub(ckd, hdr.udplb.version ++ hdr.udplb.proto);
| |
− | 296 cksum_sub(ckd, hdr.udplb.tick[63:48]);
| |
− | 297 cksum_sub(ckd, hdr.udplb.tick[47:32]);
| |
− | 298 cksum_sub(ckd, hdr.udplb.tick[31:16]);
| |
− | 299 cksum_sub(ckd, hdr.udplb.tick[15:00]);
| |
− |
| |
− | 300 // Write the updated checksum back into the packet
| |
− | 301 hdr.udp.checksum = hdr.udp.checksum ^ 0xFFFF;
| |
− | 302 cksum_add(hdr.udp.checksum, ckd);
| |
− | 303 hdr.udp.checksum = hdr.udp.checksum ^ 0xFFFF;
| |
− |
| |
− | 304 // Update destination port and fix up length to adapt to dropped udplb header
| |
− | 305 hdr.udp.dstPort = new_udp_dst;
| |
− | 306 hdr.udp.totalLen = hdr.udp.totalLen - SIZEOF_UDPLB_HDR;
| |
− | 307 }
| |
− | 308 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 309 control DeparserImpl(packet_out packet, in headers hdr, inout short_metadata short_meta, inout standard_metadata_t smeta) {
| |
− | 310 apply {
| |
− | 311 packet.emit(hdr.ethernet);
| |
− | 312 packet.emit(hdr.ipv4);
| |
− | 313 packet.emit(hdr.ipv4_opt);
| |
− | 314 packet.emit(hdr.ipv6);
| |
− | 315 packet.emit(hdr.udp);
| |
− | 316 }
| |
− | 317 }
| |
− |
| |
− | 318 XilinxPipeline(
| |
− | 319 ParserImpl(),
| |
− | 320 MatchActionImpl(),
| |
− | 321 DeparserImpl()
| |
− | 322 ) main;
| |
− |
| |
− | </pre>
| |
− |
| |
− | ==== Notes: ====
| |
− |
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>lines 11-12: These are MAC addresses</li>
| |
− | <li>line 40: IPV4 options length = (ipv4 <span class="math"> × </span> hdrlen - 5) <span class="math"> × </span> 32</li>
| |
− | <li>line 49: literally “LB” = 0x4c42; c.f. section [sec:Load Balancer Meta-Data] and line 8 section [sec:rocpcap].</li>
| |
− | <li>line 50: LB version; c.f. line 9 section [sec:rocpcap]</li>
| |
− | <li>line 51: protocol; c.f. line 10 section [sec:rocpcap], section [sec:roc]</li>
| |
− | <li>line 135, 259: Gate to ensure in packet is for LB</li>
| |
− | <li>line 156: '''epoch''' is determined by '''largest''' prefix match of '''tick'''; c.f. section X lines 18,25 for epochs 0,1 respectively</li>
| |
− | <li>line 165: lower 9 bits of '''tick''' used for member slot indexing on round-robin basis; all 512 member slots require population for all '''active''' epochs; c.f. line 33 section [sec:lbcntrlpln]</li>
| |
− | </ul>
| |
− |
| |
− | == LB Control Plane ==
| |
− |
| |
− | This is the Control Plane CLI configuration script:
| |
− |
| |
− | <ul>
| |
| <pre> | | <pre> |
− | 1 table_add
| + | file: /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_mtu_probing |
− | 2 dst_filter_table
| + | variable: net.ipv4.tcp_mtu_probing (integer; default: 0; since Linux 2.6.17): |
− | 3 NoAction
| |
− | 4 0x00aabbccddee # set FPGA MAC = 00.170.187.204.221.238
| |
− | 5 0x0800 # ipv4
| |
− | 6 0x0000000000000000000000000a010203 # set FPGA IPV4 meta_ipdst = 10.1.2.3
| |
− | 7 =>
| |
− | 8 table_add
| |
− | 9 dst_filter_table
| |
− | 10 NoAction
| |
− | 11 0x00aabbccddee # set FPGA MAC = 00.170.187.204.221.238
| |
− | 12 0x86dd # ipv6
| |
− | 13 0xfe800000000000000000000000000002 # set FPGA IPV6 meta_ipdst = 254.128.00.0 ?? 0.3
| |
− | 14 =>
| |
− | 15 table_add
| |
− | 16 epoch_assign_table
| |
− | 17 do_assign_epoch
| |
− | 18 0x0000000000000000/0 # tick/lpm (match high 0b); all ticks = epoch 0
| |
− | 19 =>
| |
− | 20 0x00000000 # epoch
| |
− | 21 64 # priority (low is higher)
| |
− | 22 table_add
| |
− | 23 epoch_assign_table
| |
− | 24 do_assign_epoch
| |
− | 25 0x0000000000000010/60 # tick/lpm (match high 60b); 16 ticks = epoch 1
| |
− | 26 =>
| |
− | 27 0x00000001 # epoch
| |
− | 28 5 # priority (low is higher)
| |
− | 29 table_add
| |
− | 30 load_balance_calendar_table
| |
− | 31 do_assign_member
| |
− | 32 0x00000000 # meta_epoch
| |
− | 33 0x00a # calendar_slot or tick lsb ; 0x00a = 10; see line #42 ROC PCAP Generator Script
| |
− | 34 =>
| |
− | 35 0x0000 # member_id
| |
− | 36 table_add
| |
− | 37 load_balance_calendar_table
| |
− | 38 do_assign_member
| |
− | 39 0x00000001 # meta_epoch
| |
− | 40 0x014 # calendar_slot
| |
− | 41 =>
| |
− | 42 0x0000 # member_id
| |
− | 43 table_add
| |
− | 44 member_info_lookup_table
| |
− | 45 do_ipv4_member_rewrite
| |
− | 46 0x0800 # ipv4
| |
− | 47 0x0000 # meta_member_id
| |
− | 48 =>
| |
− | 49 0x112233445566 # dst MAC
| |
− | 50 0xaabbccdd # dst IPV4 IP
| |
− | 51 0x4556 # dest Port
| |
− | 52 table_add
| |
− | 53 member_info_lookup_table
| |
− | 54 do_ipv6_member_rewrite
| |
− | 55 0x86dd # ipv6
| |
− | 56 0x0000 # meta_member_id
| |
− | 57 =>
| |
− | 58 0x112233445566 # dst MAC
| |
− | 59 0xfe800000000000000000000000000003 # dst IPV6 IP
| |
− | 60 0x4556 # dest Port
| |
− | | |
− | 61 run_traffic packets
| |
− | | |
− | </pre>
| |
− | <li>lines 1,8: Sets the LB MAC address, IPV4 address for IPV4, IPV6 respectively.</li>
| |
− | <li>line 15: Set up Epoch 0 to match all ticks at low priority (=64)</li>
| |
− | <li>line 22: Set up Epoch 1 to match ticks for which the 2nd least significant nibble=1 and the most significant nibble is arbitrary designating 16 possible tick values for Epoch 1 at higher priority (=5).</li>
| |
− | <li>line 29: Designate member (end-node) 0 for calendar slot 0xa, Epoch 0</li>
| |
− | <li>line 36: Designate member (end-node) 0 for calendar slot 0x14, Epoch 1</li>
| |
− | <li>line 43: Designate member 0 for IPV4 packets as MAC=0x11223344556, IP=0xaabbccdd, Port=0x4556</li>
| |
− | <li>line 52: Designate member 0 for IPV6 packets as MAC=0x11223344556,IP=0xfe8000000000000000000000000000, Port=0x4556</li>
| |
− | </ul>
| |
− | | |
− | == Control Plane (Host CPU) Processing ==
| |
− | | |
− | [[File:LB-cntrl-pln.png|border|"Control Plane Flow Chart"]]
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Software Initialization Steps
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>PROPOSAL: A low-level C Software library will be provided to allow insertion/deletion of table entries into each of the P4 tables. All other SW will likely need to be written by the user of the LB pipeline.</li>
| |
− | <li>Populate Input Packet Filter Table
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Table Insert <span class="math">⟨</span>0x800, LB IPv4 Addr, LB UDP Dst<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | <li>Table Insert <span class="math">⟨</span>0x86dd, LB IPv6 Addr, LB UDP Dst<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Populate Load Balance Member Table: For each LB Member
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Allocate next free Member ID number from SW pool</li>
| |
− | <li>Table Insert
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>K: <span class="math">⟨</span>0x800, Member ID<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | <li>V: <span class="math">⟨</span>IPv4 Rewrite, 0, Next-Hop MAC DA, Worker IPv4 Dst, Worker UDP Dst Port<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Table Insert
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>K: <span class="math">⟨</span>0x86dd, Member ID<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | <li>V: <span class="math">⟨</span>IPv6 Rewrite, 0, Next-Hop MAC DA, Worker IPv6 Dst, Worker UDP Dst Port<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Populate Load Balance to Member Map Table
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Allocate next free Calendar Epoch number from SW pool</li>
| |
− | <li>Assign all active LB Member IDs to the 512 Calendar Slots
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Any members can occur between 0-512 times in the calendar</li>
| |
− | <li>A member occurring more times in the calendar has a higher “weight” and will be more likely to be assigned an event within this Calendar Epoch</li>
| |
− | <li>All 512 slots MUST have a member assigned to them or events that target the empty slot will be entirely discarded by the load balancer</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>For each Calendar Slot Table Insert
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>K: <span class="math">⟨</span>Calendar Epoch, Calendar Slot<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | <li>V: <span class="math">⟨</span>LB Member ID<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Populate the Calendar Epoch Assignment Table
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Assign all Event IDs (Timestamps) to the newly allocated Calendar Epoch</li>
| |
− | <li>Table Insert
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>K: <span class="math">⟨</span>*<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | <li>V: <span class="math">⟨</span>Calendar Epoch<span class="math">⟩</span></li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>The load balancer will now assign each Rx’d packet to exactly one of the LB members based on the Event ID contained in the packet. The mapping will remain consistent for any given Event ID within an Epoch since the Calendar and Member tables cannot change within a given Epoch.</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>Making Changes to the Load Balancer ConfigurationThis section assumes that the load balancer is in-service and as such, care must be taken to avoid service disruption during reconfiguration. If the load balancer is out-of-service, you can reconfigure it using the Initialization steps above without care for disruption.
| |
− | Any Epoch that is reachable (connected) via the Calendar Epoch Assignment table MUST not be changed. In-service reconfiguration of the load balancer is done by the following steps.
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Allocate the next free Calendar Epoch ID: Once we’re done all the rest of the updates, we’ll activate this new Epoch</li>
| |
− | <li>Insert new entries into the Load Balance Member Table for any entries that need to be different in the next Epoch</li>
| |
− | <li>Compute and insert an entirely new calendar into the Load Balance to Member Map Table using the next Calendar Epoch ID</li>
| |
− | <li>Choose an Event ID in the (near) future which will become the boundary between the current Epoch and the new Epoch.</li>
| |
− | <li>Compute a set of Ternary prefix matches over the Event ID space which describe the entire range of Event IDs from the start of the current Epoch up to the start of the new Epoch.</li>
| |
− | <li>Program the ternary prefix matches into the Calendar Epoch Assignment Table</li>
| |
− | <li>Update the wildcard match in the Calendar Epoch Assignment Table to point to the new Epoch</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | <li>The new Epoch is activated and MUST NOT be changed</li>
| |
− | <li>After waiting an appropriate time for all events from the previous Epoch to have quiesced, perform the following cleanup steps.
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Delete the ternary prefix matches for the previous Epoch from the Calendar Epoch Assignment Table. This disconnects all references for the previous Epoch to the rest of the pipeline tables.</li>
| |
− | <li>Delete the Calendar for the previous Epoch</li>
| |
− | <li>Delete the Member rewrites for the previous Calendar</li>
| |
− | </ul></li>
| |
− | </ul>
| |
− | | |
− | [[File:esnet-JLab-network-diagram-v002d-lb.png|border|1500px|link=|"Load Balancer/Host CPU Processing"]]
| |
− | = Reassembly Engine Processing =
| |
− | Time-Stamp aggregated data transferred through network equipment will be fragmented and require reassembly by the RE on behalf of the targeted compute farm destination node. Several candidate designs are being considered as depicted in Figure x:
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>RE resident () in each compute node in an FPGA accelerated Network Interface Card (NIC) (e.g., Xilinx SN1000)</li>
| |
− | <li>RE resident () in each compute node CPU operating system.</li>
| |
− | <li>RE centralized () in an FPGA residing in a compute farm switch.</li>
| |
− | </ul>
| |
− | Additionally, end compute nodes are individually responsible for informing the LB host CPU of status such that the LB host CPU can make informed decisions in comprising an effective load balancing strategy for the FPGA resident LB.
| |
− | [[File:esnet-JLab-network-diagram-v002d-re.png|border|"Compute Farm Reassembly/Feedback"]]
| |
− | = Initial Test Configuration =
| |
− | Figure X depicts a notional EJFAT initial test configuration using commonly available Unix utilities and not initially using a network switch. The sequence of this test configuration is as follows:
| |
− | <ul>
| |
− | <li>Generate a representative ROC PCAP file using the script in section [sec:rocpcap]. This data should emulate a data stream from the DAQ system exhibiting desired sequences in the stream that will test the functionality of the LB.</li>
| |
− | <li>Configure the LB P4 load balancer per the guidelines set forth in section [sec:lbcntrlpln].</li>
| |
− | <li>Use '''tcpreplay''' to send the ROC PCAP file via the test host CPU NIC into the FPGA resident LB via the FPGA’s (bidirectional) QSFP28 optical port.</li>
| |
− | <li>Use '''tcpdump''' to capture the LB response sent back into the test host CPU NIC into an LB PCAP file</li>
| |
− | <li>Use '''Wireshark'''/tshark or other to decode, render, and examine the LB PCAP file to ascertain if the LB provided the correct response. Decoding should be facilitated by using the '''Protocol''' field in the LB meta-data specified in section [sec:Load Balancer Meta-Data] with add-ins for the bit structures defined in sections [sec:Load Balancer Meta-Data], [sec:Reassembly Engine Meta-Data].</li>
| |
− | <li>Use an '''LB config''' process running on the host CPU to setup test conditions with the destination compute farm to alter the LBs routing strategy using the information in sections [sec:cntrl-pln], [sec:lbcntrlpln].</li>
| |
− | </ul>
| |
− | | |
− | [[File:ejfat-u280_tst0.png|border|EJFAT Test Configuration"]]
| |
− | | |
− | == ROC PCAP Generator Script ==
| |
− | | |
− | The following Scapy test script can be used to generate the ROC PCAP file shown in Figure X:
| |
− | | |
− | <pre>
| |
− | #!/usr/bin/env python3
| |
− | | |
− | from scapy.all import *
| |
− | | |
− | class UDPLB(Packet):
| |
− | name = "UDP LB Packet"
| |
− | fields_desc = [
| |
− | XShortField("magic", 0x4C42),
| |
− | XByteField("version", 1),
| |
− | XByteField("proto", 0),
| |
− | XLongField("tick", 0),
| |
− | ]
| |
− | | |
− | class EVIO6Seg(Packet):
| |
− | name = "EVIO6 Segment"
| |
− | fields_desc = [
| |
− | BitField("version", 0, 4),
| |
− | BitField("reserved", 0, 10),
| |
− | FlagsField("flags", 0, 2,
| |
− | ["last",
| |
− | "first",]),
| |
− | XShortField("rocid", 0),
| |
− | XIntField("offset", 0),]
| |
− | | |
− | bind_layers(UDPLB, EVIO6Seg, {'proto': 1})
| |
− | | |
− | EVIO6_BLOB_SIZE = 1050
| |
− | evio6_blob = bytearray(EVIO6_BLOB_SIZE)
| |
− | EVIO6_SEG_SIZE = 100
| |
− | | |
− | with scapy.utils.PcapWriter('packets_in.pcap', linktype=DLT_EN10MB) as w:
| |
− | w.write_header([])
| |
− | for offset in range(0, EVIO6_BLOB_SIZE, EVIO6_SEG_SIZE):
| |
− | flags = []
| |
− | if offset == 0:
| |
− | # first segment
| |
− | flags.append("first")
| |
− | if offset + EVIO6_SEG_SIZE > EVIO6_BLOB_SIZE:
| |
− | # last (possibly short) segment
| |
− | flags.append("last")
| |
− | | |
− | p = Ether(dst="00:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee", src="00:11:22:33:44:55")/IP(dst="10.1.2.3", src="10.1.2.2")/UDP(sport=50000,dport=0x4c42)/UDPLB(tick=10)/EVIO6Seg(rocid=0xabc, flags=flags, offset=offset)/Raw(load=evio6_blob[offset:offset+EVIO6_SEG_SIZE])
| |
− | w.write_packet(p)
| |
− | #print(p.show())
| |
| | | |
− | p = Ether(dst="00:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee", src="00:01:02:03:04:05")/IPv6(dst="fe80::2", src="fe80::1")/UDP(sport=12345,dport=0x4c42)/UDPLB(tick=20)/EVIO6Seg(rocid=0x123, flags=flags, offset=offset)/Raw(load=evio6_blob[offset:offset+EVIO6_SEG_SIZE])
| + | tcp_mtu_probing - INTEGER |
− | w.write_packet(p)
| + | Controls TCP Packetization-Layer Path MTU Discovery. Takes three values: |
− | #print(p.show())
| + | 0 - Disabled |
| + | 1 - Disabled by default, enabled when an ICMP black hole detected |
| + | 2 - Always enabled, use initial MSS of tcp_base_mss. |
| </pre> | | </pre> |
| | | |
− | == Scapy Installation == | + | == REFERENCEs == |
| | | |
− | Scapy may be installed by executing the following command at the Unix command line:
| + | [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:x:/r/sites/DataCenter/_layouts/15/Doc.aspx?sourcedoc=%7B3F832940-1BA2-4183-A00A-5085C5A353D6%7D&file=IRIAD-testbed-Inventory.xlsx&action=default&mobileredirect=true EJFAT Config Planning] |
| | | |
− | <pre> pip3 install --user scapy
| + | [https://www.jlab.org/news/releases/california-streamin-jefferson-lab-esnet-achieve-coast-coast-feed-real-time-physics JLab EJFAT News Release] |
− | </pre>
| |
| | | |
− | == ROC PCAP Meta Data File == | + | [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:i:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/JIRIAF%20on%20FABRIC.png?csf=1&web=1&e=TOGEPr EJFAT on FABRIC] |
| | | |
− | In the following file:
| + | [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:b:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/E2SAR.drawio.pdf?csf=1&web=1&e=E0Uqlh EJFAT API] |
− | Each row (1...n) in this file matches with the corresponding packet (1...n) in the packets<span>_</span>in.pcap file. ( Lines 42, 46 in section [sec:rocpcap] )
| |
− | The simulator loads a line from this file and uses it to initialize the short<span>_</span>metadata struct which is processed along with the corresponding packet data.
| |
| | | |
− | You should find references to “short<span>_</span>metadata” struct in the p4 program.
| + | [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ssw8sye7jExtPCJVejloe8hNkyWOcxEQzVmm45xs5-w/edit#heading=h.b8k68ix2wf30 LB Pipeline] |
| | | |
− | I have no idea what the sim does when it has more packets in the .pcap file than the number of lines in the .meta file. In general, all of these fields may be relevant. For the load balancer specifically, the only field that matters is really the “egress<span>_</span>spec” field. On the way in, it contains the *ingress* port. It isn’t touched by the p4 program since we always want the output packet to go back out the exact same interface that it arrived on (after we rewrite the destination header fields of course).
| + | [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1qEo51MZeUPM3-DA2CK6jAccrU0r1QtPfl5i3aPS2SKM/edit?exids=71471482,71471477#heading=h.69350544ggm5 Getting Started with EJFAT] |
− | The p4bm simulator does something like this:
| |
| | | |
− | <pre>
| + | [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:w:/r/sites/ITDivision/proposals/_layouts/15/Doc.aspx?sourcedoc=%7B33ffd720-9356-471f-8880-b0c56c5593a5%7D&action=view&wdAccPdf=0&wdparaid=39A41B49 IRIAD Workplan] |
− | open packets_in.pcap for read
| |
− | open packets_in.meta for read
| |
− | open packets_out.pcap for write
| |
− | open packets_out.meta for write
| |
− | while (!done) {
| |
− | read packet p from packets_in.pcap
| |
− | read metadata row m from packets_in.meta
| |
− | (out_packet, out_meta) = simulate_the_p4(p, m)
| |
− | write out_packet to packets_out.pcap
| |
− | write out_meta to packets_out.meta
| |
− | </pre>
| |
| | | |
− | The pcap-generator.py script isn’t directly used by the p4bm sim. That’s just something I wrote to help you to make up input packets for the simulator so you didn’t have to make your input packets (as seen in packets<span>_</span>in.pcap) by hand.
| + | [https://wiki.jlab.org/epsciwiki/index.php/SRO_Grand_Challenge SRO Grand Challenge] |
| | | |
− | There is a 1:1 correspondence between calls to write<span>_</span>packet() in the pcap-generator.py script and packets in the packets<span>_</span>in.pcap file.
| + | [https://my.es.net/?_gl=1*pchcca*_ga*MjAyODE5NDE3OC4xNzEwOTYwMDI4*_ga_9Y9H16804B*MTcxMDk2MDAyOC4xLjAuMTcxMDk2MDAyOC4wLjAuMA..&s=JLAB&st=esnet_site ESnet Logical Map] |
| | | |
− | The .py program spits out 2 interleaved ROC transfers (one transfer is carried in IPv4, the other is in IPv6). Each ROC transfer starts out as 1050 bytes of EVIO6 data. It is then segmented into 100 byte segments, ready to be put into a packet. Each segment gets a EVIO6 Segmentation header added to keep track of which segment it is, then each segment gets a UDP Load Balancer header added to give the load-balancer its context.
| + | [http://linux-ip.net/html/tools-ip-neighbor.html IP Neighbor] |
| | | |
− | Each call to write<span>_</span>packet() spits out one of the segments in either a IPv4 or IPv6 encapsulation.
| + | [https://robotframework.org/robotframework/latest/RobotFrameworkUserGuide.html Robot Framework] |
| | | |
− | The program might be more clear if you were to duplicate the loop (one loop for IPv4 and one loop for IPv6) and put a single call to write<span>_</span>packet() in each of the loops. That might make it more clear that it was 2 transfers since they would no longer be interleaved.
| + | [https://science.osti.gov/-/media/ascr/ascac/pdf/meetings/202306/Brown_IRI_ASCAC_2023206.pdf IRI Vision] |
| | | |
− | The 2 lines in packets<span>_</span>in.meta will be used for the first 2 packets in the packets<span>_</span>in.pcap file. As currently written, one of those lines will be for the first segment in IPv4 and the second line will be for the first segment in IPv6. As I mentioned before, I’m actually not certain what happens after that in the simulator. In practice, it shouldn’t be important for this pipeline since it doesn’t get modified by the p4 program at all.
| + | [https://arxiv.org/pdf/2111.05155 A horizontally scalable online processing system for trigger-less data acquisition] |
| | | |
− | == Tshark Plug-in for LB Meta-Data ==
| + | [https://arxiv.org/pdf/2212.11032 The-triggerless-data-acquisition-system-of-the-XENONnT-experiment] |
| | | |
− | <pre>
| + | [https://indico.cern.ch/event/783429/contributions/3378959/attachments/1829959/2996545/khennessy_cepc_dune_daq_v1.pdf DUNE triggerless DAQ] |
− | 1 --
| |
− | 2 local p_udplb = Proto("udplb", "UDP Load Balancer Protocol")
| |
| | | |
− | 3 local f_magic = ProtoField.string("udplb.magic", "Magic", base.ASCII)
| + | [https://indico.jlab.org/event/378/contributions/6050/attachments/5093/6351/20200513_JLab_Streaming_Readout.pdf Streaming Mode DAQ at JLab] |
− | 4 local f_version = ProtoField.uint8("udplb.version", "Version", base.DEC)
| |
− | 5 local f_proto = ProtoField.uint8("udplb.proto", "Protocol", base.HEX)
| |
− | 6 local f_tick = ProtoField.uint64("udplb.tick", "Tick", base.HEX)
| |
| | | |
− | 7 p_udplb.fields = {
| + | [http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Real-time_data_analysis_in_particle_physics Real-time data analysis in particle physics] |
− | 8 f_magic,
| |
− | 9 f_version,
| |
− | 10 f_proto,
| |
− | 11 f_tick,
| |
− | 12 }
| |
| | | |
− | 13 local p_udplb_encap_table = DissectorTable.new("udplb.proto", "UDP-LB Encap", ftypes.UINT8, base.DEC, p_udplb)
| + | [https://indico.cern.ch/event/659612/contributions/2690262/attachments/1591386/2518642/triggerintro4.pdf Intro to Triggering] |
| | | |
− | 14 local proto = Field.new("udplb.proto")
| + | [https://wiki.jlab.org/epsciwiki/images/8/8b/SRO_LDRD_Test_Plan_2024v0.8.pdf SRO Test Plan] |
− | 15 local tick = Field.new("udplb.tick")
| |
− | | |
− | 16 function p_udplb.dissector(buf, pkt, tree)
| |
− | 17 local t = tree:add(p_udplb, buf(0, 12))
| |
− | 18 t:add(f_magic, buf(0,2))
| |
− | 19 t:add(f_version, buf(2,1))
| |
− | 20 t:add(f_proto, buf(3,1))
| |
− | 21 t:add(f_tick, buf(4,8))
| |
− | | |
− | 22 -- local proto = buf(13,1):uint()
| |
− | 23 local dissector = p_udplb_encap_table:get_dissector(proto()())
| |
− | | |
− | 24 if dissector ~= nil then
| |
− | 25 -- found a dissector
| |
− | 26 dissector:call(buf(12):tvb(), pkt, tree)
| |
− | 27 else
| |
− | 28 pkt.cols.protocol:set("UDP-LB")
| |
− | 29 pkt.cols.packet_len:set(buf:len())
| |
− | 30 pkt.cols.info:set("Tick: " .. tick()())
| |
− | 31 end
| |
− | | |
− | 32 end
| |
− | | |
− | 33 local udp_encap_table = DissectorTable.get("udp.port")
| |
− | 34 udp_encap_table:add(0x4c42, p_udplb)
| |
− | </pre>
| |
− | | |
− | == Tshark Plug-in for Payload Seg ==
| |
− | | |
− | <pre>
| |
− | 1 --
| |
− | 2 local p_evio6seg = Proto("evio6seg", "EVIO6 Segmentation")
| |
− | | |
− | 3 local f_version = ProtoField.uint8("eviogseg.version", "Version", base.DEC, nil, 0xF0)
| |
− | 4 local f_flags = ProtoField.uint16("evio6seg.flags", "Flags", base.HEX, nil, 0x0FFF)
| |
− | 5 local f_rsvd = ProtoField.bool("evio6seg.flags.rsvd", "Reserved", 16, nil, 0xFFC)
| |
− | 6 local f_first = ProtoField.bool("evio6seg.flags.first", "First Segment", 16, nil, 0x002)
| |
− | 7 local f_last = ProtoField.bool("evio6seg.flags.last", "Last Segment", 16, nil, 0x001)
| |
− | 8 local f_rocid = ProtoField.uint16("evio6seg.rocid", "ROC ID", base.HEX) | |
− | 9 local f_offset = ProtoField.uint32("evio6seg.offset", "Offset", base.HEX)
| |
− | | |
− | 10 p_evio6seg.fields = {
| |
− | 11 f_version,
| |
− | 12 f_flags,
| |
− | 13 f_rsvd,
| |
− | 14 f_first,
| |
− | 15 f_last,
| |
− | 16 f_rocid,
| |
− | 17 f_offset,
| |
− | 18 }
| |
− | | |
− | 19 -- field accessor function, used in the dissector
| |
− | 20 local offset = Field.new("evio6seg.offset")
| |
− | 21 local rocid = Field.new("evio6seg.rocid")
| |
− | | |
− | 22 local data_dis = Dissector.get("data")
| |
− | | |
− | 23 function p_evio6seg.dissector(buf, pkt, tree)
| |
− | 24 local t = tree:add(p_evio6seg, buf(0,4))
| |
− | 25 t:add(f_version, buf(0,1))
| |
− | | |
− | 26 local tflags = t:add(f_flags, buf(0,2))
| |
− | 27 tflags:add(f_rsvd, buf(0,2))
| |
− | 28 tflags:add(f_first, buf(0,2))
| |
− | 29 tflags:add(f_last, buf(0,2))
| |
− | | |
− | 30 t:add(f_rocid, buf(2,2))
| |
− | 31 t:add(f_offset, buf(4,4))
| |
− | | |
− | 32 data_dis:call(buf(8):tvb(), pkt, tree)
| |
− | | |
− | 33 pkt.cols.protocol:set("EVIO6SEG")
| |
− | 34 pkt.cols.packet_len:set(buf(8):tvb():reported_length_remaining())
| |
− | 35 pkt.cols.info:set("ROC: " .. string.format("0x%X", rocid()()) .. " Offset: " .. offset()())
| |
− | 36
| |
− | 37 end
| |
− | | |
− | 38 local udplb_encap_table = DissectorTable.get("udplb.proto")
| |
− | 39 udplb_encap_table:add(1, p_evio6seg)
| |
− | | |
− | 40 local udp_encap_table = DissectorTable.get("udp.port")
| |
− | 41 udp_encap_table:add(0x4556, p_evio6seg)
| |
− | </pre>
| |
| | | |
− | <span>99</span>
| + | == Edge to Core Test Equipment: == |
− | Author, A.N and Another, A. N., 2010, MNRAS, 431, 28.
| |
| | | |
− | = Appendix: EJFAT Processing = | + | # [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:x:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/Edge-to-Core-Test-Stand-12102021.xlsx?d=w8de06c441cd442fd8d3f1b7d7983028d&csf=1&web=1&e=wKS9Lh Price Estimate Spreadsheet] |
| + | # [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:b:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/EJFAT-Test-Stand-Network-Map.pdf?csf=1&web=1&e=iWvvet Networking Diagram], [[Media:20240209_EJFAT_diagram.pdf | Updated (PDF)]] (from Brent 2024-02-09) |
| + | # [https://misportal.jlab.org/reqs/pr/viewPr.do?prNum=408549 PR408549] : Requisition 1 of 2 : |
| + | ## [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:w:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/EJFAT-Test-Stand-Servers-SOW.docx?d=w19107d52332948a0b2924b13939c3f64&csf=1&web=1&e=CS6Ub8 Statement of Work for Servers] |
| + | ## 1/13/2022: EJFAT team decided to solicit two bid responses, one with MLX NIC and one without. Response from Procurement is "I can ask for the two separate quotes. If you are going to purchase both option (with & without add-in cards), once I receive the quotes back, you will have submit a new PR to cover the option (without add-in cards)." |
| + | ## 1/18/2022: Question from KOI Computers: "please clarify what the part number for the NVIDIA Dual Port ConnectX-6". Replied with part # MCX623106AN-CDAT. |
| + | ## 1/24/2022: Requisition currently open for bid responses from vendors. Due date is COB 1/24/2022. |
| + | ## 1/27/2022: PO awarded to Atipa for 6 servers and 1 file-server with FPGA and MLX SmartNIC. Expected delivery date from vendor is 5/31/2022. |
| + | # [https://misportal.jlab.org/reqs/pr/viewPr.do?prNum=408870 PR408870] [https://misportal.jlab.org/reqs/pr/viewPr.do?prNum=408938 PR408938] Requisition 2 of 2: Statement of Work for Switches & Cables |
| + | ## 1/14/2022: PRs for the switches, transceivers and fiber have been submitted. I added (4) 2km 100G transceivers to support dual 100G connections between the switches. We can always upgrade to 400G in the future, if needed. |
| + | # [https://misportal.jlab.org/reqs/pr/viewPr.do?prNum=409850 PR409850] [https://developer.nvidia.com/arm-hpc-devkit NVIDIA ARM HPC Developer Kit] |
| + | ## Hardware Specifications for dev kit |
| + | ##: [[Model]] GIGABYTE G242-P32, 2U server |
| + | ##: [[CPU]] 1x Ampere Altra Q80-30 (Arm processor) |
| + | ##: [[Memory]] 512G DDR4 memory |
| + | ##: [[Storage]] 6TB SAS/ SATA 3.5″ |
| + | ##: [[GPU]] 2x NVIDIA A100 GPU |
| + | ##: [[Network]] 2x NVIDIA® BlueField®-2 E-Series DPU, 200GbE/HDR single-port QSFP56, PCIe Gen4 x16, secure boot enabled, crypto disabled, 16GB on-board DDR, 1GbE OOB management |
| | | |
− | [[File:esnet-jlab-network-diagram-v002d.png|border|1600px|link=|"EJFAT Load Balanced Transport"]] | + | == Resources == |
| + | * [https://jeffersonlab.sharepoint.com/:b:/r/sites/SciComp/Shared%20Documents/EPSCI/EJFAT/u280_po_Signed_21-M0862%20-%20Avnet.pdf?csf=1&web=1&e=PmJfdu First FPGA PO] |
| + | * [https://www.jlab.org TBD] |