Data Plane Development Kit

DPDK / dpdk.org
Developer(s) 6WIND, Intel
Stable release
16.11 / 13 November 2016 (2016-11-13)
Development status Active
Written in C
Operating system FreeBSD, Linux
Type Routing
License BSD
Website dpdk.org

The Data Plane Development Kit (DPDK) is a set of data plane libraries and network interface controller drivers for fast packet processing. The DPDK provides a programming framework for Intel x86 processors and enables faster development of high speed data packet networking applications.[1][2] It scales from Intel Atom processors to Intel Xeon processors and support for other processor architectures like IBM POWER8 are under progress.[3] It is provided and supported under the open source[4] BSD license.

Overview

The DPDK framework creates a set of libraries for specific hardware/software environments through the creation of an Environment Abstraction Layer (EAL).[5] The EAL hides the environmental specific and provides a standard programming interface to libraries, available hardware accelerators and other hardware and operating system (Linux, FreeBSD) elements. Once the EAL is created for a specific environment, developers link to the library to create their applications. For instance, EAL provides the frameworks to support Linux, FreeBSD, Intel IA 32- or 64-bit or IBM Power8.

The EAL also provides additional services including time references, PCIe bus access, trace and debug functions and alarm operations.

The DPDK implements a low overhead run-to-completion model for fast data plane performance and accesses devices via polling to eliminate the performance overhead of interrupt processing.

The DPDK also includes software examples that highlight best practices for software architecture, tips for data structure design and storage, application profiling and performance tuning utilities and tips that address common network performance deficits.

Libraries

The DPDK includes data plane libraries and optimized NIC drivers for the following:[6]

All libraries are stored in the dpdk/lib/librte_* directories

Plugins

The EAL allows loading some plugins using the -d file.so option without recompiling any applications that use the DPDK libraries. The following plugins are available:

Environment

The DPDK was originally designed to run using a bare-metal mode which is currently deprecated. Actually, DPDK's EAL provides support for Linux or FreeBSD userland application.

EAL can be extended in order to support any processors.

Ecosystem

Beside Intel which is a contributor to the DPDK, several other vendors also support the DPDK within their products and some offer additional training, support and professional services. The list of vendors who have announced DPDK support includes:

Projects

Opensource

The pfSense project published a road map on 25 February 2015, in which developer Jim Thompson announced the rewriting of the pfSense core—including pf, network packet forwarding and shaping, link bonding, IPsec—using Intel's DPDK: "We have a goal of being able to forward, with packet filtering at rates of at least 14.88Mpps. This is 'line rate' on a 10Gbps interface. There is simply no way to use today's FreeBSD (or linux) in-kernel stacks for this type of load."[15]

OVS has a limited set of feature running userland that can be leveraged to bypass the Linux kernel OVS processing. This use case of OVS with DPDK userland is usually named OVS-DPDK. It is mostly deployed with Openstack Neutron but it assumes that many features and SDN capabilities of Openstack are disabled. For instance, when OVS-DPDK is used, Neutron provides a lower lever of security than when OVS kernel is used (no stateful firewalling, less security group).

It has been estimated that more than 20 opensource projects are now using DPDK in various fashions.

Platforms and solutions

Since DPDK was launched, very quickly many platforms have integrated this userland library for some IOs. The platforms are:

References

  1. Simon Stanley,All Change for Packet Processing, Heavy Reading, 2013
  2. Shamus McGillicudy, Intel DPDK, switch and server ref designs push SDN ecosystem forward, SearchSDN, April 2013
  3. "DPDK: Data Plane Development Kit – What it is". dpdk.org. dpdk.org. Retrieved 16 March 2015.
  4. Simon Stanley,DPDK Goes Open-Source, Intel Embedded Community, May 2013
  5. Intel Corporation, Intel® Data Plane Development Kit: Programmers Guide, November 2012
  6. Intel Communications Infrastructure Division, Intel® Data Plane Development Kit Overview, December 2012
  7. PRWeb, 6WIND Extends Portable Packet Processing Software to Support Intel® Data Plane Development Kit, September 2011
  8. Calsoft Labs to offer professional services and support for Intel® Data Plane Development Kit, ALTEN Calsoft Labs, 18 February 2014, retrieved 2014-10-28
  9. COTS Journal, ATCA Blade Serves Up Xeon E5-2600 Processor, June 2012
  10. Brocade vRouter
  11. MarketWatch, Radisys Delivers Industry's First 40G Solution for Intel(R) Data Plane Development Kit, September 2012
  12. Tieto, Tieto provides professional software services and support for the Intel® Data Plane Development Kit, February 2012
  13. Reuters, Wind River Delivers Support and Services for Intel Data Plane Development Kit for High-Performance Packet Processing, May 2012
  14. Get Flying with the Intel Data Plane Development Kit, Lanner Electronics Inc., 20 February 2013, retrieved 2013-07-11
  15. Thompson, Jim. "Further (a roadmap for pfSense)". blog.pfsense.org. Electric Sheep Fencing LLC. Retrieved 21 April 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.