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[net-next,00/12] nexthop: Preparations for resilient next-hop groups

Message ID cover.1611836479.git.petrm@nvidia.com (mailing list archive)
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Series nexthop: Preparations for resilient next-hop groups | expand

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Petr Machata Jan. 28, 2021, 12:49 p.m. UTC
At this moment, there is only one type of next-hop group: an mpath group.
Mpath groups implement the hash-threshold algorithm, described in RFC
2992[1].

To select a next hop, hash-threshold algorithm first assigns a range of
hashes to each next hop in the group, and then selects the next hop by
comparing the SKB hash with the individual ranges. When a next hop is
removed from the group, the ranges are recomputed, which leads to
reassignment of parts of hash space from one next hop to another. RFC 2992
illustrates it thus:

             +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
             |   1   |   2   |   3   |   4   |   5   |
             +-------+-+-----+---+---+-----+-+-------+
             |    1    |    2    |    4    |    5    |
             +---------+---------+---------+---------+

              Before and after deletion of next hop 3
	      under the hash-threshold algorithm.

Note how next hop 2 gave up part of the hash space in favor of next hop 1,
and 4 in favor of 5. While there will usually be some overlap between the
previous and the new distribution, some traffic flows change the next hop
that they resolve to.

If a multipath group is used for load-balancing between multiple servers,
this hash space reassignment causes an issue that packets from a single
flow suddenly end up arriving at a server that does not expect them, which
may lead to TCP reset.

If a multipath group is used for load-balancing among available paths to
the same server, the issue is that different latencies and reordering along
the way causes the packets to arrive in wrong order.

Resilient hashing is a technique to address the above problem. Resilient
next-hop group has another layer of indirection between the group itself
and its constituent next hops: a hash table. The selection algorithm uses a
straightforward modulo operation to choose a hash bucket, and then reads
the next hop that this bucket contains, and forwards traffic there.

This indirection brings an important feature. In the hash-threshold
algorithm, the range of hashes associated with a next hop must be
continuous. With a hash table, mapping between the hash table buckets and
the individual next hops is arbitrary. Therefore when a next hop is deleted
the buckets that held it are simply reassigned to other next hops:

             +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
             |1|1|1|1|2|2|2|2|3|3|3|3|4|4|4|4|5|5|5|5|
             +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
	                      v v v v
             +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
             |1|1|1|1|2|2|2|2|1|2|4|5|4|4|4|4|5|5|5|5|
             +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

              Before and after deletion of next hop 3
	      under the resilient hashing algorithm.

When weights of next hops in a group are altered, it may be possible to
choose a subset of buckets that are currently not used for forwarding
traffic, and use those to satisfy the new next-hop distribution demands,
keeping the "busy" buckets intact. This way, established flows are ideally
kept being forwarded to the same endpoints through the same paths as before
the next-hop group change.

This patchset prepares the next-hop code for eventual introduction of
resilient hashing groups.

- Patches #1-#4 carry otherwise disjoint changes that just remove certain
  assumptions in the next-hop code.

- Patches #5-#6 extend the in-kernel next-hop notifiers to support more
  next-hop group types.

- Patches #7-#12 refactor RTNL message handlers. Resilient next-hop groups
  will introduce a new logical object, a hash table bucket. It turns out
  that handling bucket-related messages is similar to how next-hop messages
  are handled. These patches extract the commonalities into reusable
  components.

The plan is to contribute approximately the following patchsets:

1) Nexthop policy refactoring (already pushed)
2) Preparations for resilient next hop groups (this patchset)
3) Implementation of resilient next hop group
4) Netdevsim offload plus a suite of selftests
5) Preparations for mlxsw offload of resilient next-hop groups
6) mlxsw offload including selftests

Interested parties can look at the current state of the code at [2] and
[3].

[1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2992
[2] https://github.com/idosch/linux/commits/submit/res_integ_v1
[3] https://github.com/idosch/iproute2/commits/submit/res_v1

David Ahern (1):
  nexthop: Rename nexthop_free_mpath

Ido Schimmel (1):
  nexthop: Use enum to encode notification type

Petr Machata (10):
  nexthop: Dispatch nexthop_select_path() by group type
  nexthop: Introduce to struct nh_grp_entry a per-type union
  nexthop: Assert the invariant that a NH group is of only one type
  nexthop: Dispatch notifier init()/fini() by group type
  nexthop: Extract dump filtering parameters into a single structure
  nexthop: Extract a common helper for parsing dump attributes
  nexthop: Strongly-type context of rtm_dump_nexthop()
  nexthop: Extract a helper for walking the next-hop tree
  nexthop: Add a callback parameter to rtm_dump_walk_nexthops()
  nexthop: Extract a helper for validation of get/del RTNL requests

 .../ethernet/mellanox/mlxsw/spectrum_router.c |  54 +++-
 drivers/net/netdevsim/fib.c                   |  23 +-
 include/net/nexthop.h                         |  14 +-
 net/ipv4/nexthop.c                            | 270 ++++++++++++------
 4 files changed, 245 insertions(+), 116 deletions(-)

Comments

David Ahern Jan. 29, 2021, 3:24 a.m. UTC | #1
On 1/28/21 5:49 AM, Petr Machata wrote:
> At this moment, there is only one type of next-hop group: an mpath group.
> Mpath groups implement the hash-threshold algorithm, described in RFC
> 2992[1].
> 
> To select a next hop, hash-threshold algorithm first assigns a range of
> hashes to each next hop in the group, and then selects the next hop by
> comparing the SKB hash with the individual ranges. When a next hop is
> removed from the group, the ranges are recomputed, which leads to
> reassignment of parts of hash space from one next hop to another. RFC 2992
> illustrates it thus:
> 
>              +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
>              |   1   |   2   |   3   |   4   |   5   |
>              +-------+-+-----+---+---+-----+-+-------+
>              |    1    |    2    |    4    |    5    |
>              +---------+---------+---------+---------+
> 
>               Before and after deletion of next hop 3
> 	      under the hash-threshold algorithm.
> 
> Note how next hop 2 gave up part of the hash space in favor of next hop 1,
> and 4 in favor of 5. While there will usually be some overlap between the
> previous and the new distribution, some traffic flows change the next hop
> that they resolve to.
> 
> If a multipath group is used for load-balancing between multiple servers,
> this hash space reassignment causes an issue that packets from a single
> flow suddenly end up arriving at a server that does not expect them, which
> may lead to TCP reset.
> 
> If a multipath group is used for load-balancing among available paths to
> the same server, the issue is that different latencies and reordering along
> the way causes the packets to arrive in wrong order.
> 
> Resilient hashing is a technique to address the above problem. Resilient
> next-hop group has another layer of indirection between the group itself
> and its constituent next hops: a hash table. The selection algorithm uses a
> straightforward modulo operation to choose a hash bucket, and then reads
> the next hop that this bucket contains, and forwards traffic there.
> 
> This indirection brings an important feature. In the hash-threshold
> algorithm, the range of hashes associated with a next hop must be
> continuous. With a hash table, mapping between the hash table buckets and
> the individual next hops is arbitrary. Therefore when a next hop is deleted
> the buckets that held it are simply reassigned to other next hops:
> 
>              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
>              |1|1|1|1|2|2|2|2|3|3|3|3|4|4|4|4|5|5|5|5|
>              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
> 	                      v v v v
>              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
>              |1|1|1|1|2|2|2|2|1|2|4|5|4|4|4|4|5|5|5|5|
>              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
> 
>               Before and after deletion of next hop 3
> 	      under the resilient hashing algorithm.
> 
> When weights of next hops in a group are altered, it may be possible to
> choose a subset of buckets that are currently not used for forwarding
> traffic, and use those to satisfy the new next-hop distribution demands,
> keeping the "busy" buckets intact. This way, established flows are ideally
> kept being forwarded to the same endpoints through the same paths as before
> the next-hop group change.
> 
> This patchset prepares the next-hop code for eventual introduction of
> resilient hashing groups.
> 
> - Patches #1-#4 carry otherwise disjoint changes that just remove certain
>   assumptions in the next-hop code.
> 
> - Patches #5-#6 extend the in-kernel next-hop notifiers to support more
>   next-hop group types.
> 
> - Patches #7-#12 refactor RTNL message handlers. Resilient next-hop groups
>   will introduce a new logical object, a hash table bucket. It turns out
>   that handling bucket-related messages is similar to how next-hop messages
>   are handled. These patches extract the commonalities into reusable
>   components.
> 
> The plan is to contribute approximately the following patchsets:
> 
> 1) Nexthop policy refactoring (already pushed)
> 2) Preparations for resilient next hop groups (this patchset)
> 3) Implementation of resilient next hop group
> 4) Netdevsim offload plus a suite of selftests
> 5) Preparations for mlxsw offload of resilient next-hop groups
> 6) mlxsw offload including selftests
> 
> Interested parties can look at the current state of the code at [2] and
> [3].
> 
> [1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2992
> [2] https://github.com/idosch/linux/commits/submit/res_integ_v1
> [3] https://github.com/idosch/iproute2/commits/submit/res_v1
> 

Very easy to review patchset. Thank you for that and for this cover
letter with the end goal and progress.
patchwork-bot+netdevbpf@kernel.org Jan. 29, 2021, 5:10 a.m. UTC | #2
Hello:

This series was applied to netdev/net-next.git (refs/heads/master):

On Thu, 28 Jan 2021 13:49:12 +0100 you wrote:
> At this moment, there is only one type of next-hop group: an mpath group.
> Mpath groups implement the hash-threshold algorithm, described in RFC
> 2992[1].
> 
> To select a next hop, hash-threshold algorithm first assigns a range of
> hashes to each next hop in the group, and then selects the next hop by
> comparing the SKB hash with the individual ranges. When a next hop is
> removed from the group, the ranges are recomputed, which leads to
> reassignment of parts of hash space from one next hop to another. RFC 2992
> illustrates it thus:
> 
> [...]

Here is the summary with links:
  - [net-next,01/12] nexthop: Rename nexthop_free_mpath
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/5d1f0f09b5f0
  - [net-next,02/12] nexthop: Dispatch nexthop_select_path() by group type
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/79bc55e3fee9
  - [net-next,03/12] nexthop: Introduce to struct nh_grp_entry a per-type union
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/b9bae61be466
  - [net-next,04/12] nexthop: Assert the invariant that a NH group is of only one type
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/720ccd9a7285
  - [net-next,05/12] nexthop: Use enum to encode notification type
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/09ad6becf535
  - [net-next,06/12] nexthop: Dispatch notifier init()/fini() by group type
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/da230501f2c9
  - [net-next,07/12] nexthop: Extract dump filtering parameters into a single structure
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/56450ec6b7fc
  - [net-next,08/12] nexthop: Extract a common helper for parsing dump attributes
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/b9ebea127661
  - [net-next,09/12] nexthop: Strongly-type context of rtm_dump_nexthop()
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/a6fbbaa64c3b
  - [net-next,10/12] nexthop: Extract a helper for walking the next-hop tree
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/cbee18071e72
  - [net-next,11/12] nexthop: Add a callback parameter to rtm_dump_walk_nexthops()
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/e948217d258f
  - [net-next,12/12] nexthop: Extract a helper for validation of get/del RTNL requests
    https://git.kernel.org/netdev/net-next/c/0bccf8ed8aa6

You are awesome, thank you!
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