5. AF_XDP Poll Mode Driver

AF_XDP is an address family that is optimized for high performance packet processing. AF_XDP sockets enable the possibility for XDP program to redirect packets to a memory buffer in userspace.

For the full details behind AF_XDP socket, you can refer to AF_XDP documentation in the Kernel.

This Linux-specific PMD driver creates the AF_XDP socket and binds it to a specific netdev queue, it allows a DPDK application to send and receive raw packets through the socket which would bypass the kernel network stack. Current implementation only supports single queue, multi-queues feature will be added later.

AF_XDP PMD enables need_wakeup flag by default if it is supported. This need_wakeup feature is used to support executing application and driver on the same core efficiently. This feature not only has a large positive performance impact for the one core case, but also does not degrade 2 core performance and actually improves it for Tx heavy workloads.

5.1. Options

The following options can be provided to set up an af_xdp port in DPDK.

  • iface - name of the Kernel interface to attach to (required);
  • start_queue - starting netdev queue id (optional, default 0);
  • queue_count - total netdev queue number (optional, default 1);

5.2. Prerequisites

This is a Linux-specific PMD, thus the following prerequisites apply:

  • A Linux Kernel (version > v4.18) with XDP sockets configuration enabled;
  • libbpf (within kernel version > v5.1-rc4) with latest af_xdp support installed, User can install libbpf via make install_lib && make install_headers in <kernel src tree>/tools/lib/bpf;
  • A Kernel bound interface to attach to;
  • For need_wakeup feature, it requires kernel version later than v5.3-rc1;
  • For PMD zero copy, it requires kernel version later than v5.4-rc1;

5.3. Set up an af_xdp interface

The following example will set up an af_xdp interface in DPDK:

--vdev net_af_xdp,iface=ens786f1

5.4. Limitations

  • MTU

    The MTU of the AF_XDP PMD is limited due to the XDP requirement of one packet per page. In the PMD we report the maximum MTU for zero copy to be equal to the page size less the frame overhead introduced by AF_XDP (XDP HR = 256) and DPDK (frame headroom = 320). With a 4K page size this works out at 3520. However in practice this value may be even smaller, due to differences between the supported RX buffer sizes of the underlying kernel netdev driver.

    For example, the largest RX buffer size supported by the underlying kernel driver which is less than the page size (4096B) may be 3072B. In this case, the maximum MTU value will be at most 3072, but likely even smaller than this, once relevant headers are accounted for eg. Ethernet and VLAN.

    To determine the actual maximum MTU value of the interface you are using with the AF_XDP PMD, consult the documentation for the kernel driver.

    Note: The AF_XDP PMD will fail to initialise if an MTU which violates the driver’s conditions as above is set prior to launching the application.