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Capsule sandbox

The Capsule sandbox is a containerized development environment for building Capsule applications in Rust.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Capsule is built on Intel's Data Plane Development Kit release 19.11. While it is written in Rust, it needs to be able to call DPDK's C functions installed separately as shared dynamic libaries. To make developing and running Capsule applications easy, we created a sandbox container with all the necessary dependencies. You can pull down the container and start writing network functions in stable Rust right away.

Getting Started

To run the sandbox, the docker host must run on a Linux distribution. DPDK requires either Linux or FreeBSD. We plan to add FreeBSD support in the future.

Vagrant and Docker

The quickest way to start the sandbox is to use the VirtualBox virtual machine included in this repository. If you are developing on either MacOS or Windows, this is the only way to write a Capsule application.

Before running the sandbox, download and install Vagrant and VirtualBox on the host. Then install the following Vagrant plugins,

host$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-reload vagrant-disksize vagrant-vbguest

After cloning this repository, start and ssh into the VirtualBox VM using vagrant commands,

host$ vagrant up
host$ vagrant ssh

This VM has three additional private network interfaces defined on the same subnet. Two of the interfaces are bound to DPDK and are not visible to the Linux kernel. Use the third interface to send and receive packets to and from the DPDK bound interfaces with any networking tools.

# Specific IPs. These is needed because DPDK takes over the NIC.
config.vm.network "private_network", ip: "192.168.56.10", :mac => "0200C0A8380A"
config.vm.network "private_network", ip: "192.168.56.11", :mac => "0200C0A8380B"

# NIC on the same subnet as the two dedicated to DPDK.
config.vm.network "private_network", ip: "192.168.56.129", :mac => "0200C0A83881"

Once inside the Debian VM with Docker installed. The VM is already preconfigured for DPDK. To run the sandbox, use the command,

vagrant$ docker run -it --rm \
    --privileged \
    --network=host \
    --name sandbox \
    --cap-add=SYS_PTRACE \
    --security-opt seccomp=unconfined \
    -v /lib/modules:/lib/modules \
    -v /dev/hugepages:/dev/hugepages \
    getcapsule/sandbox:19.11.6-1.50 /bin/bash

The sandbox must run in privileged mode with host networking, so it can access the two network interfaces on the Vagrant host bound to DPDK applications.

vagrant$ lspci
00:08.0 Ethernet controller: Red Hat, Inc Virtio network device
00:09.0 Ethernet controller: Red Hat, Inc Virtio network device

To use Capsule, add it as a dependency in your project's Cargo.toml,

[dependencies]
capsule = "0.1"

Remember to also mount the working directory of your project as a volume for the sandbox. Then you can use Cargo commands inside the container as normal.

Linux Distributions Running Docker Directly

Alternatively, if you are already running a Linux operating system and do not wish to use Vagrant, you should be able to run the sandbox container directly. We've tested the sandbox on Debian Buster, Ubuntu Bionic and CentOS 7. Other Linux distributions and versions may work similarly with minor tweaks, if you are not running the versions we tested on.

A few system configuration changes are necessary to support DPDK.

DPDK needs a small kernel module to set up the device, map device memory to user-space and register interrupts. The standard uio_pci_generic module included in the Linux kernel can provide the capability. To load the module, use the command,

host$ sudo modprobe uio_pci_generic

Debian and CentOS include this module by default. For Ubuntu, uio_pci_generic is not part of the base system, but can be installed via an additional package,

sudo apt install linux-modules-extra-$(uname -r)

DPDK also needs HugePages support for the large memory pool allocation used for packet buffers. To enable HugePages, use the following commands,

host$ sudo su
host$ echo "vm.nr_hugepages = 2048" >> /etc/sysctl.conf
host$ sysctl -e -p
host$ exit

Before your Capsule application can access a network interface on the host, the interface must be bound to a DPDK compatible driver with the dpdk-devbind utility. To bind the driver, find the interface's PCI address and use the command,

host$ docker pull getcapsule/dpdk-devbind:19.11.6
host$ docker run --rm --privileged --network=host \
    -v /lib/modules:/lib/modules \
    getcapsule/dpdk-devbind:19.11.6 \
    /bin/bash -c 'dpdk-devbind.py --force -b uio_pci_generic #PCI_ADDR#'

Once the necessary changes are made, pull down the sandbox container and run it,

host$ docker pull getcapsule/sandbox:19.11.6-1.50
host$ docker run ...

Without Docker

If you choose not to use Docker, or if you are using a Linux distribution incompatible with the Debian based sandbox, then you need to install DPDK from source yourself.

In addition to the required tools and libraries, you also need the packet captures (pcap) library to run some Capsule example applications. Install libpcap-dev for Debian/Ubuntu or libpcap-devel for RHEL/CentOS/Fedora.

Once you've installed all the necessary tools and libraries, use our script to install the version of DPDK that Capsule uses.

You can also use another script to install the latest stable Rust if it's not setup already. Since kernel 4.0, running DPDK applications requires root privileges. You must install the Rust toolchain for the root user as well if you want to run your project with cargo run. Just for reference, when running Capsule examples without root privileges, you will see an error akin to

EAL: FATAL: Cannot use IOVA as 'PA' since physical addresses are not available
EAL: Cannot use IOVA as 'PA' since physical addresses are not available
DEBUG capsule::dpdk: EAL parsed -1 arguments.
Error: DpdkError("Invalid argument")

We've also provided another VirtualBox VM for development, sans Docker, if you don't want to manually install DPDK, Rust, and the necessary tools and libraries.

host$ vagrant up vm
host$ vagrant ssh

Kernel NIC Interface

If your application uses KNI, you will need the kernel module rte_kni. Kernel modules are version specific. We may provide precompiled modules for different kernel versions and Linux distributions in the future. But for now, you will have to compile it yourself by installing the kernel headers or sources required to build kernel modules on your system, and then build DPDK from source. Follow the directions above.

Once compiled, load it using command,

host$ sudo insmod /lib/modules/`uname -r`/extra/dpdk/rte_kni.ko

Packaging for Release

When packaging your application for release, the package must include the shared DPDK libraries and have as dependencies libnuma and libpcap for your Linux distribution.

If you want to containerize your release, you can use getcapsule/dpdk:19.11.6 as the base image which includes libnuma, libpcap and DPDK. For other packaging methods, you can find the DPDK libraries in /usr/local/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu.

Contributing

Thanks for your help improving the project! We have a contributing guide to help you get involved with the Capsule project.

Code of Conduct

This project and everyone participating in it are governed by the Capsule Code Of Conduct. By participating, you agree to this Code. Please report any violations to the code of conduct to capsule-dev@googlegroups.com.

Contact

You can contact us through either Discord or email.

License

This project is licensed under the Apache-2.0 license.