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This repository contains the Vigor verification toolchain and network functions (NFs).

Machine prerequisites

Our scripts assume you are using Ubuntu 18.04 or 20.04, with an active Internet connection to download dependencies. Older Ubuntus, or other Debian-based distros, may work but have not been tested.

ℹ️ If you run the scripts in a Docker container, launch it as --privileged to allow opam to create namespaces. (see ocaml/opam#3498)

As an alternative to installing the dependencies on your own machine, we provide a Docker image: dslabepfl/vigor-20.08. (The image dslabepfl/vigor corresponding to the artifact-evaluated version, using DPDK 17.11, is still available.) However, you must still use Ubuntu 18.04 as a host, since the guest uses the host's kernel and DPDK needs kernel headers to compile. This image can be generated with the ./Docker-build.sh script.

Please note that running the setup.sh script can take an hour, since it downloads and compiles many dependencies, and uses sudo which will prompt for your credentials.

To compile and run Vigor NFs, you need:

  • 20 GB of disk space
  • 16 GB of RAM, 8 GB of which is allocated as 4096x2MB hugepages; see the DPDK documentation to set up hugepages.
  • A DPDK-compatible NIC with at least two ports, bound to DPDK using the dpdk-devbind.py tool.
  • To run setup.sh no-verify.

To verify NFs using DPDK models, you need:

  • 20 GB of disk space
  • 8 GB of RAM
  • To run setup.sh (no arguments)

To verify NFs using hardware models, you need:

  • 20 GB of disk space
  • 128 GB of RAM
  • To run setup.sh (no arguments)

To benchmark Vigor NFs, you need:

  • One 'device under test' machine with the setup described for compiling and running NFs, and a kernel setup for performance (see the Linux setup for performance section below)
  • One 'tester' machine, with at least two ports on a DPDK-compatible NIC, each connected to the 'device under test' ports
  • Key-based SSH access to the tester from the device under test (This is not strictly required, but will save you from entering your password many times)
  • To change the bench/config.sh file to match the two machines' configuration

Vigor NFs

There are currently six Vigor NFs:

NF Folder Description
NOP vignop No-op forwarder
NAT vignat NAT according to RFC 3022
Bridge vigbridge Bridge with MAC learning according to IEEE 802.1Q-2014 sections 8.7 and 8.8
Load balancer viglb Load balancer inspired by Google's Maglev
Policer vigpol Traffic policer whose specification we invented
Firewall vigfw Firewall whose specification we invented

There are additional "baseline" NFs, which can only be compiled, run and benchmarked, each in its own folder:

NF Folder Description
Click NOP click-nop Click-based no-op forwarder
Click NAT click-nat Click-based NAT
Click bridge click-bridge Click-based MAC learning bridge
Click load balancer click-lb Click-based load balancer (not Maglev)
Moonpol moonpol Libmoon-based traffic policer
Click firewall click-fw Click-based firewall

The Click- and Libmoon-based NFs use batching if the VIGOR_USE_BATCH environment variable is set to true when running the benchmark targets (see table below).

Pick the NF you want to work with by cd-ing to its folder, then use one of the following make targets:

Target(s) Description Expected duration
Default Compile the NF <1min
run Run the NF using recommended arguments <1min to start (stop with Ctrl+C)
symbex validate Verify the NF only <1min to symbex, <1h to validate
symbex-withdpdk validate Verify the NF + DPDK + driver <1h to symbex, hours to validate
symbex-withnfos validate Verify the NF + DPDK + driver + NFOS (full stack) <1h to symbex, hours to validate
count-loc Count LoC in the NF <1min
count-spec-loc Count LoC in the specification <1min
count-nfos-loc Count LoC in the NFOS <1min
count-libvig-loc Count LoC in libVig <1min
count-dpdk-loc Count LoC in DPDK (not drivers) <1min
count-ixgbe-loc Count LoC in the ixgbe driver <1min
count-uclibc-loc Count LoC in KLEE-uClibc <1min
benchmark-throughput Benchmark the NF's throughput <15min
benchmark-latency Benchmark the NF's latency <5min
nfos-iso Build a NFOS ISO image runnable in a VM <1min
nfos-multiboot1 Build a NFOS ISO image suitable for netboot <1min
nfos-run Build and run NFOS in a qemu VM <1min to start

To run with your own arguments, compile then run sudo ./build/app/nf -- -? which will display the command-line arguments you need to pass to the NF.

To verify using a pay-as-you-go specification, add VIGOR_SPEC=paygo-your_spec.py before a verification command; the spec name must begin with paygo- and end with .py.

For instance:

  • To verify the "broadcast" pay-as-you-go property of the Vigor bridge (without verifying DPDK or the NFOS), run cd vigbridge then VIGOR_SPEC=paygo-broadcast.py make symbex validate.
  • To benchmark the Vigor policer's throughput, run cd vigpol then make benchmark-throughput

Create your own Vigor NF

  • Run make new-nf at the root of the repository, and answer the prompt.

The generated files contain inline comments describing how to write your NF code and your specification.

Repository structure

Besides the NF folders mentioned above, the repository contains:

  • .git*: Git-related files
  • .clang-format: Settings file for the clang-format code formatter
  • .travis*: Travis-related files for continuous integration
  • Docker* Docker-related files to build an image
  • Makefile*: Makefiles for the NFs
  • README.md: This file
  • bench: Benchmarking scripts, used by the benchmarking make targets
  • codegen: Code generators, used as part of the Vigor build process
  • doc: Documentation files
  • grub.cfg, linker.ld, pxe-boot.sh: NFOS-related files
  • libvig: The libVig folder, containing verified code, proof code, models, and the NFOS kernel
  • nf.{h,c}, nf-util.{h,c}, nf-log.h: Skeleton code for Vigor NFs
  • setup*: Setup script and related files
  • template: Template for new Vigor NFs (see "Create your own Vigor NF" above)
  • validator: The Vigor Validator

Using the NFOS

Vigor includes a NF OS that is simple enough to be symbolically executed, besides trusted boot code.

You can run NFOS either in a virtual machine, using qemu, or on bare metal, using PXE boot.

Note, that as NFOS can not read cmdline arguments, all the NF arguments are compiled into the image during the build. You can set the NF arguments in the respective NF Makefile.

Running the NFOS in a VM

In order to run the NFOS inside a virtual machine, you need your kernel allow direct device access through VFIO. For that you need to pass intel_iommu=on iommu=pt to your linux kernel in the command line arguments in your bootloader.

Further, you need to load the vfio-pci module to forward your NICs to the VM with ;

$ modprobe vfio-pci

Then, bind the NICs you intend for the NF to use to vfio-pci (RTE_SDK is the path to your DPDK folder):

$ $RTE_SDK/usertools/dpdk-devbind.py -b vfio-pci <nic1> <nic2>

Here <nic1> and <nic2> are PCI addresses of the NICs you want to bind (e.g. 0000:06:00.0). You can find the PCI addresses of your NICs using dpdk-devbind.py -s.

⚠️ Warning: after the next step your terminal will stop responding. Make sure you have a spare terminal open on this machine.

Finally, to run the NF with NFOS in a VM, get in to the NF directory, e.g. vigor/vignat, and run:

$ make nfos-run

This will build the NF with DPDK, device driver and NFOS, produce the bootable ISO image and start a qemu machine executing that image. Note that NFOS ignores any input, so your terminal will show the NFOS output and will stop responding. You will need to kill the qemu process from a different terminal.

Running the NFOS on bare metal over the network

In order to run the NFOS on bare metal you will need an extra ethernet connection of the machine intended to run the NFOS (we call it DUT from now on) and a PXE server machine.

You will need nfos-x86_64-multiboot1.bin image on the machine that will serve PXE requests. You can build it either directly on the machine, or build it on DUT and copy it over. To build the image, run:

$ make nfos-multiboot1

To serve the image, run on the machine intended as a PXE server:

$ ./pxe-boot.sh nfos-x86_64-multiboot1.bin

This will start a DHCP server and a PXE server and wait for network boot requests. As our image is larger than 64KB, we use a two step boot process, booting first an ipxe/undionly.kpxe image that then fetches the NFOS image and boots it.

In BIOS, configure DUT to boot from network, using the interface connected to the PXE server. When you reboot it, you should see some activity in the PXE server output and see NFOS output on DUT (printing the NF configuration). At this point you can stop the PXE boot server. The NFOS is running!

Linux setup for performance

To maximize and stabilize performance, we recommend the following Linux kernel switches in /etc/default/grub's GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT:

These settings were obtained from experience and various online guides, such as Red Hat's low-latency tuning guides. They are designed for Intel-based machines, you may have to tweak some of them if you use AMD CPUs.

Please do not leave these settings enabled if you aren't benchmarking, as they will effectively cause your machine to always consume a lot of power.

This table does not include the hugepages settings.

Setting Effect
isolcpus=8,9 Isolate the specified CPU cores so Linux won't schedule anything on them; replace with at least one core you will then use to run the NFs
acpi=noirq Disable ACPI interrupts
nosoftlockup Don't print backtraces when a process appears to be locked up (such as an NF that runs for a while)
intel_idle.max_cstate=0 processor.max_cstate=0 Do not allow the CPU to enter low-power states
idle=poll Do not allow the kernel t use a wait mechanism in the idle routine
mce=ignore_ce Ignore corrected errors that cause periodic latency spikes
intel_pstate=disable Prevents the Intel driver from managing power state and frequency
cpuidle.off=1 Disable CPU idle time management
pcie_aspm=off Disable PCIe Active State Power Management, forcing PCIe devices to always run at full power
processor.ignore_ppc=1 Ignore BIOS warnings about CPU frequency
intel_iommu=on iommu=pt Set the IOMMU to passthrough, required on some CPUs for DPDK's huge pages to run at full performance

FAQ

  • Q: DPDK says No free hugepages reported in hugepages-1048576kB, what did I do wrong?

  • A: Nothing wrong! This just means there are no 1GB hugepages; as long as it can find the 2MB ones, you're good.

  • Q: DPDK says PMD: ixgbe_dev_link_status_print(): Port 0: Link Down, what's up?

  • A: This doesn't mean the link is down, just that it's down at the moment DPDK checks, it usually comes up right after that and the NF is fine.

  • Q: DPDK cannot reserve all of the hugepages it needs, though it can reserve some of them.

  • A: Reboot the machine. This is the only workaround that always works.

Dependencies

We depend on, and are grateful for:

SOSP paper details

This section details the justification for each figure and table in the SOSP paper; "references" are to sections of this file, paths refers to this repository unless otherwise indicated.

Figure 1:

  • "NF logic" is the code in each NF's folder
  • "Packet I/O framework" is the lib folder in the DPDK 17.11 repository
  • "libVig" is in libvig
  • "Driver" is a DPDK driver; we verified drivers/net/ixgbe in the DPDK 17.11 repository
  • "NF-specific OS" is the NFOS in libvig/kernel

Figure 2:

  • "NF logic" / "libVig" / "System stack" have the same meanings as in Figure 1
  • "Vigor toolchain" is composed of KLEE, VeriFast, and the Vigor Validator; the latter is in validator
  • "RFC-derived specification" are the spec.py files in each NF's folder
  • "One-off properties" are the paygo-*.py files in each NF's folder

Figure 3:

  • This is a simplified version of vigbridge/spec.py

Figure 4:

  • "Stateless logic" and "libVig" have the same meaning as Figure 1's "NF logic" and "libVig"
  • "libVig API" are the header files in the libvig folder
  • "NF specification" has the same meaning as Figure 2's "RFC-derived specification"/"One-off properties"
  • Step 1 "Symbolic execution" is performed by KLEE, using one of the symbex Make targets as indicated in Vigor NFs
  • Step 2 "Conversion" is performed by validator/import.ml
  • Step 3 "Lemma insertion" is performed by validator/common_fspec.ml
  • Step 4 "Theorem proving" is performed by VeriFast, as invoked in validator/verifier.ml

Figure 5:

  • This is a simplified version of the vigbridge folder's code (besides spec.py and paygo-*.py), and of nf_main.c

Figure 6:

  • This is a simplified version of a common pattern we use in NFs, see e.g. vignat/nat_flowmanager.{c,h}

Figure 7:

  • This is a simplified version of vigbridge/paygo-learn.py

Figure 8:

  • This is a simplified version of vigbridge/spec.py

Figure 9:

  • This is a simplified version of vigbridge/paygo-broadcast.py

Figure 10:

  • This is a made-up example for the paper, using standard Vigor spec syntax.

Figure 11:

  • This is a graphical version of the setup described by bench/config.sh

Figure 12:

  • The data is in doc/VigorClickComponentsComparison.csv file

Table 1:

Table 2:

  • These numbers are obtained using their corresponding targets as mentioned in Vigor NFs

Table 3:

  • This is an outdated version of Table 8; use patch -R < optimize.patch in each NF's folder to revert the optimization if you want to reproduce these numbers; note that they do not validate any more, sometimes because the specs assume that the NF always expire flows, but the unoptimized NFs do not, sometimes because the types of variables changed a bit. Thus, we extrapolated the time of the "valid" and "assertion failed" traces to the "type mismatch" traces, since type mismatches take almost no time to detect compared to the time it takes to verify a trace.

Table 4:

  • The NF bugs were discovered during development
  • The DPDK and ixgbe bugs can be reproduced by un-patching DPDK and running verification.

Table 5:

  • These numbers can be reproduced (assuming identical hardware) by running the benchmarks as described in Vigor NFs

Table 6:

  • The "LOC" column can be obtained using the spec line-counting target as mentioned in Vigor NFs
  • The time to translate RFCs was noted during development and is not meaningfully reproducible
  • The user-supplied bounds are the conjunctions of the methods passed as the last argument of a data structure declaration in the fspec.ml file of each NF; except that to be consistent with the paper, a < X & X < b counts as 1.

Table 7:

  • The modular properties for each NF can be found as paygo-*.py files in each NF's repository

Table 8:

  • These numbers are obtained using the targets mentioned in Vigor NFs; note that we count paths (as reported at the end of a KLEE run), not prefixes, and that to get the per-trace time we multiply wall-clock time by the number of CPUs used by parallel then divide by the number of paths.