-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 24
luigirizzo/netmap-ipfw
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
# README FILE FOR IPFW-USER ON TOP OF NETMAP This directory contains a version of ipfw and dummynet that can run in userland, using NETMAP as the backend for packet I/O. This permits a throughput about 10 times higher than the corresponding in-kernel version. I have measured about 6.5 Mpps for plain filtering, and 2.2 Mpps going through a pipe. Some optimizations are possible when running on netmap pipes, or other netmap ports that support zero copy. To build the code simply run make NETMAP_INC=/some/where/with/netmap-release/sys pointing to the netmap 'sys' directory (the makefile uses gmake underneath) The base version comes from FreeBSD-HEAD -r '{2012-08-03}' (and subsequently updated in late 2013) with small modifications listed below netinet/ipfw ip_dn_io.c support for on-stack mbufs ip_fw2.c some conditional compilation for functions not available in userspace ip_fw_log.c revise snprintf, SNPARGS (MAC) sbin/ipfw and the kernel counterpart communicate throuugh a TCP socket (localhost:5555) carrying the raw data that would normally be carried on set/getsockopt. For testing purposes, opening a telnet session to port 5556 and typing some bytes will start a fake 'infinite source' so you can check how fast your ruleset works. gmake dummynet/ipfw & # preferably in another window telnet localhost 5556 # type some bytes to start 'traffic' sh -c "while true; do ipfw/ipfw show; ipfw/ipfw zero; sleep 1; done" (on an i7-3400 I get about 15 Mpps) Real packet I/O is possible using netmap info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/netmap/ You can use a couple of VALE switches (part of netmap) to connect a source and sink to the userspace firewall, as follows s f f d [pkt-gen]-->--[valeA]-->--[kipfw]-->--[valeB]-->--[pkt-gen] The commands to run (in separate windows) are # preliminarly, load the netmap module sudo kldload netmap.ko # connect the firewall to two vale switches ./kipfw valeA:f valeB:f & # configure ipfw/dummynet ipfw/ipfw show # or other # start the sink pkt-gen -i valeB:d -f rx # start an infinite source pkt-gen -i valeA:s -f tx # plain again with the firewall and enjoy ipfw/ipfw show # or other On my i7-3400 I get about 6.5 Mpps with a single rule, and about 2.2 Mpps when going through a dummynet pipe. This is for a single process handling the traffic.
About
Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/netmap-ipfw
Resources
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published