Provided by: openvswitch-common_2.0.2-0ubuntu0.14.04.3_amd64 bug

NAME

       ovs-benchmark - flow setup benchmark utility for Open vSwitch

SYNOPSIS

       ovs-benchmark latency --remote ip[:ports] [--sockets nsocks] [--batches nbatches]
                             [--local [ip][:ports]]

       ovs-benchmark rate --remote ip[:ports] [--max-rate rate] [--timeout maxsecs]
                          [--sockets nsocks] [--batches nbatches] [--local [ip][:ports]]

       ovs-benchmark listen [--local [ip]:ports]

       ovs-benchmark help

DESCRIPTION

       ovs-benchmark  tests  the performance of Open vSwitch flow setup by setting up a number of
       TCP connections and measuring the time required.  It can  also  be  used  with  the  Linux
       bridge  or  without  any  bridging software, which allows one to measure the bandwidth and
       latency cost of bridging.

       Each ovs-benchmark command is described separately below.

The ``latency'' command

       This command initiates nsocks TCP connections (by default, 100) as  quickly  as  possible,
       waits  for  each  one  to  complete  with  success  or  failure, and prints a bar chart of
       completion times on standard output, followed by a summary line.  Each  line  in  the  bar
       chart lists a time to connection completion in milliseconds followed by a number of . or !
       symbols, one for each  TCP  connection  that  completed  in  that  many  milliseconds.   A
       successful  connection prints a ., and an unsuccessful connection (e.g. to a port on which
       no process is listening) prints a !.

       If nbatches is given, the entire procedure is repeated  the  specified  number  of  times.
       Only a single summary line is printed at the end.

       Results  vary  widely  based  on  the  number  of  sockets  and whether the remote host is
       listening for connections on the specified ports.  With a small  number  of  sockets,  all
       connection  times  typically  remain  within  a handful of milliseconds.  As the number of
       sockets increases, the distribution of connection times clusters around  the  sending  TCP
       stack's SYN retransmission interval.  (This pattern occurs with or without Open vSwitch on
       the network path.)

The ``rate'' command

       This command initiates nsocks TCP connections (by default, 100)  as  quickly  as  possible
       (limited  by  maxrate, if --max-rate is specified).  Each time a connection completes with
       success or failure, it closes that connection and initiates a new one.  It continues to do
       so  either  forever  or,  if  --timeout  is specified, until maxsecs seconds have elapsed.
       During the test, it prints statistics about  time  elapsed,  successful  and  unsuccessful
       connections,  and  the  average  number of completed (succeeded or failed) connections per
       second over the run.

       Without --max-rate, the rate command measures the maximum sustained flow setup rate for an
       Open  vSwitch  instance.   This naturally tends to drive ovs-vswitchd CPU usage to 100% on
       the host receiving the traffic.

       When --max-rate is specified with a value below the maximum  rate  that  an  Open  vSwitch
       instance  can  handle,  then rate can also be used to measure the kernel and userspace CPU
       cost of flow setups at specific flow rates.

       Results tend to fluctuate greatly for the first few seconds of a run,  then  settle  down.
       The  displayed  average  is  calculated  over  the  entire  run  and  so tends to converge
       asymptotically on the ``correct'' value.  To converge more quickly, try running for  5  to
       10 seconds, then killing and restarting the run.

The ``listen'' command

       This  command  listens  on  one  or  more  TCP ports for incoming connections.  It accepts
       connections and immediately closes them.  It can  be  paired  with  the  rate  or  latency
       commands for observing effects of successful vs. unsuccessful TCP connections.

       It  is  easier  to reproduce and interpret ovs-benchmark results when there is no listener
       (see NOTES below).

The ``help'' command

       Prints a usage message and exits successfully.

OPTIONS

       -r ip[:ports]
       --remote ip[:ports]
              This option, required on latency and rate commands, minimally specifies the  remote
              host to connect to (as an IP address or DNS name) as ip.

              A TCP port or range of ports (separated by -) may also be specified.  If a range is
              specified then each port in the range is used in round-robin  order.   The  default
              port is 6630 if none is specified.

       -l [ip][:ports]
       --local [ip][:ports]
              On  the latency and rate, without this option, outgoing connections will not bind a
              specific TCP port.  The local TCP stack will pick a local TCP port to  bind.   When
              this  option  is  specified,  the  specified port or range of ports will be used in
              turn.  (If a port range is specified on both --local and --remote, then each  local
              port  in  its  range will be used before the remote port is incremented to the next
              port in its range.)

              On the listen command, this option  specifies  the  local  port  or  ports  and  IP
              addresses  on  which  to  listen.  If it is omitted, port 6630 on any IP address is
              used.

       -s nsocks
       --sockets nsocks
              For latency, sets the number of connections to initiate per batch.  For rate,  sets
              the  number of outstanding connections attempts to maintain at any given time.  The
              default is 100.

       -b nbatches
       --batches nbatches
              For latency, sets the number  of  times  to  initiate  and  wait  for  all  of  the
              connections to complete.  The default is 1.

       -c maxrate
       --max-rate maxrate
              For  rate,  caps the maximum rate at which connections will be attempted to maxrate
              connections per second.  By default there is no limit.

       -T maxsecs
       --timeout maxsecs
              For rate, stops the benchmark after maxsecs seconds have elapsed.  By default,  the
              benchmark continues until interrupted by a signal.

NOTES

       ovs-benchmark  uses  standard  POSIX  socket  calls  for  network access, so it shares the
       strengths and limitations of TCP/IP and its implementations in the local and remote TCP/IP
       stacks.   Particularly,  TCP  and  its  implementations  limit  the number of successfully
       completed and then closed TCP connections.  This means that ovs-benchmark  tests  tend  to
       slow  down  if  run for long intervals or with large numbers of sockets or batches, if the
       remote system is listening on the port or ports being contacted.   The  problem  does  not
       occur  when  the remote system is not listening.  ovs-benchmark results are therefore much
       more reliable and repeatable when the remote system is not listening on the port or  ports
       being  contacted.   Even  a single listening socket (e.g. range of ports 8000 to 9000 with
       one listener on port 8080) can cause anomalies in results.

       Be sure that the remote TCP/IP stack's firewall  allows  the  benchmark's  traffic  to  be
       processed.  For Open vSwitch benchmarking purposes, you might want to disable the firewall
       with, e.g., iptables -F.

       ovs-benchmark is single-threaded.  A multithreaded  process  might  be  able  to  initiate
       connections more quickly.

       A  TCP  connection  consists  of  two  flows  (one in each direction), so multiply the TCP
       connection statistics that ovs-benchmark reports by 2 to get flow statistics.