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latte

latte is a simple network probe written in Go that measures the response latency of an SDN controller for certain types of request/response message pairs.

latte runs on the controller side, sniffing the OpenFlow traffic coming in and going out of it. The filtering of certain request/response pairs to measure the latency of (e.g. PACKET_IN/FLOW_MOD) is based on "matchers". Matchers are sets of functions (or, strictly speaking, golang interfaces) defining:

  • what types of incoming/outgoing OF messages form request/response pairs, and therefore should be selected for deeper inspection
  • what patterns within each selected message should be inspected and extracted in order to uniquely match a response with an existing, in-flight request

Matchers are provided as a command line option to latte. Currently the following matchers are supported:

  • multinet: matches PACKET_IN requests and FLOW_MOD replies generated using Multinet, based on the following patterns:
    • PACKET_INs should contain Ethernet frames with ARP payload
    • FLOW_MODs should contain two OXMs with OFPXMC_OPENFLOW_BASIC class and OFPXMT_OFB_ETH_DST, OFPXMT_OFB_ETH_SRC match fields

latte

Usage

  1. Install Go
  2. Install libpcap development library (yum install libpcap-devel or apt-get install libpcap-dev)
  3. Init your GOPATH env variable, e.g.
export GOPATH=$HOME/gocode/
  1. Fetch and build latte:
go get github.com/anastop/latte
go install github.com/anastop/latte
  1. Run latte:
sudo $GOPATH/bin/latte -device lo -ofport 6653 -sniffer pcap -matcher "multinet" -late-threshold 400

This will start monitoring:

  • OpenFlow traffic (port=6653)
  • on loopback interface on the controller side
  • using libpcap for capturing packets
  • using "multinet" matcher to detect packets generated through Multinet (see above)
  • and a latency threshold of 400.0 msec, to consider any response that exceeds this as late
  1. Generate some traffic.

For a quick test, replay the multinet_1w_traffic pcap file located under resources folder.
This is a capture from real traffic generated using Multinet (1 worker) and the OpenDaylight controller.

To do this, invoke in another shell the tcpreplay utility as follows:

sudo tcpreplay -i lo multinet_1w_traffic.pcap
  1. When you're done, hit Ctrl+C to stop latte and get the results
Latency(ms)    Percentile    TotalCount
---------------------------------------
 0.00447900  0.000000               1
 0.04121500  0.500000             461
 0.12134300  0.750000             690
 0.28671900  0.875000             806
161.48070300  0.937500             864
236.97817500  0.968750             916
236.97817500  0.984375             916
236.97817500  0.992188             916
236.97817500  0.996094             916
425.72185500  0.998047             919
425.72185500  1.000000             919

total_count: 919
min: 0.004448
max: 425.721855
mean: 15.590453
stddev: 57.842297

Inmsg total: 1018
Inmsg registered: 928
Inmsg unreplied: 9 (1.0%)
Outmsg total: 920
Outmsg registered: 920
Outmsg matched: 919
Outmsg late: 0 (0.0%)
Outmsg orphan: 1

Statistics:

  • Inmsg total: total incoming messages having the same OF type as the one defined in matcher
  • Inmsg registered: messages from Inmsg total that were successfully registered for subsequent comparisons, as they were found containing the pattern defined in matcher
  • Inmsg unreplied: messages from Inmsg registered for which no reply was ever detected
  • Outmsg total: total outgoing messages having the same OF type as the one defined in matcher
  • Outmsg registered: messages from Outmsg total that were successfully registered for matching with registered incoming messages, as they were found containing the pattern defined in matcher
  • Outmsg matched: messages from Outmsg registered that were successfully matched with an existing registered incoming message. Latencies are being computed for these ones.
  • Outmsg late: messages from Outmsg matched considered late because they exceeded the latency threshold
  • Outmsg orphan: messages from Outmsg registered for which no match was found within the registered incoming messages. Normally these should be controller initiated messages, just having the same pattern as the one defined in matcher.

All results are reported in milliseconds.

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Latency & packet loss measuring tool for SDN controllers

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