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197 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
197 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
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Using Linux TCP Splicing with HAProxy
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Willy Tarreau <w@1wt.eu>
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- 2007/01/06 -
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Alexandre Cassen has started a project called Linux Layer7 Switching (L7SW),
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whose goal is to provide kernel services to help userland proxies achieving
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very high performance. Right now, the project consists in a loadable kernel
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module providing TCP Splicing under Linux.
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TCP Splicing is a method by which a userland proxy can tell the kernel that
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it considers it has no added value on the data part of a connection, and that
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the kernel can perform the transfers it itself, thus relieving the proxy from
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a potentially heavy job. There are two advantages to this method :
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- it reduces the number of process wakeups
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- it reduces the number of data copies between user-space and kernel buffers
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This method is particularly suited to protocols in which data is sent till
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the end of the session. This is the case for FTP data for instance, and it
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is also the case for the BODY part of HTTP/1.0.
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The great news is that haproxy has been designed from the beginning with a
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clear distinction between the headers and the DATA phase, so it was a child's
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game to add hooks to Alex's library in it
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Be careful! Both versions are to be considered BETA software ! Run them on
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your systems if you want, but do not complain if it crashes twice a day !
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Anyway, it seems stable on our test machines.
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In order to use TCP Splicing on haproxy, you need :
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- Linux Layer7 Switching code version 0.1.1 : [ http://linux-l7sw.sf.net/ ]
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- Haproxy version 1.3.5 : [ http://haproxy.1wt.eu/download/1.3/src/ ]
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Then, you must untar both packages in any location, let's assume you'll
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be using /tmp. First extract l7sw and :
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$ cd /tmp
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$ tar zxf layer7switch-0.1.1.tar.gz
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$ cd layer7switch-0.1.1
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L7SW currently only supports Linux kernel 2.6.19+. If you prefer to use it
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on a more stable kernel, such as 2.6.16.X, you can apply this patch to the
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L7SW directory :
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[ http://haproxy.1wt.eu/download/patches/tcp_splice-0.1.1-linux-2.6.16.diff ]
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$ patch -p1 -d kernel < tcp_splice-0.1.1-linux-2.6.16.diff
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Alternatively, if you prefer to run it on 2.4.33+, you can apply this patch
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to the L7SW directory :
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[ http://haproxy.1wt.eu/download/patches/tcp_splice-0.1.1-linux-2.4.33.diff ]
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$ patch -p1 -d kernel < tcp_splice-0.1.1-linux-2.4.33.diff
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Then build the kernel module as described in the L7SW README. Basically, you
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just have to do this once your tree has been patched :
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$ cd kernel
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$ make
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You can either install the resulting module (tcp_splice) or load it now. During
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early testing periods, it might be preferable to avoid installing anything and
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just load it manually :
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$ sudo insmod tcp_splice.*o
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$ cd ..
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Now that the module is loaded, you need to build the libtcpsplice library on
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which haproxy currently relies :
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$ cd userland/libtcpsplice
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$ make
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$ cd ..
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For the adventurous, there's also a proof of concept in the userlan/switchd
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directory, it may be useful if you encounter problems with haproxy for
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instance. But it is not needed at all here.
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OK, L7SW is ready. Now you have to extract haproxy and tell it to build using
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libtcpsplice :
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$ cd /tmp
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$ tar zxf haproxy-1.3.5.tar.gz
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$ cd haproxy-1.3.5
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$ make USE_TCPSPLICE=1 TCPSPLICEDIR=/tmp/layer7switch-0.1.1/userland/libtcpsplice
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There are other options to make, which are hugely recommended, such as
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CPU=, REGEX=, and above all, TARGET= so that you use the best syscalls and
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functions for your system. Generally you will use TARGET=linux26, but 2.4 users
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with an epoll-patched kernel will use TARGET=linux24e. This is very important
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because failing to specify those options will disable important optimizations
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which might hide the tcpsplice benefits ! Please consult the haproxy's README.
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Now that you have haproxy built with support for tcpsplice, and that the module
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is loaded, you have to write a config. There is an example in the 'examples'
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directory. Basically, you just have to add the "option tcpsplice" keyword BOTH
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in the frontend AND in the backend sections that you want to accelerate.
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If the option is specified only in the frontend or in the backend, then no
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acceleration will be used. It is designed this way to allow some front-back
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combinations to use it without forcing others to use it. Of course, if you use
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a single "listen" section, you just have to specify it once.
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As of now (l7sw-0.1.1 and haproxy-1.3.5), you need the CAP_NETADMIN capability
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to START and to RUN. For human beings, it means that you have to start haproxy
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as root and keep it running as root, so it must not drop its priviledges. This
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is somewhat annoying, but we'll try to find a solution later.
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Also, l7sw-0.1.1 does not yet support TCP window scaling nor SACK. So you have
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to disable both features on the proxy :
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$ sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_window_scaling=0
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$ sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_sack=0
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$ sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_dsack=0
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$ sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_tw_recycle=1
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You can now check that everything works as expected. Run "vmstat 1" or "top"
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in one terminal, and haproxy in another one :
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$ sudo ./haproxy -f examples/tcp-splicing-sample.cfg
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Transfering large file through it should not affect it much. You should observe
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something like 10% CPU instead of 95% when transferring 1 MB files at full
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speed. You can play with the tcpsplice option in the configuration to see the
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effects.
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Troubleshooting
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---------------
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This software is still beta, and you will probably encounter some caveats.
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I personnally ran into a few issues that we'll try to address with Alex. First
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of all, I had occasionnal lockups on my SMP machine which I never had on an UP
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one. So if you get problems on an SMP machine, please reboot it in UP and do
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not lose your time on this.
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I also noticed that sometimes, some sessions remained established even after
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the end of the program. You might also see some situtations where even after
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the proxy's exit, the traffic still passes through the system. It may happen
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when you have a limited source port range and that you reuse a TIME_WAIT
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session matching exactly the same source and destinations. This will need
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to be addressed too.
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You can play with tcp_splice variables and timeouts here in /proc/sys/net/ :
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$ ls /proc/sys/net/tcp_splice/
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debug_level timeout_established timeout_listen timeout_synsent
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timeout_close timeout_finwait timeout_synack timeout_timewait
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timeout_closewait timeout_lastack timeout_synrecv
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$ sysctl net/tcp_splice
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net.tcp_splice.debug_level = 0
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_synack = 120
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_listen = 120
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_lastack = 30
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_closewait = 60
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_close = 10
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_timewait = 120
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_finwait = 120
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_synrecv = 60
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_synsent = 120
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net.tcp_splice.timeout_established = 900
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You can also consult the full session list here :
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$ head /proc/net/tcp_splice_conn
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FromIP FPrt ToIP TPrt LocalIP LPrt DestIP DPrt State Expires
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0A000301 4EBB 0A000302 1F40 0A000302 817B 0A000301 0050 CLOSE 7
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0A000301 4E9B 0A000302 1F40 0A000302 8165 0A000301 0050 CLOSE 7
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Since a session exists at least in CLOSE state for 10 seconds, you just have
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to consult this entry less than 10 seconds after a test to see a session.
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Please report your successes, failures, suggestions or fixes to the L7SW
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mailing list here (do not use the list to report other haproxy bugs) :
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https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-l7sw-devel
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Motivations
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-----------
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I've always wanted haproxy to be the fastest and most reliable software load
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balancer available. L7SW is an opportunity to make get a huge performance boost
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on high traffic sites (eg: photo sharing, streaming, ...). In turn, I find it a
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shame that Alex wastes his time redevelopping a proxy as a proof of concept for
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his kernel code. While it is a fun game to enter into, it really becomes harder
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when you need to get close to customers' needs. So by porting haproxy early to
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L7SW, I get both the opportunity to get an idea of what it will soon be capable
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of, and help Alex spend more time on the complex kernel part.
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Have fun !
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Willy
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