Introduction
The objective of this exercise is to write a P4 program that
implements basic forwarding. To keep things simple, we will just
implement forwarding for IPv4.
With IPv4 forwarding, the switch must perform the following actions
for every packet: (i) update the source and destination MAC addresses,
(ii) decrement the time-to-live (TTL) in the IP header, and (iii)
forward the packet out the appropriate port.
Your switch will have a single table, which the control plane will
populate with static rules. Each rule will map an IP address to the
MAC address and output port for the next hop. We have already defined
the control plane rules, so you only need to implement the data plane
logic of your P4 program.
Spoiler alert: There is a reference solution in the
solution
sub-directory. Feel free to compare your implementation to the
reference.
Step 1: Run the (incomplete) starter code
The directory with this README also contains a skeleton P4 program,basic.p4
, which initially drops all packets. Your job will be to
extend this skeleton program to properly forward IPv4 packets.
Before that, let's compile the incomplete basic.p4
and bring
up a switch in Mininet to test its behavior.
-
In your shell, run:
make run
This will:
- compile
basic.p4
, and - start a Mininet instance with three switches (
s1
,s2
,s3
)
configured in a triangle, each connected to one host (h1
,h2
,
andh3
). - The hosts are assigned IPs of
10.0.1.1
,10.0.2.2
, and10.0.3.3
.
- compile
-
You should now see a Mininet command prompt. Open two terminals
forh1
andh2
, respectively:mininet> xterm h1 h2
-
Each host includes a small Python-based messaging client and
server. Inh2
's xterm, start the server:./receive.py
-
In
h1
's xterm, send a message toh2
:./send.py 10.0.2.2 "P4 is cool"
The message will not be received.
-
Type
exit
to leave each xterm and the Mininet command line.
Then, to stop mininet:make stop
And to delete all pcaps, build files, and logs:
make clean
The message was not received because each switch is programmed
according to basic.p4
, which drops all packets on arrival.
Your job is to extend this file so it forwards packets.
A note about the control plane
A P4 program defines a packet-processing pipeline, but the rules
within each table are inserted by the control plane. When a rule
matches a packet, its action is invoked with parameters supplied by
the control plane as part of the rule.
In this exercise, we have already implemented the the control plane
logic for you. As part of bringing up the Mininet instance, themake run
command will install packet-processing rules in the tables of
each switch. These are defined in the sX-runtime.json
files, whereX
corresponds to the switch number.
Important: We use P4Runtime to install the control plane rules. The
content of files sX-runtime.json
refer to specific names of tables, keys, and
actions, as defined in the P4Info file produced by the compiler (look for the
file build/basic.p4info
after executing make run
). Any changes in the P4
program that add or rename tables, keys, or actions will need to be reflected in
these sX-runtime.json
files.
Step 2: Implement L3 forwarding
The basic.p4
file contains a skeleton P4 program with key pieces of
logic replaced by TODO
comments. Your implementation should follow
the structure given in this file---replace each TODO
with logic
implementing the missing piece.
A complete basic.p4
will contain the following components:
- Header type definitions for Ethernet (
ethernet_t
) and IPv4 (ipv4_t
). -
TODO: Parsers for Ethernet and IPv4 that populate
ethernet_t
andipv4_t
fields. - An action to drop a packet, using
mark_to_drop()
. -
TODO: An action (called
ipv4_forward
) that:- Sets the egress port for the next hop.
- Updates the ethernet destination address with the address of the next hop.
- Updates the ethernet source address with the address of the switch.
- Decrements the TTL.
-
TODO: A control that:
- Defines a table that will read an IPv4 destination address, and
invoke eitherdrop
oripv4_forward
. - An
apply
block that applies the table.
- Defines a table that will read an IPv4 destination address, and
-
TODO: A deparser that selects the order
in which fields inserted into the outgoing packet. - A
package
instantiation supplied with the parser, control, and deparser.In general, a package also requires instances of checksum verification
and recomputation controls. These are not necessary for this tutorial
and are replaced with instantiations of empty controls.
Step 3: Run your solution
Follow the instructions from Step 1. This time, your message fromh1
should be delivered to h2
.
Food for thought
The "test suite" for your solution---sending a message from h1
toh2
---is not very robust. What else should you test to be confident
of your implementation?
Although the Python
scapy
library is outside the scope of this tutorial,
it can be used to generate packets for testing. Thesend.py
file shows how
to use it.
Other questions to consider:
- How would you enhance your program to support next hops?
- Is this program enough to replace a router? What's missing?
Troubleshooting
There are several problems that might manifest as you develop your program:
-
basic.p4
might fail to compile. In this case,make run
will
report the error emitted from the compiler and halt. -
basic.p4
might compile but fail to support the control plane
rules in thes1-runtime.json
throughs3-runtime.json
files thatmake run
tries to install using P4Runtime. In this case,make run
will
report errors if control plane rules cannot be installed. Use these error
messages to fix yourbasic.p4
implementation. -
basic.p4
might compile, and the control plane rules might be
installed, but the switch might not process packets in the desired
way. The/tmp/p4s.<switch-name>.log
files contain detailed logs
that describing how each switch processes each packet. The output is
detailed and can help pinpoint logic errors in your implementation.
Cleaning up Mininet
In the latter two cases above, make run
may leave a Mininet instance
running in the background. Use the following command to clean up
these instances:
make stop
Next Steps
Congratulations, your implementation works! In the next exercise we
will build on top of this and add support for a basic tunneling
protocol: basic_tunnel!