NAME

The usNIC Fabric Provider

OVERVIEW

The usnic provider is designed to run over the Cisco VIC (virtualized NIC) hardware on Cisco UCS servers. It utilizes the Cisco usNIC (userspace NIC) capabilities of the VIC to enable ultra low latency and other offload capabilities on Ethernet networks.

RELEASE NOTES

  • The usnic libfabric provider requires the use of the “libnl” library.
    • There are two versions of libnl generally available: v1 and v3; the usnic provider can use either version.
    • If you are building libfabric/the usnic provider from source, you will need to have the libnl header files available (e.g., if you are installing libnl from RPM or other packaging system, install the “-devel” versions of the package).
    • If you have libnl (either v1 or v3) installed in a non-standard location (e.g., not in /usr/lib or /usr/lib64), you may need to tell libfabric’s configure where to find libnl via the --with-libnl=DIR command line option (where DIR is the installation prefix of the libnl package).
  • The most common way to use the libfabric usnic provider is via an MPI implementation that uses libfabric (and the usnic provider) as a lower layer transport. MPI applications do not need to know anything about libfabric or usnic in this use case – the MPI implementation hides all these details from the application.
  • If you are writing applications directly to the libfabric API:
    • FI_EP_DGRAM endpoints are the best supported method of utilizing the usNIC interface. Specifically, the FI_EP_DGRAM endpoint type has been extensively tested as the underlying layer for Open MPI’s usnic BTL.
    • FI_EP_MSG and FI_EP_RDM endpoints are implemented, but are only lightly tested. It is likely that there are still some bugs in these endpoint types. RMA is not yet supported.
    • fi_provider(7) lists requirements for all providers. The following limitations exist in the usnic provider:
      • fi_getname is not supported on FI_EP_DGRAM, FI_EP_MSG, and passive endpoints.
      • multicast operations are not supported on FI_EP_DGRAM and FI_EP_RDM endpoints.
      • FI_EP_MSG endpoints only support connect, accept, and shutdown CM operations.
      • Passive endpoints only support listen CM operations.
      • FI_EP_DGRAM endpoints support fi_sendmsg() and fi_recvmsg(), but all flags are ignored.
      • FI_EP_RDM and FI_EP_MSG endpoints do not support fi_sendmsg() and fi_recvmsg().
      • Address vectors only support FI_AV_MAP.
      • No counters are supported.
      • The tag matching interface is not supported.
    • The usnic libfabric provider supports extensions that provide information and functionality beyond the standard libfabric interface. See the “USNIC EXTENSIONS” section, below.

USNIC EXTENSIONS

The usnic libfabric provider exports extensions for additional VIC, usNIC, and Ethernet capabilities not provided by the standard libfabric interface.

These extensions are available via the “fi_ext_usnic.h” header file.

The following is an example of how to utilize the usnic “fabric getinfo” extension, which returns IP and SR-IOV information about a usNIC interface obtained from the fi_getinfo(3) function.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <rdma/fabric.h>

/* The usNIC extensions are all in the
   rdma/fi_ext_usnic.h header */
#include <rdma/fi_ext_usnic.h>

int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
    struct fi_info *info;
    struct fi_info *info_list;
    struct fi_info hints = {0};
    struct fi_ep_attr ep_attr = {0};
    struct fi_fabric_attr fabric_attr = {0};

    fabric_attr.prov_name = "usnic";
    ep_attr.type = FI_EP_DGRAM;

    hints.caps = FI_MSG;
    hints.mode = FI_LOCAL_MR | FI_MSG_PREFIX;
    hints.addr_format = FI_SOCKADDR;
    hints.ep_attr = &ep_attr;
    hints.fabric_attr = &fabric_attr;

    /* Find all usnic providers */
    fi_getinfo(FI_VERSION(1, 0), NULL, 0, 0, &hints, &info_list);

    for (info = info_list; NULL != info; info = info->next) {
        /* Open the fabric on the interface */
        struct fid_fabric *fabric;
        fi_fabric(info->fabric_attr, &fabric, NULL);

        /* Pass FI_USNIC_FABRIC_OPS_1 to get usnic ops
           on the fabric */
        struct fi_usnic_ops_fabric *usnic_fabric_ops;
        fi_open_ops(&fabric->fid, FI_USNIC_FABRIC_OPS_1, 0,
                (void **) &usnic_fabric_ops, NULL);

        /* Now use the returned usnic ops structure to call
           usnic extensions.  The following extension queries
           some IP and SR-IOV characteristics about the
           usNIC device. */
        struct fi_usnic_info usnic_info;
        usnic_fabric_ops->getinfo(FI_EXT_USNIC_INFO_VERSION,
                                  fabric, &usnic_info);

        printf("Fabric interface %s is %s:\n"
               "\tNetmask:  0x%08x\n\tLink speed: %d\n"
               "\tSR-IOV VFs: %d\n\tQPs per SR-IOV VF: %d\n"
               "\tCQs per SR-IOV VF: %d\n",
               info->fabric_attr->name,
               usnic_info.ui.v1.ui_ifname,
               usnic_info.ui.v1.ui_netmask_be,
               usnic_info.ui.v1.ui_link_speed,
               usnic_info.ui.v1.ui_num_vf,
               usnic_info.ui.v1.ui_qp_per_vf,
               usnic_info.ui.v1.ui_cq_per_vf);

        fi_close(&fabric->fid);
    }

    fi_freeinfo(info_list);
    return 0;
}

Note that other usnic extensions are defined for other fabric objects. The second argument to fi_open_ops(3) is used to identify both the fid type and the extension family. For example, FI_USNIC_AV_OPS_1 can be used in conjunction with an fi_av fid to obtain usnic extensions for address vectors.

See fi_ext_usnic.h for more details.

SEE ALSO

fabric(7), fi_open_ops(3), fi_provider(7),