Crates.io | xsk-rs |
lib.rs | xsk-rs |
version | 0.6.1 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-10-01 12:01:26.612776 |
updated_at | 2024-05-19 14:09:42.432643 |
description | Rust bindings for Linux AF_XDP sockets |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/DouglasGray/xsk-rs |
max_upload_size | |
id | 294996 |
size | 222,730 |
A Rust interface for Linux AF_XDP sockets using libxdp.
For more information please see the networking docs or a more detailed overview.
Initially inspired by Jesse DuMond's OCaml implementation.
A few may be found in the examples
directory. A simple example of
moving bytes between two sockets via a veth pair can be found in
examples/hello_xdp.rs
, while a slightly more complex example of
sending and receiving eth frames (also via a veth pair) is in
examples/dev2_to_dev1.rs
, which includes a single-threaded and
multi-threaded implementation. Note that neither example will be
indicative of actual performance, since binding the sockets to the
veth pair means that packets will pass through the kernel network
stack.
An example with shared UMEM is in examples/shared_umem.rs
.
Root permissions may be required to run the tests or examples, since
they require a veth pair to be set up. However to avoid running cargo
under root
it's best to first build the tests/examples and run the
binaries directly.
# tests
cargo build --tests
sudo run_all_tests.sh
# examples
cargo build --examples --release
sudo target/release/examples/hello_xdp
sudo target/release/examples/dev1_to_dev2 -- [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
Tested on a 64-bit machine running Linux kernel version 6.5.0.
There is a fair amount of unsafe involved when using this library, and so the potential for disaster, however if you keep in mind the following then there should hopefully be few avenues for catastrophe:
The below example sends a packet from one interface to another.
use std::{convert::TryInto, io::Write};
use xsk_rs::{
config::{SocketConfig, UmemConfig},
socket::Socket,
umem::Umem,
};
const ETHERNET_PACKET: [u8; 42] = [
0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xf6, 0xe0, 0xf6, 0xc9, 0x60, 0x0a, 0x08, 0x06, 0x00, 0x01,
0x08, 0x00, 0x06, 0x04, 0x00, 0x01, 0xf6, 0xe0, 0xf6, 0xc9, 0x60, 0x0a, 0xc0, 0xa8, 0x45, 0x01,
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0xc0, 0xa8, 0x45, 0xfe,
];
fn main() {
// Create a UMEM for dev1 with 32 frames, whose sizes are
// specified via the `UmemConfig` instance.
let (dev1_umem, mut dev1_descs) =
Umem::new(UmemConfig::default(), 32.try_into().unwrap(), false)
.expect("failed to create UMEM");
// Bind an AF_XDP socket to the interface named `xsk_dev1`, on
// queue 0.
let (mut dev1_tx_q, _dev1_rx_q, _dev1_fq_and_cq) = unsafe {
Socket::new(
SocketConfig::default(),
&dev1_umem,
&"xsk_dev1".parse().unwrap(),
0,
)
}
.expect("failed to create dev1 socket");
// Create a UMEM for dev2. Another option is to use the same UMEM
// as dev1 - to do that we'd just pass `dev1_umem` to the
// `Socket::new` call. In this case the UMEM would be shared, and
// so `dev1_descs` could be used in either context, but each
// socket would have its own completion queue and fill queue.
let (dev2_umem, mut dev2_descs) =
Umem::new(UmemConfig::default(), 32.try_into().unwrap(), false)
.expect("failed to create UMEM");
// Bind an AF_XDP socket to the interface named `xsk_dev2`, on
// queue 0.
let (_dev2_tx_q, mut dev2_rx_q, dev2_fq_and_cq) = unsafe {
Socket::new(
SocketConfig::default(),
&dev2_umem,
&"xsk_dev2".parse().unwrap(),
0,
)
}
.expect("failed to create dev2 socket");
let (mut dev2_fq, _dev2_cq) = dev2_fq_and_cq.expect("missing dev2 fill queue and comp queue");
// 1. Add frames to dev2's fill queue so we are ready to receive
// some packets.
unsafe {
dev2_fq.produce(&dev2_descs);
}
// 2. Write to dev1's UMEM.
let pkt = "Hello, world!".as_bytes();
unsafe {
dev1_umem
.data_mut(&mut dev1_descs[0])
.cursor()
.write_all(pkt)
.expect("failed writing packet to frame")
}
// 3. Submit the frame to the kernel for transmission.
println!("sending packet");
unsafe {
dev1_tx_q.produce_and_wakeup(&dev1_descs[..1]).unwrap();
}
// 4. Read on dev2.
let pkts_recvd = unsafe { dev2_rx_q.poll_and_consume(&mut dev2_descs, 100).unwrap() };
// 5. Confirm that one of the packets we received matches what we expect.
for recv_desc in dev2_descs.iter().take(pkts_recvd) {
let data = unsafe { dev2_umem.data(recv_desc) };
if data.contents() == ÐERNET_PACKET {
println!("received packet!");
return;
}
}
panic!("no matching packets received")
}