Implement infrastructure that allows enabling address sanitizer
for docker containers. Enable address sanitizer for SWSS container.
- Why I did it
To add a possibility to compile SONiC applications with address sanitizer (ASAN).
ASAN is a memory error detector for C/C++. It finds:
1. Use after free (dangling pointer dereference)
2. Heap buffer overflow
3. Stack buffer overflow
4. Global buffer overflow
5. Use after return
6. Use after the scope
7. Initialization order bugs
8. Memory leaks
- How I did it
By adding new ENABLE_ASAN configuration option.
- How to verify it
By default ASAN is disabled and the SONiC image is not affected.
When ASAN is enabled it inspects all allocation, deallocation, and memory usage that the application does in run time. To verify whether the application has memory errors tests that trigger memory usage of the application should be run. Ideally, the whole regression tests should be run. Memory leaks reports will be placed in /var/log/asan/ directory of SONiC host OS.
Signed-off-by: Oleksandr Ivantsiv <oivantsiv@nvidia.com>
- Why I did it
Remove obsolete parameter that enables static VXLAN src port range
provide functionality no generate json config file according to appropriate parameter in config_db
Done for
SN3800:
• Mellanox-SN3800-D28C50
• Mellanox-SN3800-C64
• Mellanox-SN3800-D28C49S1 (New 10G SKU)
SN2700:
• Mellanox-SN2700-D48C8
- How I did it
Remove SAI_VXLAN_SRCPORT_RANGE_ENABLE=1 from appropriate sai.profile files
Created vxlan.json file and added few params that depends on DEVICE_METADATA.localhost.vxlan_port_range
- How to verify it
File /etc/swss/config.d/vxlan.json should be generated inside swss docker when it restart
[
{
"SWITCH_TABLE:switch": {
"vxlan_src": "0xFF00",
"vxlan_mask": "8"
},
"OP": "SET"
}
]
Signed-off-by: Andriy Yurkiv <ayurkiv@nvidia.com>
Co-authored-by: Zhi Yuan (Carl) Zhao <zyzhao@arista.com>
Why I did it
Arista 7060 platform has a rare and unreproduceable PCIe timeout that could possibly be solved with increasing the switch PCIe timeout value. To do this we'll call a script for this platform to increase the PCIe timeout on boot-up.
No issues would be expected from the setpci command. From the PCIe spec:
"Software is permitted to change the value in this field at any
time. For Requests already pending when the Completion
Timeout Value is changed, hardware is permitted to use either
the new or the old value for the outstanding Requests, and is
permitted to base the start time for each Request either on when
this value was changed or on when each request was issued. "
How I did it
Add "platform-init" support in swss docker similar to how "hwsku-init" is called, only this would be for any device belonging to a platform. Then the script would reside in device data folder.
Additionally, add pciutils dependency to docker-orchagent so it can run the setpci commands.
How to verify it
On bootup of an Arista 7060, can execute:
lspci -vv -s 01:00.0 | grep -i "devctl2"
In order to check that the timeout has changed.
- Create a script in the orchagent docker container which listens for these encapsulated packets which are trapped to CPU (indicating that they cannot be routed/no neighbor info exists for the inner packet). When such a packet is received, the script will issue a ping command to the packet's inner destination IP to start the neighbor learning process.
- This script is also resilient to portchannel status changes (i.e. interface going up or down). An interface going down does not affect traffic sniffing on interfaces which are still up. When an interface comes back up, we restart the sniffer to start capturing traffic on that interface again.
- Why I did it
This is to update the common sonic-buildimage infra for reclaiming buffer.
- How I did it
Render zero_profiles.j2 to zero_profiles.json for vendors that support reclaiming buffer
The zero profiles will be referenced in PR [Reclaim buffer] Reclaim unused buffers by applying zero buffer profiles #8768 on Mellanox platforms and there will be test cases to verify the behavior there.
Rendering is done here for passing azure pipeline.
Load zero_profiles.json when the dynamic buffer manager starts
Generate inactive port list to reclaim buffer
Signed-off-by: Stephen Sun <stephens@nvidia.com>
* [ACL] enable ACL FC when genereting config from minigraph but disable by default
Why I did it
To support ACL counters on Flex Counter Infrastructure.
How I did it
Enable ACL FC in init_cfg and minigraph. Disable when genereting configuration from preset.
How to verify it
Together with depends PRs. Run ACL/Everflow test suite.
Signed-off-by: Stepan Blyshchak <stepanb@nvidia.com>
Why I did it
During swss container startup, if ndppd starts up before/with vlanmgrd, ndppd will be pinned at nearly 100% CPU usage.
How I did it
Only start ndppd after vlanmgrd is running. Also, call ndppd directly instead of through bash for improved logging and to prevent orphaned processes.
Signed-off-by: Lawrence Lee <lawlee@microsoft.com>
#### Why I did it
Reset flex counters delay flag on config DB when enable_counters script is called to allow enablement of flex counters in orchagent.
#### How I did it
Push to config DB 'false' value for delay indication when enable_counters script is called before enabling the counters.
#### How to verify it
Observe counters are created when enable_counters script is called.
Signed-off-by: Yong Zhao yozhao@microsoft.com
Why I did it
Currently we leveraged the Supervisor to monitor the running status of critical processes in each container and it is more reliable and flexible than doing the monitoring by Monit. So we removed the functionality of monitoring the critical processes by Monit.
How I did it
I removed the script process_checker and corresponding Monit configuration entries of critical processes.
How to verify it
I verified this on the device str-7260cx3-acs-1.
Why I did it
ndppd by default reads /proc/net/ipv6_route ever 30 seconds. Since T1s advertise so many routes to ToRs, this file is extremely large, and reading it causes ndppd's CPU usage to spike every 30 seconds
How I did it
Increase the delay for reading this file to the maximum possible value (max integer value), which will result in CPU spikes every ~24 days instead of every 30 seconds
How to verify it
Start ndppd with the new config file, confirm that no CPU spikes are seen except at startup
Signed-off-by: Lawrence Lee <lawlee@microsoft.com>
Avoid the following error messages while dynamic buffer calculation is enabled
```
ERR monit[491]: 'swss|buffermgrd' status failed (1) -- '/usr/bin/buffermgrd -l' is not running in host
```
Change /usr/bin/buffermgrd -l to /usr/bin/buffermgrd. The buffermgrd is started by -l for traditional model or -a for dynamic model. So we need to use the common section of both.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Sun <stephens@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arvindsrinivasan Lakshmi Narasimhan arlakshm@microsoft.com
- Why I did it
This PR has the changes to support having different swss.rec and sairedis.rec for each asic.
The logrotate script is updated as well
- How I did it
Update the orchagent.sh script to use the logfile name options in these PRs(Azure/sonic-swss#1546 and Azure/sonic-sairedis#747)
In multi asic platforms the record files will be different for each asic, with the format swss.asic{x}.rec and sairedis.asic{x}.rec
Update the logrotate script for multiasic platform .
- Why I did it
Initially, we used Monit to monitor critical processes in each container. If one of critical processes was not running
or crashed due to some reasons, then Monit will write an alerting message into syslog periodically. If we add a new process
in a container, the corresponding Monti configuration file will also need to update. It is a little hard for maintenance.
Currently we employed event listener of Supervisod to do this monitoring. Since processes in each container are managed by
Supervisord, we can only focus on the logic of monitoring.
- How I did it
We borrowed the event listener of Supervisord to monitor critical processes in containers. The event listener will take
following steps if it was notified one of critical processes exited unexpectedly:
The event listener will first check whether the auto-restart mechanism was enabled for this container or not. If auto-restart mechanism was enabled, event listener will kill the Supervisord process, which should cause the container to exit and subsequently get restarted.
If auto-restart mechanism was not enabled for this contianer, the event listener will enter a loop which will first sleep 1 minute and then check whether the process is running. If yes, the event listener exits. If no, an alerting message will be written into syslog.
- How to verify it
First, we need checked whether the auto-restart mechanism of a container was enabled or not by running the command show feature status. If enabled, one critical process should be selected and killed manually, then we need check whether the container will be restarted or not.
Second, we can disable the auto-restart mechanism if it was enabled at step 1 by running the commnad sudo config feature autorestart <container_name> disabled. Then one critical process should be selected and killed. After that, we will see the alerting message which will appear in the syslog every 1 minute.
- Which release branch to backport (provide reason below if selected)
201811
201911
[x ] 202006
Mellanox already supports multiple destination IPs in IPinIP tunnel configuration, thus removing mellanox
exception for IPinIP configuration.
- How I did it
Removed "dst_ip" field generation in mellanox platform condition.
Sorted the "dst_ip" list, so that it is easier to test against sample configuration in unit tests.
Aligned unit test sample.
Signed-off-by: Stepan Blyschak <stepanb@nvidia.com>
Introduce tunnel manager daemon. Start the process as part of swss container
Submodule update for swss:
9ed3026 - 2020-12-24 : [NAT] ACL Rule with DO_NOT_NAT action is getting failed. (#1502) [Akhilesh Samineni]
c39a4b1 - 2020-12-23 : Mux/IPTunnel orchagent changes (#1497) [Prince Sunny]
bc8df0e - 2020-12-23 : Add support for headroom pool watermark (#1567) [Neetha John]
**- Why I did it**
As part of migrating SONiC codebase from Python 2 to Python 3
**- How I did it**
- No longer install Python 2 in docker-base-buster or docker-config-engine-buster.
- Install Python 2 and pip2 in the following containers until we can completely eliminate it there:
- docker-platform-monitor
- docker-sonic-mgmt-framework
- docker-sonic-vs
- Pin pip2 version <21 where it is still temporarily needed, as pip version 21 will drop support for Python 2
- Also preform some other cleanup, ensuring that pip3, setuptools and wheel packages are installed in docker-base-buster, and then removing any attempts to re-install them in derived containers
Install the necessary python3 dependent packages to convert restore_neighbor.py
to support python3 as python2 is EOL. See: Azure/sonic-swss#1542
Signed-off-by: Zhenggen Xu <zxu@linkedin.com>
**- Why I did it**
To support dynamic buffer calculation.
This PR also depends on the following PRs for sub modules
- [sonic-swss: [buffermgr/bufferorch] Support dynamic buffer calculation #1338](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-swss/pull/1338)
- [sonic-swss-common: Dynamic buffer calculation #361](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-swss-common/pull/361)
- [sonic-utilities: Support dynamic buffer calculation #973](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-utilities/pull/973)
**- How I did it**
1. Introduce field `buffer_model` in `DEVICE_METADATA|localhost` to represent which buffer model is running in the system currently:
- `dynamic` for the dynamic buffer calculation model
- `traditional` for the traditional model in which the `pg_profile_lookup.ini` is used
2. Add the tables required for the feature:
- ASIC_TABLE in platform/\<vendor\>/asic_table.j2
- PERIPHERAL_TABLE in platform/\<vendor\>/peripheral_table.j2
- PORT_PERIPHERAL_TABLE on a per-platform basis in device/\<vendor\>/\<platform\>/port_peripheral_config.j2 for each platform with gearbox installed.
- DEFAULT_LOSSLESS_BUFFER_PARAMETER and LOSSLESS_TRAFFIC_PATTERN in files/build_templates/buffers_config.j2
- Add lossless PGs (3-4) for each port in files/build_templates/buffers_config.j2
3. Copy the newly introduced j2 files into the image and rendering them when the system starts
4. Update the CLI options for buffermgrd so that it can start with dynamic mode
5. Fetches the ASIC vendor name in orchagent:
- fetch the vendor name when creates the docker and pass it as a docker environment variable
- `buffermgrd` can use this passed-in variable
6. Clear buffer related tables from STATE_DB when swss docker starts
7. Update the src/sonic-config-engine/tests/sample_output/buffers-dell6100.json according to the buffer_config.j2
8. Remove buffer pool sizes for ingress pools and egress_lossy_pool
Update the buffer settings for dynamic buffer calculation
**- Why I did it**
Align style with slightly modified PEP8 standards (extend maximum line length to 120 chars). This will also help in the transition to Python 3, where it is more strict about whitespace, plus it helps unify style among the SONiC codebase. Will tackle other directories in separate PRs.
**- How I did it**
Using `autopep8 --in-place --max-line-length 120` and some manual tweaks.
**- Why I did it**
We were building a custom version of Supervisor because I had added patches to prevent hangs and crashes if the system clock ever rolled backward. Those changes were merged into the upstream Supervisor repo as of version 3.4.0 (http://supervisord.org/changes.html#id9), therefore, we should be able to simply install the vanilla package via pip. This will also allow us to easily move to Python 3, as Python 3 support was added in version 4.0.0.
**- How I did it**
- Remove Makefiles and patches for building supervisor package from source
- Install Python 3 supervisor package version 4.2.1 in Buster base container
- Also install Python 3 version of supervisord-dependent-startup in Buster base container
- Debian package installed binary in `/usr/bin/`, but pip package installs in `/usr/local/bin/`, so rather than update all absolute paths, I changed all references to simply call `supervisord` and let the system PATH find the executable to prevent future need for changes just in case we ever need to switch back to build a Debian package, then we won't need to modify these again.
- Install Python 2 supervisor package >= 3.4.0 in Stretch and Jessie base containers
Treat devices that are ToRRouters (ToRRouters and BackEndToRRouters) the same when rendering templates
Except for BackEndToRRouters belonging to a storage cluster, since these devices have extra sub-interfaces created
Treat devices that are LeafRouters (LeafRouters and BackEndLeafRouters) the same when rendering templates
Signed-off-by: Lawrence Lee <lawlee@microsoft.com>
**- Why I did it**
As part of moving all SONiC code from Python 2 (no longer supported) to Python 3
**- How I did it**
- Convert enable_counters.py script to Python 3
- Reorganize imports per PEP8 standard
- Two blank lines precede functions per PEP8 standard
Why/How I did:
Make sure first error syslog is triggered based on FAULT TOLERANCE condition.
Added support of repeat clause with alert action. This is used as trigger
for generation of periodic syslog error messages if error is persistent
Updated the monit conf files with repeat every x cycles for the alert action
As part of the transition from Python 2 to Python 3, we are installing both pip2 and pip3 in the slave and config-engine containers. This PR replaces calls to `pip` in these containers with an explicit call to `pip2` to ensure the proper version of pip is executed, no matter which version of pip is aliased to `pip`, as we no longer rely on that alias.
Also some other pip-related cleanup
The orchagent and syncd need to have the same default synchronous mode configuration. This PR adds a template file to translate the default value in CONFIG_DB (empty field) to an explicit mode so that the orchagent and syncd could have the same default mode.
* Install ndppd during image build, and copy config files to image
* Configure proxy settings based on config DB at container start
* Pipe ndppd output to logger inside container to log output in syslog
Jinja2 templates rendered using Python 3 interpreter, are required
to conform with Python 3 new semantics.
singed-off-by: Tamer Ahmed <tamer.ahmed@microsoft.com>
* buildimage: Add gearbox phy device files and a new physyncd docker to support VS gearbox phy feature
* scripts and configuration needed to support a second syncd docker (physyncd)
* physyncd supports gearbox device and phy SAI APIs and runs multiple instances of syncd, one per phy in the device
* support for VS target (sonic-sairedis vslib has been extended to support a virtual BCM81724 gearbox PHY).
HLD is located at b817a12fd8/doc/gearbox/gearbox_mgr_design.md
**- Why I did it**
This work is part of the gearbox phy joint effort between Microsoft and Broadcom, and is based
on multi-switch support in sonic-sairedis.
**- How I did it**
Overall feature was implemented across several projects. The collective pull requests (some in late stages of review at this point):
https://github.com/Azure/sonic-utilities/pull/931 - CLI (merged)
https://github.com/Azure/sonic-swss-common/pull/347 - Minor changes (merged)
https://github.com/Azure/sonic-swss/pull/1321 - gearsyncd, config parsers, changes to orchargent to create gearbox phy on supported systems
https://github.com/Azure/sonic-sairedis/pull/624 - physyncd, virtual BCM81724 gearbox phy added to vslib
**- How to verify it**
In a vslib build:
root@sonic:/home/admin# show gearbox interfaces status
PHY Id Interface MAC Lanes MAC Lane Speed PHY Lanes PHY Lane Speed Line Lanes Line Lane Speed Oper Admin
-------- ----------- --------------- ---------------- --------------- ---------------- ------------ ----------------- ------ -------
1 Ethernet48 121,122,123,124 25G 200,201,202,203 25G 204,205 50G down down
1 Ethernet49 125,126,127,128 25G 206,207,208,209 25G 210,211 50G down down
1 Ethernet50 69,70,71,72 25G 212,213,214,215 25G 216 100G down down
In addition, docker ps | grep phy should show a physyncd docker running.
Signed-off-by: syd.logan@broadcom.com
We want to let Monit to unmonitor the processes in containers which are disabled in `FEATURE` table such that
Monit will not generate false alerting messages into the syslog.
Signed-off-by: Yong Zhao <yozhao@microsoft.com>
SWSS config script restore ARP/FDB/Routes. Restore neighbor script
uses config DB ARP information to restore ARP entries and so needs
to be started after swssconfig exits.
signed-off-by: Tamer Ahmed <tamer.ahmed@microsoft.com>