| OpenFlow Testing Framework |
| July, 2010 |
| Last updated March 2012 |
| |
| Copyright (c) 2010 The Board of Trustees of The Leland Stanford |
| Junior University |
| |
| Warning |
| +++++++ |
| |
| This is still experimental and it requires root privilege to |
| control the dataplane ports. As a consequence, there may be |
| risks to the machine on which this is running. Use caution. |
| |
| Please see Helpful Notes below. |
| |
| License |
| +++++++ |
| |
| The software included with this distribution is subject to the |
| OpenFlow Switching License as given in the included file LICENSE. |
| Details are also available at: |
| |
| http://www.openflow.org/wp/legal |
| |
| Other software referenced in this distribution is subject to its |
| respective license. |
| |
| Getting OFTest |
| ++++++++++++++ |
| |
| You can check out OFTest with git with the following command: |
| |
| git clone git://github.com/floodlight/oftest |
| |
| Introduction |
| ++++++++++++ |
| |
| This test framework is meant to exercise a candidate OpenFlow |
| switch (the device/switch under test, DUT or SUT). It provides a |
| connection like a controller to which the switch connects and it |
| controls data plane ports, sending and receiving packets, which |
| should be connected to the switch. |
| |
| There are two parts to running the test framework: |
| |
| * Building the python libraries that support the OF protocol |
| * Running oft, the main entry point of the test framework |
| |
| Normally log output from oft is sent to the file oft.log, but |
| can be redirected to the console by specifying --log-file="". |
| |
| Quick Start |
| +++++++++++ |
| |
| You need to have Python and Scapy installed on your system. |
| See 'Pre-requisites' below. |
| |
| Make sure your switch is running and trying to connect to a |
| controller on the machine where you're running oft (normally port |
| 6633). See below regarding run_switch.py for a script that starts |
| up a software switch on the test host. |
| |
| Currently, switches must be running version 1.0 of OpenFlow. |
| |
| # git clone git://github.com/floodlight/oftest |
| # cd oftest |
| # make -C tools/munger |
| Make sure the switch you want to test is running -- |
| see (4) below for the reference switch example. |
| # ./oft --list |
| # sudo ./oft --test-spec=Echo |
| # sudo ./oft --verbose --log-file="" |
| # sudo ./oft --test-spec=<mod> --platform=remote --host=... |
| |
| Longer Start |
| ++++++++++++ |
| |
| 1. Pre-requisites: |
| * An OF switch instance to test (see 4 below) |
| * Root privilege on host running oft |
| * Switch running OpenFlow 1.0 and attempting to connect |
| to a controller on the machine running oft. |
| * Python 2.5 or 2.6. You can run platforms using eth interfaces |
| with Python 2.4. Python 2.7 may work. |
| * oftest checked out (called <oftest> here) |
| * scapy installed: http://www.secdev.org/projects/scapy/ |
| 'sudo apt-get install scapy' should work on Debian. |
| * tcpdump installed (optional, but scapy will complain if it's |
| not there) |
| * Doxygen and doxypy for document generation (optional) |
| * lint for source checking (optional) |
| |
| 2. Build the OpenFlow Python message classes |
| |
| Important: The OF version used by the controller is based on |
| the file in <oftest>/tools/pylibopenflow/include/openflow.h |
| This is currently the 1.0 release file. |
| |
| make -C <oftest>/tools/munger |
| |
| This places files in <oftest>/src/python/oftest/src. |
| |
| 3. Edit configuration if necessary |
| Local platforms work with veth interface pairs and default to |
| four ports. You can adjust this a bit with the command line |
| parameters port_count, base_of_port and base_if_index. |
| |
| Starting from remote.py as a simple example, you can add your |
| own <platform>.py file and then have it imported with |
| --platform=<platform> on the command line. This is meant to |
| allow you to test remote switches attempting to connect to a |
| controller on a network accessible to the test host. |
| |
| 4. Start the switch to test |
| The switch must be running and actively attempting to |
| connect to a controller on the test host at the port number |
| used by oft (6633 by default, or specified as --port=<n> as |
| an argument to oft). |
| |
| If you're new to the test environment and want to check its |
| sanity, you can do the following. This requires that |
| your host kernel supports virtual ethernet interfaces. This |
| is best done in a window separate from where you will run oft. |
| |
| 4A. Check out openflow (preferably at the same level as oftest): |
| git clone git://openflowswitch.org/openflow.git |
| 4B. cd openflow; ./boot.sh; ./configure; make |
| 4C. cd ../oftest |
| 4D. Run the switch startup script: |
| sudo ./run_switch.py; Now you can run oft (see below). |
| 4F. Use --help to see command line switches. If you use a port |
| number other than the default, make sure you use the same |
| one for the switch as for oft. |
| 4E. Use control-C to terminate the switch daemons. |
| 4F. To clean up the virtual ethernet interfaces, use |
| sudo rmmod veth |
| |
| New tools allow you to run an OVS instance as well. See |
| oftest/tools/ovs-ctl. You will need to install a version of |
| openvswitch. See http://openvswitch.org/. |
| |
| 5. Run oft |
| See Warning above; requires sudo to control the dataplane |
| cd <oftest> |
| sudo ./oft --help |
| |
| Helpful Note: Recovering From Crash |
| +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ |
| |
| If the test script, oft, becomes unresponsive, you may find that |
| ^C does not break out of the script. In this case you have two |
| options: |
| |
| * Use ^Z to interrupt the script and return to the shell prompt. |
| * Start another terminal window to the same machine. |
| |
| In either case, you then need to kill the process that is hung. |
| Use the following commands: |
| |
| me@host> ps aux | grep oft |
| root 4 0.0 S< Jul07 0:00 [ksoftirqd/0] |
| ... |
| root 14066 3.2 Tl 09:27 0:00 python ./oft ... |
| me 14074 0.0 R+ 09:28 0:00 grep oft |
| |
| me@host> sudo kill -9 14066 |
| |
| where 14066 is the process ID of the hung process. (Replace it |
| with the PID for your process.) |
| |
| This is still preliminary work and there are bugs in the framework |
| that need to be ironed out. Please report any issues to |
| dtalayco@stanford.edu. |
| |
| |
| OFT Command Line Options |
| ++++++++++++++++++++++++ |
| |
| Here is a summary of the oft command line options. Use --help to see |
| the long and short command option names. |
| |
| platform : String identifying the target platform |
| controller_host : Host on which test controller is running (for sockets) |
| controller_port : Port on which test controller listens for switch cxn |
| port_count : Number of ports in dataplane |
| base_of_port : Base OpenFlow port number in dataplane |
| base_if_index : Base OS network interface for dataplane |
| test_dir : Directory to search for test files (default .) |
| test_spec : Specification of test(s) to run |
| log_file : Filename for test logging |
| list : Boolean: List all tests and exit |
| debug : String giving debug level (info, warning, error...) |
| verbose : Same as debug=verbose |
| |
| Overview |
| ++++++++ |
| |
| The directory structure is currently: |
| |
| <oftest> |
| ` |
| |-- oft |
| |-- doc |
| |-- src |
| | `-- python |
| | `-- oftest |
| |-- tests |
| | `-- test cases |
| `-- tools |
| |-- munger |
| `-- pylibopenflow |
| |
| The tools directory is what processes the OpenFlow header |
| files to produce Python classes representing OpenFlow messages. |
| The results are placed in src/python/oftest and currently |
| include: |
| |
| message.py: The main API providing OF message classes |
| error.py: Subclasses for error messages |
| action.py: Subclasses for action specification |
| cstruct.py: Direct representation of C structures in Python |
| class_maps.py: Addition info about C structures |
| |
| In addition, the following Python files are present in |
| src/python/oftest: |
| |
| controller.py: The controller representation |
| dataplane.py: The dataplane representation |
| action_list.py: Action list class |
| netutils.py: e.g., set promisc on sockets |
| ofutils.py: Utilities related to OpenFlow messages |
| oft_assert.py: Test framework level assertion |
| testutils.py: Test utilities |
| |
| Tests are run from the tests directory. The file oft is the |
| top level entry point for tests. Try ./oft --help for some more. |
| |
| Important Notes |
| +++++++++++++++ |
| |
| 1. If you change any of the code generation scripts in |
| tools/munger/scripts you must re-run make -C tools/munger to |
| regenerate the OpenFlow message classes. |
| |
| 2. If your running into issues with transactions, and it appears that |
| OpenFlow messages aren't quite right, start by looking at any length |
| fields in the packets. With the local platform, you can use wireshark |
| on the loopback interface as well as the dataplane veth interfaces. |
| |
| Adding Your Own Test Cases |
| ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ |
| |
| Check the online tutorial: |
| http://openflow.org/wk/index.php/OFTestTutorial |
| |
| You can: |
| |
| * Add cases to an existing file |
| * Add a new file |
| |
| If you add cases to an existing file, each case should be its own |
| class. It must inherit from unittest.TestCase or one of its |
| derivatives and define runTest (that's how test cases are discovered). |
| |
| If you add a new file, it must implement a top level function called |
| test_set_init which takes a configuration dictionary. See basic.py |
| for an example. The main point of this is to pass the port map |
| object to the test cases. But you can access any configuration |
| parameters this way. Each test case in the new file must derive |
| from unittest.TestCase. |
| |
| CONVENTIONS: |
| |
| The first line of the doc string for a file and for a test class is |
| displayed in the list command. Please keep it clear and under 50 |
| characters. |
| |
| |
| Using CentOS/RHEL |
| +++++++++++++++++ |
| |
| CentOS/RHEL have two challenges: they are very tied to Python 2.4 |
| (and Scapy requires Python 2.5 for its latest version) and they |
| require a kernel upgrade to use veth pairs for local platform |
| testing. |
| |
| If you only need to control eth interfaces for a remote platform, |
| you can use CentOS/RHEL without major disruption. The key is to |
| download scapy-1.2 from the following link: |
| |
| wget http://hg.secdev.org/scapy/raw-file/v1.2.0.2/scapy.py |
| |
| See: http://www.dirk-loss.de/scapy-doc/installation.html#installing-scapy-v1-2 |
| for more info. |
| |
| Copy scapy.py to /usr/lib/python2.4/site-packages |
| |
| If you hit an error related to importing scapy.all, you just need |
| to change the import to refer to scapy (not scapy.all). See |
| examples in parse.py for example. |
| |
| |
| Other Info |
| ++++++++++ |
| |
| * Build doc with |
| + cd <oftest>/tools/munger |
| + make doc |
| Places the results in <oftest>/doc/html |
| If you have problems, check the install location doxypy.py and |
| that it is set correctly in <oftest>/doc/Doxyfile |
| |
| * Run lint on sources |
| + cd <oftest>/tools/munger |
| + make lint |
| Places results in <oftest>/lint/*.log |
| The file controller.log currently has some errors indicated |
| |
| |
| To Do |
| +++++ |
| |
| * Need to have an overview of the components of the test, how they |
| connect and how they are managed by the test framework. |
| * See the Regression Test component on trac: |
| http://www.openflowswitch.org/bugs/openflow |
| http://www.openflowswitch.org/bugs/openflow/query?component=Regression+test+suite |
| |
| * Make the framework work with OF versions other than 1.0? |
| |