| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 |   EQL Driver: Serial IP Load Balancing HOWTO | 
 | 2 |   Simon "Guru Aleph-Null" Janes, simon@ncm.com | 
 | 3 |   v1.1, February 27, 1995 | 
 | 4 |  | 
 | 5 |   This is the manual for the EQL device driver. EQL is a software device | 
 | 6 |   that lets you load-balance IP serial links (SLIP or uncompressed PPP) | 
 | 7 |   to increase your bandwidth. It will not reduce your latency (i.e. ping | 
 | 8 |   times) except in the case where you already have lots of traffic on | 
 | 9 |   your link, in which it will help them out. This driver has been tested | 
 | 10 |   with the 1.1.75 kernel, and is known to have patched cleanly with | 
 | 11 |   1.1.86.  Some testing with 1.1.92 has been done with the v1.1 patch | 
 | 12 |   which was only created to patch cleanly in the very latest kernel | 
 | 13 |   source trees. (Yes, it worked fine.) | 
 | 14 |  | 
 | 15 |   1.  Introduction | 
 | 16 |  | 
 | 17 |   Which is worse? A huge fee for a 56K leased line or two phone lines? | 
 | 18 |   It's probably the former.  If you find yourself craving more bandwidth, | 
 | 19 |   and have a ISP that is flexible, it is now possible to bind modems | 
 | 20 |   together to work as one point-to-point link to increase your | 
 | 21 |   bandwidth.  All without having to have a special black box on either | 
 | 22 |   side. | 
 | 23 |  | 
 | 24 |  | 
 | 25 |   The eql driver has only been tested with the Livingston PortMaster-2e | 
 | 26 |   terminal server. I do not know if other terminal servers support load- | 
 | 27 |   balancing, but I do know that the PortMaster does it, and does it | 
 | 28 |   almost as well as the eql driver seems to do it (-- Unfortunately, in | 
 | 29 |   my testing so far, the Livingston PortMaster 2e's load-balancing is a | 
 | 30 |   good 1 to 2 KB/s slower than the test machine working with a 28.8 Kbps | 
 | 31 |   and 14.4 Kbps connection.  However, I am not sure that it really is | 
 | 32 |   the PortMaster, or if it's Linux's TCP drivers. I'm told that Linux's | 
 | 33 |   TCP implementation is pretty fast though.--) | 
 | 34 |  | 
 | 35 |  | 
 | 36 |   I suggest to ISPs out there that it would probably be fair to charge | 
 | 37 |   a load-balancing client 75% of the cost of the second line and 50% of | 
 | 38 |   the cost of the third line etc... | 
 | 39 |  | 
 | 40 |  | 
 | 41 |   Hey, we can all dream you know... | 
 | 42 |  | 
 | 43 |  | 
 | 44 |   2.  Kernel Configuration | 
 | 45 |  | 
 | 46 |   Here I describe the general steps of getting a kernel up and working | 
 | 47 |   with the eql driver.	From patching, building, to installing. | 
 | 48 |  | 
 | 49 |  | 
 | 50 |   2.1.	Patching The Kernel | 
 | 51 |  | 
 | 52 |   If you do not have or cannot get a copy of the kernel with the eql | 
 | 53 |   driver folded into it, get your copy of the driver from | 
 | 54 |   ftp://slaughter.ncm.com/pub/Linux/LOAD_BALANCING/eql-1.1.tar.gz. | 
 | 55 |   Unpack this archive someplace obvious like /usr/local/src/.  It will | 
 | 56 |   create the following files: | 
 | 57 |  | 
 | 58 |  | 
 | 59 |  | 
 | 60 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 61 |        -rw-r--r-- guru/ncm	198 Jan 19 18:53 1995 eql-1.1/NO-WARRANTY | 
 | 62 |        -rw-r--r-- guru/ncm	30620 Feb 27 21:40 1995 eql-1.1/eql-1.1.patch | 
 | 63 |        -rwxr-xr-x guru/ncm	16111 Jan 12 22:29 1995 eql-1.1/eql_enslave | 
 | 64 |        -rw-r--r-- guru/ncm	2195 Jan 10 21:48 1995 eql-1.1/eql_enslave.c | 
 | 65 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 66 |  | 
 | 67 |   Unpack a recent kernel (something after 1.1.92) someplace convenient | 
 | 68 |   like say /usr/src/linux-1.1.92.eql. Use symbolic links to point | 
 | 69 |   /usr/src/linux to this development directory. | 
 | 70 |  | 
 | 71 |  | 
 | 72 |   Apply the patch by running the commands: | 
 | 73 |  | 
 | 74 |  | 
 | 75 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 76 |        cd /usr/src | 
 | 77 |        patch </usr/local/src/eql-1.1/eql-1.1.patch | 
 | 78 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 79 |  | 
 | 80 |  | 
 | 81 |  | 
 | 82 |  | 
 | 83 |  | 
 | 84 |   2.2.	Building The Kernel | 
 | 85 |  | 
 | 86 |   After patching the kernel, run make config and configure the kernel | 
 | 87 |   for your hardware. | 
 | 88 |  | 
 | 89 |  | 
 | 90 |   After configuration, make and install according to your habit. | 
 | 91 |  | 
 | 92 |  | 
 | 93 |   3.  Network Configuration | 
 | 94 |  | 
 | 95 |   So far, I have only used the eql device with the DSLIP SLIP connection | 
 | 96 |   manager by Matt Dillon (-- "The man who sold his soul to code so much | 
 | 97 |   so quickly."--) .  How you configure it for other "connection" | 
 | 98 |   managers is up to you.  Most other connection managers that I've seen | 
 | 99 |   don't do a very good job when it comes to handling more than one | 
 | 100 |   connection. | 
 | 101 |  | 
 | 102 |  | 
 | 103 |   3.1.	/etc/rc.d/rc.inet1 | 
 | 104 |  | 
 | 105 |   In rc.inet1, ifconfig the eql device to the IP address you usually use | 
 | 106 |   for your machine, and the MTU you prefer for your SLIP lines.	One | 
 | 107 |   could argue that MTU should be roughly half the usual size for two | 
 | 108 |   modems, one-third for three, one-fourth for four, etc...  But going | 
 | 109 |   too far below 296 is probably overkill. Here is an example ifconfig | 
 | 110 |   command that sets up the eql device: | 
 | 111 |  | 
 | 112 |  | 
 | 113 |  | 
 | 114 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 115 |        ifconfig eql 198.67.33.239 mtu 1006 | 
 | 116 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 117 |  | 
 | 118 |  | 
 | 119 |  | 
 | 120 |  | 
 | 121 |  | 
 | 122 |   Once the eql device is up and running, add a static default route to | 
 | 123 |   it in the routing table using the cool new route syntax that makes | 
 | 124 |   life so much easier: | 
 | 125 |  | 
 | 126 |  | 
 | 127 |  | 
 | 128 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 129 |        route add default eql | 
 | 130 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 131 |  | 
 | 132 |  | 
 | 133 |   3.2.	Enslaving Devices By Hand | 
 | 134 |  | 
 | 135 |   Enslaving devices by hand requires two utility programs: eql_enslave | 
 | 136 |   and eql_emancipate (-- eql_emancipate hasn't been written because when | 
 | 137 |   an enslaved device "dies", it is automatically taken out of the queue. | 
 | 138 |   I haven't found a good reason to write it yet... other than for | 
 | 139 |   completeness, but that isn't a good motivator is it?--) | 
 | 140 |  | 
 | 141 |  | 
 | 142 |   The syntax for enslaving a device is "eql_enslave <master-name> | 
 | 143 |   <slave-name> <estimated-bps>".  Here are some example enslavings: | 
 | 144 |  | 
 | 145 |  | 
 | 146 |  | 
 | 147 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 148 |        eql_enslave eql sl0 28800 | 
 | 149 |        eql_enslave eql ppp0 14400 | 
 | 150 |        eql_enslave eql sl1 57600 | 
 | 151 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 152 |  | 
 | 153 |  | 
 | 154 |  | 
 | 155 |  | 
 | 156 |  | 
 | 157 |   When you want to free a device from its life of slavery, you can | 
 | 158 |   either down the device with ifconfig (eql will automatically bury the | 
 | 159 |   dead slave and remove it from its queue) or use eql_emancipate to free | 
 | 160 |   it. (-- Or just ifconfig it down, and the eql driver will take it out | 
 | 161 |   for you.--) | 
 | 162 |  | 
 | 163 |  | 
 | 164 |  | 
 | 165 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 166 |        eql_emancipate eql sl0 | 
 | 167 |        eql_emancipate eql ppp0 | 
 | 168 |        eql_emancipate eql sl1 | 
 | 169 |        ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 170 |  | 
 | 171 |  | 
 | 172 |  | 
 | 173 |  | 
 | 174 |  | 
 | 175 |   3.3.	DSLIP Configuration for the eql Device | 
 | 176 |  | 
 | 177 |   The general idea is to bring up and keep up as many SLIP connections | 
 | 178 |   as you need, automatically. | 
 | 179 |  | 
 | 180 |  | 
 | 181 |   3.3.1.  /etc/slip/runslip.conf | 
 | 182 |  | 
 | 183 |   Here is an example runslip.conf: | 
 | 184 |  | 
 | 185 |  | 
 | 186 |  | 
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 | 189 |  | 
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 | 191 |  | 
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 | 194 |  | 
 | 195 |  | 
 | 196 |  | 
 | 197 |  | 
 | 198 |  | 
 | 199 |   ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 200 |   name		sl-line-1 | 
 | 201 |   enabled | 
 | 202 |   baud		38400 | 
 | 203 |   mtu		576 | 
 | 204 |   ducmd		-e /etc/slip/dialout/cua2-288.xp -t 9 | 
 | 205 |   command	 eql_enslave eql $interface 28800 | 
 | 206 |   address	 198.67.33.239 | 
 | 207 |   line		/dev/cua2 | 
 | 208 |  | 
 | 209 |   name		sl-line-2 | 
 | 210 |   enabled | 
 | 211 |   baud		38400 | 
 | 212 |   mtu		576 | 
 | 213 |   ducmd		-e /etc/slip/dialout/cua3-288.xp -t 9 | 
 | 214 |   command	 eql_enslave eql $interface 28800 | 
 | 215 |   address	 198.67.33.239 | 
 | 216 |   line		/dev/cua3 | 
 | 217 |   ______________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 218 |  | 
 | 219 |  | 
 | 220 |  | 
 | 221 |  | 
 | 222 |  | 
 | 223 |   3.4.	Using PPP and the eql Device | 
 | 224 |  | 
 | 225 |   I have not yet done any load-balancing testing for PPP devices, mainly | 
 | 226 |   because I don't have a PPP-connection manager like SLIP has with | 
 | 227 |   DSLIP. I did find a good tip from LinuxNET:Billy for PPP performance: | 
 | 228 |   make sure you have asyncmap set to something so that control | 
 | 229 |   characters are not escaped. | 
 | 230 |  | 
 | 231 |  | 
 | 232 |   I tried to fix up a PPP script/system for redialing lost PPP | 
 | 233 |   connections for use with the eql driver the weekend of Feb 25-26 '95 | 
 | 234 |   (Hereafter known as the 8-hour PPP Hate Festival).  Perhaps later this | 
 | 235 |   year. | 
 | 236 |  | 
 | 237 |  | 
 | 238 |   4.  About the Slave Scheduler Algorithm | 
 | 239 |  | 
 | 240 |   The slave scheduler probably could be replaced with a dozen other | 
 | 241 |   things and push traffic much faster.	The formula in the current set | 
 | 242 |   up of the driver was tuned to handle slaves with wildly different | 
 | 243 |   bits-per-second "priorities". | 
 | 244 |  | 
 | 245 |  | 
 | 246 |   All testing I have done was with two 28.8 V.FC modems, one connecting | 
 | 247 |   at 28800 bps or slower, and the other connecting at 14400 bps all the | 
 | 248 |   time. | 
 | 249 |  | 
 | 250 |  | 
 | 251 |   One version of the scheduler was able to push 5.3 K/s through the | 
 | 252 |   28800 and 14400 connections, but when the priorities on the links were | 
 | 253 |   very wide apart (57600 vs. 14400) the "faster" modem received all | 
 | 254 |   traffic and the "slower" modem starved. | 
 | 255 |  | 
 | 256 |  | 
 | 257 |   5.  Testers' Reports | 
 | 258 |  | 
 | 259 |   Some people have experimented with the eql device with newer | 
 | 260 |   kernels (than 1.1.75).  I have since updated the driver to patch | 
 | 261 |   cleanly in newer kernels because of the removal of the old "slave- | 
 | 262 |   balancing" driver config option. | 
 | 263 |  | 
 | 264 |  | 
 | 265 |   o  icee from LinuxNET patched 1.1.86 without any rejects and was able | 
 | 266 |      to boot the kernel and enslave a couple of ISDN PPP links. | 
 | 267 |  | 
 | 268 |   5.1.	Randolph Bentson's Test Report | 
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 | 331 |   From bentson@grieg.seaslug.org Wed Feb  8 19:08:09 1995 | 
 | 332 |   Date: Tue, 7 Feb 95 22:57 PST | 
 | 333 |   From: Randolph Bentson <bentson@grieg.seaslug.org> | 
 | 334 |   To: guru@ncm.com | 
 | 335 |   Subject: EQL driver tests | 
 | 336 |  | 
 | 337 |  | 
 | 338 |   I have been checking out your eql driver.  (Nice work, that!) | 
 | 339 |   Although you may already done this performance testing, here | 
 | 340 |   are some data I've discovered. | 
 | 341 |  | 
 | 342 |   Randolph Bentson | 
 | 343 |   bentson@grieg.seaslug.org | 
 | 344 |  | 
 | 345 |   --------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 346 |  | 
 | 347 |  | 
 | 348 |   A pseudo-device driver, EQL, written by Simon Janes, can be used | 
 | 349 |   to bundle multiple SLIP connections into what appears to be a | 
 | 350 |   single connection.  This allows one to improve dial-up network | 
 | 351 |   connectivity gradually, without having to buy expensive DSU/CSU | 
 | 352 |   hardware and services. | 
 | 353 |  | 
 | 354 |   I have done some testing of this software, with two goals in | 
 | 355 |   mind: first, to ensure it actually works as described and | 
 | 356 |   second, as a method of exercising my device driver. | 
 | 357 |  | 
 | 358 |   The following performance measurements were derived from a set | 
 | 359 |   of SLIP connections run between two Linux systems (1.1.84) using | 
 | 360 |   a 486DX2/66 with a Cyclom-8Ys and a 486SLC/40 with a Cyclom-16Y. | 
 | 361 |   (Ports 0,1,2,3 were used.  A later configuration will distribute | 
 | 362 |   port selection across the different Cirrus chips on the boards.) | 
 | 363 |   Once a link was established, I timed a binary ftp transfer of | 
 | 364 |   289284 bytes of data.	If there were no overhead (packet headers, | 
 | 365 |   inter-character and inter-packet delays, etc.) the transfers | 
 | 366 |   would take the following times: | 
 | 367 |  | 
 | 368 |       bits/sec	seconds | 
 | 369 |       345600	8.3 | 
 | 370 |       234600	12.3 | 
 | 371 |       172800	16.7 | 
 | 372 |       153600	18.8 | 
 | 373 |       76800	37.6 | 
 | 374 |       57600	50.2 | 
 | 375 |       38400	75.3 | 
 | 376 |       28800	100.4 | 
 | 377 |       19200	150.6 | 
 | 378 |       9600	301.3 | 
 | 379 |  | 
 | 380 |   A single line running at the lower speeds and with large packets | 
 | 381 |   comes to within 2% of this.  Performance is limited for the higher | 
 | 382 |   speeds (as predicted by the Cirrus databook) to an aggregate of | 
 | 383 |   about 160 kbits/sec.	The next round of testing will distribute | 
 | 384 |   the load across two or more Cirrus chips. | 
 | 385 |  | 
 | 386 |   The good news is that one gets nearly the full advantage of the | 
 | 387 |   second, third, and fourth line's bandwidth.  (The bad news is | 
 | 388 |   that the connection establishment seemed fragile for the higher | 
 | 389 |   speeds.  Once established, the connection seemed robust enough.) | 
 | 390 |  | 
 | 391 |   #lines  speed	mtu  seconds	theory  actual  %of | 
 | 392 | 	 kbit/sec      duration	speed	speed	max | 
 | 393 |   3	115200  900	_	345600 | 
 | 394 |   3	115200  400	18.1	345600  159825  46 | 
 | 395 |   2	115200  900	_	230400 | 
 | 396 |   2	115200  600	18.1	230400  159825  69 | 
 | 397 |   2	115200  400	19.3	230400  149888  65 | 
 | 398 |   4	57600	900	_	234600 | 
 | 399 |   4	57600	600	_	234600 | 
 | 400 |   4	57600	400	_	234600 | 
 | 401 |   3	57600	600	20.9	172800  138413  80 | 
 | 402 |   3	57600	900	21.2	172800  136455  78 | 
 | 403 |   3	115200  600	21.7	345600  133311  38 | 
 | 404 |   3	57600	400	22.5	172800  128571  74 | 
 | 405 |   4	38400	900	25.2	153600  114795  74 | 
 | 406 |   4	38400	600	26.4	153600  109577  71 | 
 | 407 |   4	38400	400	27.3	153600  105965  68 | 
 | 408 |   2	57600	900	29.1	115200  99410.3 86 | 
 | 409 |   1	115200  900	30.7	115200  94229.3 81 | 
 | 410 |   2	57600	600	30.2	115200  95789.4 83 | 
 | 411 |   3	38400	900	30.3	115200  95473.3 82 | 
 | 412 |   3	38400	600	31.2	115200  92719.2 80 | 
 | 413 |   1	115200  600	31.3	115200  92423	80 | 
 | 414 |   2	57600	400	32.3	115200  89561.6 77 | 
 | 415 |   1	115200  400	32.8	115200  88196.3 76 | 
 | 416 |   3	38400	400	33.5	115200  86353.4 74 | 
 | 417 |   2	38400	900	43.7	76800	66197.7 86 | 
 | 418 |   2	38400	600	44	76800	65746.4 85 | 
 | 419 |   2	38400	400	47.2	76800	61289	79 | 
 | 420 |   4	19200	900	50.8	76800	56945.7 74 | 
 | 421 |   4	19200	400	53.2	76800	54376.7 70 | 
 | 422 |   4	19200	600	53.7	76800	53870.4 70 | 
 | 423 |   1	57600	900	54.6	57600	52982.4 91 | 
 | 424 |   1	57600	600	56.2	57600	51474	89 | 
 | 425 |   3	19200	900	60.5	57600	47815.5 83 | 
 | 426 |   1	57600	400	60.2	57600	48053.8 83 | 
 | 427 |   3	19200	600	62	57600	46658.7 81 | 
 | 428 |   3	19200	400	64.7	57600	44711.6 77 | 
 | 429 |   1	38400	900	79.4	38400	36433.8 94 | 
 | 430 |   1	38400	600	82.4	38400	35107.3 91 | 
 | 431 |   2	19200	900	84.4	38400	34275.4 89 | 
 | 432 |   1	38400	400	86.8	38400	33327.6 86 | 
 | 433 |   2	19200	600	87.6	38400	33023.3 85 | 
 | 434 |   2	19200	400	91.2	38400	31719.7 82 | 
 | 435 |   4	9600	900	94.7	38400	30547.4 79 | 
 | 436 |   4	9600	400	106	38400	27290.9 71 | 
 | 437 |   4	9600	600	110	38400	26298.5 68 | 
 | 438 |   3	9600	900	118	28800	24515.6 85 | 
 | 439 |   3	9600	600	120	28800	24107	83 | 
 | 440 |   3	9600	400	131	28800	22082.7 76 | 
 | 441 |   1	19200	900	155	19200	18663.5 97 | 
 | 442 |   1	19200	600	161	19200	17968	93 | 
 | 443 |   1	19200	400	170	19200	17016.7 88 | 
 | 444 |   2	9600	600	176	19200	16436.6 85 | 
 | 445 |   2	9600	900	180	19200	16071.3 83 | 
 | 446 |   2	9600	400	181	19200	15982.5 83 | 
 | 447 |   1	9600	900	305	9600	9484.72 98 | 
 | 448 |   1	9600	600	314	9600	9212.87 95 | 
 | 449 |   1	9600	400	332	9600	8713.37 90 | 
 | 450 |  | 
 | 451 |  | 
 | 452 |  | 
 | 453 |  | 
 | 454 |  | 
 | 455 |   5.2.	Anthony Healy's Report | 
 | 456 |  | 
 | 457 |  | 
 | 458 |  | 
 | 459 |  | 
 | 460 |  | 
 | 461 |  | 
 | 462 |  | 
 | 463 |   Date: Mon, 13 Feb 1995 16:17:29 +1100 (EST) | 
 | 464 |   From: Antony Healey <ahealey@st.nepean.uws.edu.au> | 
 | 465 |   To: Simon Janes <guru@ncm.com> | 
 | 466 |   Subject: Re: Load Balancing | 
 | 467 |  | 
 | 468 |   Hi Simon, | 
 | 469 | 	  I've installed your patch and it works great. I have trialed | 
 | 470 | 	  it over twin SL/IP lines, just over null modems, but I was | 
 | 471 | 	  able to data at over 48Kb/s [ISDN link -Simon]. I managed a | 
 | 472 | 	  transfer of up to 7.5 Kbyte/s on one go, but averaged around | 
 | 473 | 	  6.4 Kbyte/s, which I think is pretty cool.  :) | 
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