NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | NOTES | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON |
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CMTIME(1) librdmacm CMTIME(1)
cmtime - RDMA CM connection steps timing test.
cmtime [-s server_address] [-b bind_address] [-c connections] [-p port_number] [-q base_qpn] [-r retries] [-t timeout_ms]
Determines min, max, and average times for various "steps" in RDMA CM connection setup and teardown between a client and server application. "Steps" that are timed are: create ID, bind address, resolve address, resolve route, create QP, modify QP to INIT, modify QP to RTR, modify QP to RTS, CM connect, client establish, disconnect, destroy QP, and destroy ID. Many operations are asynchronous, allowing progress on multiple connections simultanesously. The 'sum' output adds the time that all connections took for a given step. The average 'us/conn' is the sum divided by the number of connections. This is useful to identify steps which take a significant amount of time. The min and max values are the smallest and largest times that any single connection took to complete a given step. The 'total' and 'avg/iter' times measure the time to complete a given step for all connections. These two values take into account asynchronous operations. For steps which are serial, the total and sum values will be roughly the same. For asynchronous steps, the total may be significantly lower than the sum, as multiple connections will be in progress simultanesously. The avg/iter is the total time divided by the number of connections. In many cases, times may not be available or only available on the client. Is such situations, the output will show 0.
-s server_address The network name or IP address of the server system listening for connections. The used name or address must route over an RDMA device. This option must be specified by the client. -b bind_address The local network address to bind to. -c connections The number of connections to establish between the client and server. (default 100) -p port_number The server's port number. -q base_qpn The first QP number to use when creating connections without allocating hardware QPs. The test will use the values between base_qpn and base_qpn plus connections when connecting. (default 1000) -n num_threads Sets the number of threads to spawn used to process connection events and hardware operations. (default 1) -m mimic_qp_delay_us "Simulates" QP creation and modify calls by replacing them with a simple sleep function instead. This allows testing the CM at larger scale than would be practical, or even possible given system configuration settings, if HW resources needed to be allocated. -r retries Number of retries when resolving address or route. (default 2) -S Run connection rate test using sockets. This provides a baseline comparison of RDMA connections versus TCP connections. Sockets are set to blocking mode. -t timeout_ms Timeout in millseconds (ms) when resolving address or route. (default 2000 - 2 seconds)
Basic usage is to start cmtime on a server system, then run cmtime -s server_name on a client system. Because this test maps RDMA resources to userspace, users must ensure that they have available system resources and permissions. See the libibverbs README file for additional details.
rdma_cm(7)
This page is part of the rdma-core (RDMA Core Userspace Libraries
and Daemons) project. Information about the project can be found
at ⟨https://github.com/linux-rdma/rdma-core⟩. If you have a bug
report for this manual page, send it to
linux-rdma@vger.kernel.org. This page was obtained from the
project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://github.com/linux-rdma/rdma-core.git⟩ on 2024-06-14. (At
that time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in
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librdmacm 2017-04-28 CMTIME(1)