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Linux Kernel TLS/DTLS Socket Tool

Note that the implementation is under heavy development. Use on your own risk!

This tool is demonstrating usage, benchmarking and verifying the implementation of AF_KTLS socket.

This tool consists of two parts - a client and a server. You can run server as a standalone process or you can run the server in a separate thread. Note that benchmarks use clock(3) to determine processor time, so you will be benchmarking server as well when run in a thread.

The implementation is using Gnu TLS now. AF_KTLS currently support only AES GCM, but Gnu TLS and OpenSSL are sharing code for AES GCM cipher.

Consider dropping caches by --drop-caches before each run to omit kernel caching impact.

Scenarios

There are two types of benchmarks:

  • *-count COUNT to send (and receive) specified number of records
  • *-time SECS to run scenario specified amount of time

You can specify MTU by:

  • --payload to specify payload for send(2), recv(2) and splice(2) when AF_KTLS is destination socket
  • --sendfile-mtu to specify MTU when benchmarking sendfile(2) and splice(2) when AF_KTLS socket is destination socket (sendpage() is called in the kernel)

To evaluate speed impact, there were designed following scenarios:

Send

This scenario can be run by supplying --send-{gnutls,ktls}-{time,count}. In this case you will test Gnu TLS and AF_KTLS sending and receiving (if compiled with BENCHMARK_RECV defined) - to be more concrete send(2) and recv(2) calls.

Splice

By supplying --splice-{count,time} you can splice a file (by default /dev/zero is used to omit hard disk drive and file system impact. A content is read from a file, written to a pipe and transmitted from pipe to a AF_KTLS socket.

Splice Echo

This scenario can be run by supplying --splice-echo-{time,count}. This scenario uses splice(2) to read from AF_KTLS socket, write to a pipe, read from a pipe and write to AF_KTLS socket again.

Send a File

You can send a file using sendfile(2) or you can do recv(2)

  • encrypt in userspace -- send(2). For benchmarking sendfile(2) supply --sendfile FILE, for use space encryption, supply --sendfile-buf FILE. If you want to specify MTU, for sendfile(2), specify --sendfile-mtu MTU, for user space encryption, you have to adjust payload by --payload BYTES. Please note that AF_KTLS is computing MTU with TLS/DTLS overhead. That means that if you supply MTU 1400 for a TLS, the data carried within one packet will be 1400 - sizeof(tls_overhead) (1400 - 5 (header)
  • 8 (iv) - 16(tag) for TLS and 1400 - 13 (header) - 8(iv) - 16(tag)).

Verifying Implementation

There is implemented a test suite. You can access it by supplying --verify-sendpage (sendpage() implmenetation in the kernel), --verify-transmission (send(2) and recv(2)), --verify-splice-read (splice_read() implementation in the kernel) and --verify-handling (getsockopt(2), setsockopt(2) and basic socket operatiosn).

Help

To see all available options, see --help. Feel free to visit issues page as well.

See also AF_KTLS, AF_KTLS visualize.

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Linux Kernel TLS/DTLS Module Tool

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