Andy Fingerhut fbd5128098
2022 apr updates to vm ubuntu 20.04 (#461)
* Update p4lang repo source code versions to latest as of 2022-Apr-02

* Update vm-ubuntu-20.04/README.md for April 2, 2022
2022-04-03 16:49:08 -04:00

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# Creating the VM
Start creating a brand new VM by running `vagrant up` in this
directory (install Vagrant on your system if needed). This command
creates a _release_ VM that includes P4 software installed from
pre-compiled packages and allows to update those packages with `apt
upgrade`.
Alternatively, a development VM can be created by running `vagrant up
dev`. Note that creating a development VM can take one to several
hours, depending upon the speed of your computer and Internet
connection.
Below are steps that were performed _after_ one of the commands above
was run on the host OS, before creating the VM images. Some of these
steps could probably be automated with programs, and changes to the
`vagrant` scripts that can do so are welcome. I performed these steps
manually to create a VM image, simply to avoid the experimentation and
time required to automate them. I typically only create new VM images
once per month.
+ Log in as user p4 (password p4)
+ Click "Upgrade" in the pop-up window asking if you want to upgrade
the system, if asked. This will download the latest Linux kernel
version released for Ubuntu 20.04, and other updated packages.
+ Reboot the system.
+ This is optional, but if you want to save a little disk space, use
`sudo apt purge <list of packages>` to remove older version of Linux
kernel, if the upgrade installed a newer one.
+ `sudo apt clean`
+ Log in as user p4 (password p4)
+ Start menu -> Preferences -> LXQt settings -> Monitor settings
+ Change resolution from initial 800x600 to 1024x768. Apply the changes.
+ Close monitor settings window
+ Note: For some reason I do not know, these settings seem to be
undone, even if I use the "Save" button. They are temporarily in
effect if I shut down the system and log back in, but then in a few
seconds it switches back to 800x600. Strange.
+ Start menu -> Preferences -> LXQt settings -> Desktop
+ In "Wallpaper mode" popup menu, choose "Center on the screen".
+ Click Apply button
+ Close "Desktop preferences" window
+ Several of the icons on the desktop have an exclamation mark on
them. If you try double-clicking those icons, it pops up a window
saying "This file 'Wireshark' seems to be a desktop entry. What do
you want to do with it?" with buttons for "Open", "Execute", and
"Cancel". Clicking "Open" causes the file to be opened using the
Atom editor. Clicking "Execute" executes the associated command.
If you do a mouse middle click on one of these desktop icons, a
popup menu appears where the second-to-bottom choice is "Trust this
executable". Selecting that causes the exclamation mark to go away,
and future double-clicks of the icon execute the program without
first popping up a window to choose between Open/Execute/Cancel. I
did that for each of these desktop icons:
+ Terminal
+ Wireshark
+ Log off
+ Log in as user vagrant (password vagrant)
+ Change monitor settings and wallpaper mode as described above for
user p4.
+ Open a terminal.
+ Run the command `./clean.sh`, which removes about 6 to 7 GBytes of
files created while building the projects.
+ Log off
# Notes on test results for the VM
I have run the tests below on every VM image I release, before
releasing it. You need not run them again, unless you are curious how
to do so.
## p4c testing results
Steps to run the p4c tests:
+ Log in as user vagrant (password vagrant)
+ In a new terminal, execute these commands:
If you are testing on a Release VM image, first get a copy of the p4c
source code using the following command. This is unnecessary with a
Development VM image, as there is already a `p4c` directory with the
version of source code used to create that image already included in
the home directory of the `vagrant` user account:
```bash
# git clone --recursive https://github.com/p4lang/p4c
```
The following steps are common for both Release and Development VM
images:
```bash
# Compile p4c again from source, since the clean.sh step reduced disk
# space by deleting the p4c/build directory.
git clone https://github.com/jafingerhut/p4-guide
cd p4c
~/p4-guide/bin/build-p4c.sh
# Run the p4c tests
cd build
make -j2 check |& tee make-check-out.txt
```
As of 2022-04-02, the p4c compiler passes all but 64 of its included
tests.
The relatively small group of tests whose names begin with 'ebpf' and
'ubpf' fail. They work fine in the continuous integration tests on
the https://github.com/p4lang/p4c project, because the VM used to run
those tests has additional software installed to enable it. Perhaps
future versions of this VM will enable the ebpf and ubpf back ends to
pass these tests, also. Contributions are welcome to the needed
changes in the VM build scripts to enable this.
## Send ping packets in the solution to `basic` exercise of `p4lang/tutorials` repository
With the version of the https://github.com/p4lang/tutorials repository
that comes pre-installed in the `p4` user account of this VM, the
following tests pass.
First log in as the user `p4` (password `p4`) and open a terminal
window.
```bash
$ cd tutorials/exercises/basic
$ cp solution/basic.p4 basic.p4
$ make run
```
If at the end of many lines of logging output you see a prompt
`mininet>`, you can try entering the command `h1 ping h2` to ping from
virtual host `h1` in the exercise to `h2`, and it should report a
successful ping every second. It will not stop on its own. You can
type Control-C to stop it and return to the `mininet>` prompt, and you
can type Control-D to exit from mininet and get back to the original
shell prompt. To ensure that any processes started by the above steps
are terminated, you can run this command:
```bash
$ make stop
```
# Creating a single file image of the VM
These notes are primarily here as a reminder for people creating VM
images for distribution. If you downloaded a VM image, these steps
were already performed, and there is no reason you need to perform
them again.
For the particular case of creating the VM named:
+ 'P4 Tutorial Development 2022-04-02'
+ created on April 2, 2022
here were the host OS details, in case it turns out that matters to
the finished VM image for some reason:
+ Windows 10 Enterprise
+ VirtualBox 6.1.30 r148432
+ Vagrant 2.2.18
In the VirtualBox GUI interface:
+ Choose menu item File -> Export Appliance ...
+ Select the VM named 'P4 Tutorial Development 2022-04-02' and click
Continue button
+ Format
+ I used: Open Virtualization Format 1.0
+ Other available options were:
+ Open Virtualization Format 0.9
+ Open Virtualization Format 2.0
+ Target file
+ I used: /Users/andy/Documents/P4 Tutorials Development 2022-04-02.ova
+ Mac Address Policy
+ I used: Include only NAT network adapter MAC addresses
+ Other available options were:
+ Include all network adapter MAC addresses
+ Strip all network adapter MAC addresses
+ Additionally
+ Write Manifest file: checked
+ Include ISO image files: unchecked
Clicked "Continue" button.
Virtual system settings:
+ Name: P4 Tutorial 2022-04-02
+ Product: I left this blank
+ Product-URL: I left this blank
+ Vendor: P4.org - P4 Language Consortium
+ Vendor-URL: https://p4.org
+ Version: 2022-04-02
+ Description:
```
Open source P4 development tools built from latest source code as of 2022-Apr-02 and packaged into an Ubuntu 20.04 Desktop Linux VM for the AMD64 architecture.
```
+ License
```
Open source code available hosted at https://github.com/p4lang is released under the Apache 2.0 license. Libraries it depends upon, such as Protobuf, Thrift, gRPC, Ubuntu Linux, etc. are released under their own licenses.
```
Clicked "Export" button.