RedN is a framework that allows arbitrary offloads to RDMA NICs showcasing that they are, in fact, Turing complete. Our NSDI 2022 paper describes this framework in detail.
To cite us, you can use the following BibTex entry:
@inproceedings {redn,
author = {Waleed Reda and Marco Canini and Dejan Kosti{\'c} and Simon Peter},
title = {{RDMA} is Turing complete, we just did not know it yet!},
booktitle = {19th USENIX Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation (NSDI 22)},
year = {2022},
address = {Renton, WA},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/nsdi22/presentation/reda},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = apr,
}
- Turing complete: Provides RDMA implementations for high-level programming constructs (e.g. if and while statements)
- Fully offloads access to popular data structures on remote servers (e.g. hash tables, linked lists)
- Accelerates Memcached lookup performance (by up to 35x)
- Supports Infiniband and RoCE
- Hardware: Mellanox ConnectX-5 / ConnectX-6 NIC
- Other models that use the
mlx5
driver may also be supported (subject to further testing).
- Other models that use the
- Drivers: MLNX_OFED 4.7-1.0.0.1 installation
TODO:
We are currently working on supporting other versions.
- Toolchain: GCC compiler (version 4.7+)
- Build the project:
- Go to the root directory and run
make
.
- Go to the root directory and run
- Modify the NIC's firmware (warning: use this at your own discretion)
cd conf
and run./disable_wqe_checks.sh <device_name>
- By default the
device_name
is set tomlx5_1
- Build and run benchmarks:
cd bench/micro
and then runmake
. To execute a hash table lookup offload:- On the server run
./hash_bench
- On the client run
./hash_bench <peer_address> <iters>
Waleed Reda ([email protected])
This software is provided under the terms of the GNU General Public License 2.