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+..
+ Copyright (C) 2019-2021 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
+
+ This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
+ License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
+ file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.
+
+ See the COPYRIGHT file distributed with this work for additional
+ information regarding copyright ownership.
+
+
+``perfdhcp`` - DHCP benchmarking tool
+-------------------------------------
+
+Synopsis
+~~~~~~~~
+
+:program:`perfdhcp` [**-1**] [**-4** | **-6**] [**-A** encapsulation-level] [**-b** base] [**-B**] [**-c**] [**-C** separator] [**-d** drop-time] [**-D** max-drop] [-e lease-type] [**-E** time-offset] [**-f** renew-rate] [**-F** release-rate] [**-g** thread-mode] [**-h**] [**-i**] [**-I** ip-offset] [**-J** remote-address-list-file] [**-l** local-address|interface] [**-L** local-port] [**-M** mac-list-file] [**-n** num-request] [**-N** remote-port] [**-O** random-offset] [**-o** code,hexstring] [**-p** test-period] [**-P** preload] [**-r** rate] [**-R** num-clients] [**-s** seed] [**-S** srvid-offset] [**--scenario** name] [**-t** report] [**-T** template-file] [**-u**] [**-v**] [**-W** exit-wait-time] [**-w** script_name] [**-x** diagnostic-selector] [**-X** xid-offset] [server]
+
+Description
+~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``perfdhcp`` is a DHCP benchmarking tool. It provides a way to measure
+the performance of DHCP servers by generating large amounts of traffic
+from multiple simulated clients. It is able to test both IPv4 and IPv6
+servers, and provides statistics concerning response times and the
+number of requests that are dropped.
+
+The tool supports two different scenarios, which offer certain behaviors to be tested.
+By default (the basic scenario), tests are run using the full four-packet exchange sequence
+(DORA for DHCPv4, SARR for DHCPv6). An option is provided to run tests
+using the initial two-packet exchange (DO and SA) instead. It is also
+possible to configure ``perfdhcp`` to send DHCPv6 RENEW and RELEASE messages
+at a specified rate, in parallel with the DHCPv6 four-way exchanges. By
+default, if there is no response received with one second, a response is
+considered lost and ``perfdhcp`` continues with other transactions.
+
+A second scenario, called avalanche, is selected via ``--scenario avalanche``.
+It first sends the number of Discovery or Solicit messages specified by the ``-R`` option; then
+a retransmission (with an exponential back-off mechanism) is used for each simulated client, until all requests are
+answered. It generates a report when all clients receive their addresses, or when
+it is manually stopped. This scenario attempts to replicate a
+case where the server is not able to handle the traffic swiftly
+enough. Real clients will assume the packet or response was lost
+and will retransmit, further increasing DHCP traffic. This is
+sometimes called an avalanche effect, thus the scenario name.
+Option ``-p`` is ignored in the avalanche scenario.
+
+When running a performance test, ``perfdhcp`` exchanges packets with
+the server under test as quickly as possible, unless the ``-r`` parameter is used to
+limit the request rate. The length of the test can be limited by setting
+a threshold on any or all of the number of requests made by
+``perfdhcp``, the elapsed time, or the number of requests dropped by the
+server.
+
+Templates
+~~~~~~~~~
+
+To allow the contents of packets sent to the server to be customized,
+``perfdhcp`` allows the specification of template files that determine
+the contents of the packets. For example, the customized packet may
+contain a DHCPv6 ORO to request a set of options to be returned by the
+server, or it may contain the Client FQDN option to request that the server
+perform DNS updates. This may be used to discover performance
+bottlenecks for different server configurations (e.g. DDNS enabled or
+disabled).
+
+Up to two template files can be specified on the command line, with each file
+representing the contents of a particular type of packet, and the type being
+determined by the test being carried out. For example, if testing
+DHCPv6:
+
+- With no template files specified on the command line, ``perfdhcp``
+ generates both Solicit and Request packets.
+
+- With one template file specified, that file is used as the
+ pattern for Solicit packets: ``perfdhcp`` generates the Request
+ packets.
+
+- With two template files given on the command line, the first is
+ used as the pattern for Solicit packets, and the second as the pattern
+ for Request packets.
+
+(A similar determination applies to DHCPv4's DHCPDISCOVER and DHCPREQUEST
+packets.)
+
+The template file holds the DHCP packet, represented as a stream of ASCII
+hexadecimal digits; it excludes any IP/UDP stack headers. The
+template file must not contain any characters other than hexadecimal
+digits and spaces. Spaces are discarded when the template file is parsed;
+in the file, ``12B4`` is the same as ``12 B4``, which is the same as
+``1 2 B 4``.
+
+The template files should be used in conjunction with the command-line
+parameters which specify offsets of the data fields being modified in
+outbound packets. For example, the ``-E time-offset`` switch specifies
+the offset of the DHCPv6 Elapsed Time option in the packet template.
+If the offset is specified, ``perfdhcp`` injects the current elapsed-time
+value into this field before sending the packet to the server.
+
+In many scenarios, ``perfdhcp`` needs to simulate multiple clients,
+each having a unique client identifier. Since packets for each client are
+generated from the same template file, it is necessary to randomize the
+client identifier (or HW address in DHCPv4) in the packet created from
+it. The ``-O random-offset`` option allows specification of the offset in
+the template where randomization should be performed. It is important to
+note that this offset points to the end (not the beginning) of the
+client identifier (or HW address field). The number of bytes being
+randomized depends on the number of simulated clients. If the number of
+simulated clients is between 1 and 255, only one byte (to which the
+randomization offset points) is randomized. If the number of
+simulated clients is between 256 and 65535, two bytes are
+randomized. Note that the last two bytes of the client identifier are
+randomized in this case: the byte which the randomization offset parameter
+points to, and the one which precedes it (random-offset - 1). If the
+number of simulated clients exceeds 65535, three bytes are
+randomized, and so on.
+
+``perfdhcp`` can simulate traffic from multiple subnets by enabling option
+``-J`` and passing a path to a file that contains v4 or v6 addresses to be
+used as relays in generated messages. That enables testing of vast numbers
+of Kea shared networks. While testing DHCPv4, Kea should be started with the
+``KEA_TEST_SEND_RESPONSES_TO_SOURCE`` environment variable, to force Kea
+to send generated messages to the source address of the incoming packet.
+
+Templates may currently be used to generate packets being sent to the
+server in 4-way exchanges, i.e. Solicit, Request (DHCPv6) and DHCPDISCOVER,
+DHCPREQUEST (DHCPv4). They cannot be used when Renew or DHCPRELEASE packets are
+being sent.
+
+Options
+~~~~~~~
+
+``-1``
+ Takes the ``server-id`` option from the first received message.
+
+``-4``
+ Establishes DHCPv4 operation; this is the default. It is incompatible with the
+ ``-6`` option.
+
+``-6``
+ Establishes DHCPv6 operation. It is incompatible with the ``-4`` option.
+
+``-b basetype=value``
+ Indicates the base MAC or DUID used to simulate different clients. The basetype
+ may be "mac" or "duid". (The keyword "ether" may alternatively used
+ for MAC.) The ``-b`` option can be specified multiple times. The MAC
+ address must consist of six octets separated by single (:) or double
+ (::) colons; for example: mac=00:0c:01:02:03:04. The DUID value is a
+ hexadecimal string; it must be at least six octets long and not
+ longer than 64 bytes, and the length must be less than 128
+ hexadecimal digits. For example: duid=0101010101010101010110111F14.
+
+``-d drop-time``
+ Specifies the time after which a request is treated as having been
+ lost. The value is given in seconds and may contain a fractional
+ component. The default is 1.
+
+``-e lease-type``
+ Specifies the type of lease being requested from the server. It may
+ be one of the following:
+
+ ``address-only``
+ Only regular addresses (v4 or v6) are requested.
+
+ ``prefix-only``
+ Only IPv6 prefixes are requested.
+
+ ``address-and-prefix``
+ Both IPv6 addresses and prefixes are requested.
+
+ The ``-e prefix-only`` and ``-e address-and-prefix`` forms may not be used
+ with the ``-4`` option.
+
+``-F release-rate``
+ Specifies the rate at which DHCPv4 DHCPRELEASE or DHCPv6 Release requests are sent to a server. This value
+ is only valid when used in conjunction with the exchange rate (given
+ by ``-r rate``). Furthermore, the sum of this value and the renew-rate
+ (given by ``-f rate``) must be equal to or less than the exchange
+ rate value.
+
+``-f renew-rate``
+ Specifies the rate at which DHCPv4 DHCPREQUEST or DHCPv6 Renew requests are sent to a server.
+ This value is only valid when used in conjunction with the exchange
+ rate (given by ``-r rate``). Furthermore, the sum of this value and
+ the release-rate (given by ``-F rate``) must be equal to or less than the
+ exchange rate.
+
+``-g thread-mode``
+ Allows selection of thread-mode, which can be either ``single`` or ``multi``. In multi-thread mode,
+ packets are received in a separate thread, which allows better
+ utilisation of CPUs. In a single-CPU system it is better to run in one
+ thread, to avoid threads blocking each other. If more than one CPU is
+ present in the system, multi-thread mode is the default; otherwise
+ single-thread is the default.
+
+``-h``
+ Prints help and exits.
+
+``-i``
+ Performs only the initial part of the exchange: DISCOVER-OFFER if ``-4`` is
+ selected, Solicit-Advertise if ``-6`` is chosen.
+
+ ``-i`` is incompatible with the following options: ``-1``, ``-d``,
+ ``-D``, ``-E``, ``-S``, ``-I`` and ``-F``. In addition, it cannot be
+ used with multiple instances of ``-O``, ``-T``, and ``-X``.
+
+``-J remote-address-list-file``
+ Specifies a text file that includes multiple addresses, and is
+ designed to test shared networks. If provided, ``perfdhcp``
+ randomly chooses one of the addresses for each exchange, to generate traffic
+ from multiple subnets. When testing DHCPv4, it
+ should be started with the ``KEA_TEST_SEND_RESPONSES_TO_SOURCE=ENABLE``
+ environment variable; otherwise, ``perfdhcp`` will not be able to receive responses.
+
+``-l local-addr|interface``
+ For DHCPv4 operation, specifies the local hostname/address to use when
+ communicating with the server. By default, the interface address
+ through which traffic would normally be routed to the server is used.
+ For DHCPv6 operation, specifies the name of the network interface
+ through which exchanges are initiated.
+
+``-L local-port``
+ Specifies the local port to use. This must be zero or a positive
+ integer up to 65535. A value of 0 (the default) allows ``perfdhcp``
+ to choose its own port.
+
+``-M mac-list-file``
+ Specifies a text file containing a list of MAC addresses, one per line. If
+ provided, a MAC address is chosen randomly from this list for
+ every new exchange. In DHCPv6, MAC addresses are used to
+ generate DUID-LLs. This parameter must not be used in conjunction
+ with the ``-b`` parameter.
+
+``-N remote-port``
+ Specifies the remote port to use. This must be zero or a positive
+ integer up to 65535. A value of 0 (the default) allows ``perfdhcp``
+ to choose the standard service port.
+
+``-o code,hexstring``
+ Forces ``perfdhcp`` to insert the specified extra option (or options if
+ used several times) into packets being transmitted. The code
+ specifies the option code and the hexstring is a hexadecimal string that
+ defines the content of the option. Care should be taken as ``perfdhcp``
+ does not offer any kind of logic behind those options; they are simply
+ inserted into packets and sent as is. Be careful not to duplicate
+ options that are already inserted. For example, to insert client
+ class identifier (option code 60) with a string "docsis", use
+ "-o 60,646f63736973". The ``-o`` may be used multiple times. It is
+ necessary to specify the protocol family (either ``-4`` or ``-6``) before
+ using ``-o``.
+
+``-P preload``
+ Initiates preload exchanges back-to-back at startup. Must be 0
+ (the default) or a positive integer.
+
+``-r rate``
+ Initiates the rate of DORA/SARR (or if ``-i`` is given, DO/SA) exchanges per
+ second. A periodic report is generated showing the number of
+ exchanges which were not completed, as well as the average response
+ latency. The program continues until interrupted, at which point a
+ final report is generated.
+
+``-R num-clients``
+ Specifies how many different clients are used. With a value of 1 (the
+ default), all requests appear to come from the same client.
+ Must be a positive number.
+
+``-s seed``
+ Specifies the seed for randomization, making runs of ``perfdhcp``
+ repeatable. This must be 0 or a positive integer. The value 0 means that a
+ seed is not used; this is the default.
+
+``--scenario name``
+ Specifies the type of scenario, and can be ``basic`` (the default) or ``avalanche``.
+
+``-T template-file``
+ Specifies a file containing the template to use as a stream of
+ hexadecimal digits. This may be specified up to two times and
+ controls the contents of the packets sent (see the "Templates"
+ section above).
+
+``-u``
+ Enables checks for address uniqueness. The lease valid-lifetime should not be shorter
+ than the test duration, and clients should not request an address more than once without
+ releasing it.
+
+``-v``
+ Prints the version of this program.
+
+``-W exit-wait-time``
+ Specifies the exit-wait-time parameter, which causes ``perfdhcp`` to wait for
+ a certain amount of time after an exit condition has been met, to receive all
+ packets without sending any new packets. Expressed in microseconds.
+ If not specified, 0 is used (i.e. exit immediately after exit
+ conditions are met).
+
+``-w script_name``
+ Specifies the name of the script to be run before/after ``perfdhcp``.
+ When called, the script is passed a single parameter, either "start" or
+ "stop", indicating whether it is being called before or after ``perfdhcp``.
+
+``-x diagnostic-selector``
+ Includes extended diagnostics in the output. This is a
+ string of single keywords specifying the operations for which verbose
+ output is desired. The selector key letters are:
+
+ ``a``
+ Prints the decoded command-line arguments.
+
+ ``e``
+ Prints the exit reason.
+
+ ``i``
+ Prints the rate-processing details.
+
+ ``l``
+ Prints the received leases.
+
+ ``s``
+ Prints the first server ID.
+
+ ``t``
+ When finished, prints timers of all successful exchanges.
+
+ ``T``
+ When finished, prints templates.
+
+``-y seconds``
+ Time in seconds after which ``perfdhcp`` starts simulating the client waiting longer for server responses. This increases the
+ ``secs`` field in DHCPv4 and sends increased values in the ``Elapsed Time`` option in DHCPv6. Must be used with ``-Y``.
+
+``-Y seconds``
+ Time in seconds during which ``perfdhcp`` simulates the client waiting longer for server responses. This increases
+ the ``secs`` field in DHCPv4 and sends increased values in the ``Elapsed Time`` option in DHCPv6. Must be used with ``-y``.
+
+DHCPv4-Only Options
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The following options only apply for DHCPv4 (i.e. when ``-4`` is given).
+
+``-B``
+ Forces broadcast handling.
+
+DHCPv6-Only Options
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The following options only apply for DHCPv6 (i.e. when ``-6`` is given).
+
+``-c``
+ Adds a rapid-commit option (exchanges are Solicit-Advertise).
+
+``-A encapsulation-level``
+ Specifies that relayed traffic must be generated. The argument
+ specifies the level of encapsulation, i.e. how many relay agents are
+ simulated. Currently the only supported encapsulation-level value is
+ 1, which means that the generated traffic is equivalent to the amount of
+ traffic passing through a single relay agent.
+
+Template-Related Options
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The following options may only be used in conjunction with ``-T`` and
+control how ``perfdhcp`` modifies the template. The options may be
+specified multiple times on the command line; each occurrence affects
+the corresponding template file (see "Templates" above).
+
+``-E time-offset``
+ Specifies the offset of the ``secs`` field (DHCPv4) or ``Elapsed Time`` option (DHCPv6) in the
+ second (i.e. Request) template; must be 0 or a positive integer. A
+ value of 0 disables this.
+
+``-I ip-offset``
+ Specifies the offset of the IP address (DHCPv4) in the ``requested-ip``
+ option or ``IA_NA`` option (DHCPv6) in the second (Request) template.
+
+``-O random-offset``
+ Specifies the offset of the last octet to randomize in the template. This
+ must be an integer greater than 3. The ``-T`` switch must be given to
+ use this option.
+
+``-S srvid-offset``
+ Specifies the offset of the ``server-id`` option in the second (Request) template.
+ This must be a positive integer, and the switch can only be used
+ when the template option (``-T``) is also given.
+
+``-X xid-offset``
+ Specifies the offset of the transaction ID (xid) in the template. This must be a
+ positive integer, and the switch can only be used when the template
+ option (``-T``) is also given.
+
+Options Controlling a Test
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``-D max-drop``
+ Aborts the test immediately if "max-drop" requests have been dropped.
+ Use ``-D 0`` to abort if even a single request has
+ been dropped. "max-drop" must be a positive integer. If "max-drop"
+ includes the suffix ``%``, it specifies the maximum percentage of
+ requests that may be dropped before aborting. In this case, testing of
+ the threshold begins after 10 requests are expected to have been
+ received.
+
+``-n num-requests``
+ Initiates "num-request" transactions. No report is generated until all
+ transactions have been initiated/waited-for, after which a report is
+ generated and the program terminates.
+
+``-p test-period``
+ Sends requests for "test-period", which is specified in the same manner
+ as ``-d``. This can be used as an alternative to ``-n``, or both
+ options can be given, in which case the testing is completed when
+ either limit is reached.
+
+``-t interval``
+ Sets the delay (in seconds) between two successive reports.
+
+``-C separator``
+ Suppresses the preliminary output and causes the interim data to
+ only contain the values delimited by ``separator``. Used in
+ conjunction with ``-t`` to produce easily parsable
+ reports at ``-t`` intervals.
+
+Arguments
+~~~~~~~~~
+
+``server``
+ Indicates the server to test, specified as an IP address. In the DHCPv6 case, the
+ special name ``all`` can be used to refer to
+ ``All_DHCP_Relay_Agents_and_Servers`` (the multicast address FF02::1:2),
+ or the special name ``servers`` to refer to ``All_DHCP_Servers`` (the
+ multicast address FF05::1:3). The server is mandatory except where
+ the ``-l`` option is given to specify an interface, in which case it
+ defaults to ``all``.
+
+Errors
+~~~~~~
+
+``perfdhcp`` can report the following errors in the packet exchange:
+
+tooshort
+ A message was received that was too short.
+
+orphans
+ A message was received which does not match one sent to the server (i.e.
+ it is a duplicate message, a message that has arrived after an
+ excessive delay, or one that is just not recognized).
+
+locallimit
+ Local system limits have been reached when sending a message.
+
+Exit Status
+~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``perfdhcp`` exits with one of the following status codes:
+
+0
+ Success.
+
+1
+ General error.
+
+2
+ Error in command-line arguments.
+
+3
+ No general failures in operation, but one or more exchanges were
+ unsuccessful.
+
+Usage Examples
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Here is an example that simulates regular DHCPv4 traffic of 100 DHCPv4 devices (-R 100),
+10 packets per second (-r 10), shows the query/response rate details (-xi),
+shows a report every 2 seconds (-t 2), and sends the packets to the IP 192.0.2.1:
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ sudo perfdhcp -xi -t 2 -r 10 -R 100 192.0.2.1
+
+Here's a similar case, but for DHCPv6. Note that the DHCPv6 protocol uses link-local
+addresses, so the interface (eth0 in this example) must be specified on which to send the
+traffic. ``all`` is a convenience alias for ``All_DHCP_Relay_Agents_and_Servers``
+(the multicast address FF02::1:2). It is also possible to use the ``servers`` alias
+to refer to ``All_DHCP_Servers`` (the multicast address FF05::1:3). The default is ``all``.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ sudo perfdhcp -6 -xi -t 1 -r 1 -R 10 -l eth0 all
+
+The following examples simulate normal DHCPv4 and DHCPv6 traffic that, after 3 seconds,
+starts pretending not to receive any responses from the server for 10 seconds. The
+DHCPv4 protocol signals this by an increased ``secs`` field, while DHCPv6 uses the
+``Elapsed Time`` option. In real networks, this indicates that clients are not getting
+responses in a timely matter. This can be used to simulate some HA scenarios, as Kea
+uses the ``secs`` field and ``Elapsed Time`` option value as one of the indicators
+that the HA partner is not responding. When enabled with ``-y`` and ``-Y``, the ``secs``
+and ``Elapsed Time`` values increase steadily.
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ sudo perfdhcp -xi -t 1 -r 1 -y 10 -Y 3 192.0.2.1
+
+ sudo perfdhcp -6 -xi -t 1 -r 1 -y 10 -Y 3 2001:db8::1
+
+Documentation
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Kea comes with an extensive Kea Administrator Reference Manual that covers
+all aspects of running the Kea software - compilation, installation,
+configuration, configuration examples, and much more. Kea also features a
+Kea Messages Manual, which lists all possible messages Kea can print
+with a brief description for each of them. Both documents are
+available in various formats (.txt, .html, .pdf) with the Kea
+distribution. The Kea documentation is available at
+https://kea.readthedocs.io.
+
+Kea source code is documented in the Kea Developer's Guide,
+available at https://reports.kea.isc.org/dev_guide/.
+
+The Kea project website is available at https://kea.isc.org.
+
+Mailing Lists and Support
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+There are two public mailing lists available for the Kea project. **kea-users**
+(kea-users at lists.isc.org) is intended for Kea users, while **kea-dev**
+(kea-dev at lists.isc.org) is intended for Kea developers, prospective
+contributors, and other advanced users. Both lists are available at
+https://lists.isc.org. The community provides best-effort support
+on both of those lists.
+
+ISC provides professional support for Kea services. See
+https://www.isc.org/kea/ for details.
+
+History
+~~~~~~~
+
+The ``perfdhcp`` tool was initially coded in October 2011 by John
+DuBois, Francis Dupont, and Marcin Siodelski of ISC. Kea 1.0.0, which
+included ``perfdhcp``, was released in December 2015.
+
+See Also
+~~~~~~~~
+
+:manpage:`kea-dhcp4(8)`, :manpage:`kea-dhcp6(8)`, :manpage:`kea-dhcp-ddns(8)`,
+:manpage:`kea-ctrl-agent(8)`, :manpage:`kea-admin(8)`, :manpage:`kea-netconf(8)`,
+:manpage:`keactrl(8)`, :manpage:`kea-lfc(8)`, Kea Administrator Reference Manual.