Stefano Garzarella
2020-Dec-04 16:06 UTC
[RFC PATCH 0/8] vhost: allow userspace to control vq cpu affinity
Hi Mike, On Fri, Dec 04, 2020 at 01:56:25AM -0600, Mike Christie wrote:>These patches were made over mst's vhost branch. > >The following patches, made over mst's vhost branch, allow userspace >to set each vq's cpu affinity. Currently, with cgroups the worker thread >inherits the affinity settings, but we are at the mercy of the CPU >scheduler for where the vq's IO will be executed on. This can result in >the scheduler sometimes hammering a couple queues on the host instead of >spreading it out like how the guest's app might have intended if it was >mq aware. > >This version of the patches is not what you guys were talking about >initially like with the interface that was similar to nbd's old >(3.x kernel days) NBD_DO_IT ioctl where userspace calls down to the >kernel and we run from that context. These patches instead just >allow userspace to tell the kernel which CPU a vq should run on. >We then use the kernel's workqueue code to handle the thread >management.I agree that reusing kernel's workqueue code would be a good strategy. One concern is how easy it is to implement an adaptive polling strategy using workqueues. From what I've seen, adding some polling of both backend and virtqueue helps to eliminate interrupts and reduce latency. Anyway, I'll take a closer look at your patches next week. :-) Thanks, Stefano> >I wanted to post this version first, because it is flexible >in that userspace can set things up so devs/vqs share threads/CPUs >and we don't have to worry about replicating a bunch of features >that the workqueue code already has like dynamic thread creation, >blocked work detection, idle thread detection and thread reaping, >and it also has an interface to control how many threads can be >created and which CPUs work can run on if we want to further restrict >that from userspace. > >Note that these patches have been lightly tested. I more wanted >to get comments on the overall approach, because I know it's >not really what you were thinking about. But while I worked >on being able to share threads with multiple devices, I kept >coming back to the existing workqueue code and thinking I'll >just copy and paste that. > >