Jason Wang
2017-Sep-01 03:25 UTC
[PATCH net-next] virtio-net: invoke zerocopy callback on xmit path if no tx napi
On 2017?08?31? 22:30, Willem de Bruijn wrote:>> Incomplete results at this stage, but I do see this correlation between >> flows. It occurs even while not running out of zerocopy descriptors, >> which I cannot yet explain. >> >> Running two threads in a guest, each with a udp socket, each >> sending up to 100 datagrams, or until EAGAIN, every msec. >> >> Sender A sends 1B datagrams. >> Sender B sends VHOST_GOODCOPY_LEN, which is enough >> to trigger zcopy_used in vhost net. >> >> A local receive process on the host receives both flows. To avoid >> a deep copy when looping the packet onto the receive path, >> changed skb_orphan_frags_rx to always return false (gross hack). >> >> The flow with the larger packets is redirected through netem on ifb0: >> >> modprobe ifb >> ip link set dev ifb0 up >> tc qdisc add dev ifb0 root netem limit $LIMIT rate 1MBit >> >> tc qdisc add dev tap0 ingress >> tc filter add dev tap0 parent ffff: protocol ip \ >> u32 match ip dport 8000 0xffff \ >> action mirred egress redirect dev ifb0 >> >> For 10 second run, packet count with various ifb0 queue lengths $LIMIT: >> >> no filter >> rx.A: ~840,000 >> rx.B: ~840,000 >> >> limit 1 >> rx.A: ~500,000 >> rx.B: ~3100 >> ifb0: 3273 sent, 371141 dropped >> >> limit 100 >> rx.A: ~9000 >> rx.B: ~4200 >> ifb0: 4630 sent, 1491 dropped >> >> limit 1000 >> rx.A: ~6800 >> rx.B: ~4200 >> ifb0: 4651 sent, 0 dropped >> >> Sender B is always correctly rate limited to 1 MBps or less. With a >> short queue, it ends up dropping a lot and sending even less. >> >> When a queue builds up for sender B, sender A throughput is strongly >> correlated with queue length. With queue length 1, it can send almost >> at unthrottled speed. But even at limit 100 its throughput is on the >> same order as sender B. >> >> What is surprising to me is that this happens even though the number >> of ubuf_info in use at limit 100 is around 100 at all times. In other words, >> it does not exhaust the pool. >> >> When forcing zcopy_used to be false for all packets, this effect of >> sender A throughput being correlated with sender B does not happen. >> >> no filter >> rx.A: ~850,000 >> rx.B: ~850,000 >> >> limit 100 >> rx.A: ~850,000 >> rx.B: ~4200 >> ifb0: 4518 sent, 876182 dropped >> >> Also relevant is that with zerocopy, the sender processes back off >> and report the same count as the receiver. Without zerocopy, >> both senders send at full speed, even if only 4200 packets from flow >> B arrive at the receiver. >> >> This is with the default virtio_net driver, so without napi-tx. >> >> It appears that the zerocopy notifications are pausing the guest. >> Will look at that now. > It was indeed as simple as that. With 256 descriptors, queuing even > a hundred or so packets causes the guest to stall the device as soon > as the qdisc is installed. > > Adding this check > > + in_use = nvq->upend_idx - nvq->done_idx; > + if (nvq->upend_idx < nvq->done_idx) > + in_use += UIO_MAXIOV; > + > + if (in_use > (vq->num >> 2)) > + zcopy_used = false; > > Has the desired behavior of reverting zerocopy requests to copying. > > Without this change, the result is, as previously reported, throughput > dropping to hundreds of packets per second on both flows. > > With the change, pps as observed for a few seconds at handle_tx is > > zerocopy=165 copy=168435 > zerocopy=0 copy=168500 > zerocopy=65 copy=168535 > > Both flows continue to send at more or less normal rate, with only > sender B observing massive drops at the netem. > > With the queue removed the rate reverts to > > zerocopy=58878 copy=110239 > zerocopy=58833 copy=110207 > > This is not a 50/50 split, which impliesTw that some packets from the large > packet flow are still converted to copying. Without the change the rate > without queue was 80k zerocopy vs 80k copy, so this choice of > (vq->num >> 2) appears too conservative. > > However, testing with (vq->num >> 1) was not as effective at mitigating > stalls. I did not save that data, unfortunately. Can run more tests on fine > tuning this variable, if the idea sounds good.Looks like there're still two cases were left: 1) sndbuf is not INT_MAX 2) tx napi is used for virtio-net 1) could be a corner case, and for 2) what your suggest here may not solve the issue since it still do in order completion. Thanks
Willem de Bruijn
2017-Sep-01 16:15 UTC
[PATCH net-next] virtio-net: invoke zerocopy callback on xmit path if no tx napi
On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 11:25 PM, Jason Wang <jasowang at redhat.com> wrote:> > > On 2017?08?31? 22:30, Willem de Bruijn wrote: >>> >>> Incomplete results at this stage, but I do see this correlation between >>> flows. It occurs even while not running out of zerocopy descriptors, >>> which I cannot yet explain. >>> >>> Running two threads in a guest, each with a udp socket, each >>> sending up to 100 datagrams, or until EAGAIN, every msec. >>> >>> Sender A sends 1B datagrams. >>> Sender B sends VHOST_GOODCOPY_LEN, which is enough >>> to trigger zcopy_used in vhost net. >>> >>> A local receive process on the host receives both flows. To avoid >>> a deep copy when looping the packet onto the receive path, >>> changed skb_orphan_frags_rx to always return false (gross hack). >>> >>> The flow with the larger packets is redirected through netem on ifb0: >>> >>> modprobe ifb >>> ip link set dev ifb0 up >>> tc qdisc add dev ifb0 root netem limit $LIMIT rate 1MBit >>> >>> tc qdisc add dev tap0 ingress >>> tc filter add dev tap0 parent ffff: protocol ip \ >>> u32 match ip dport 8000 0xffff \ >>> action mirred egress redirect dev ifb0 >>> >>> For 10 second run, packet count with various ifb0 queue lengths $LIMIT: >>> >>> no filter >>> rx.A: ~840,000 >>> rx.B: ~840,000 >>> >>> limit 1 >>> rx.A: ~500,000 >>> rx.B: ~3100 >>> ifb0: 3273 sent, 371141 dropped >>> >>> limit 100 >>> rx.A: ~9000 >>> rx.B: ~4200 >>> ifb0: 4630 sent, 1491 dropped >>> >>> limit 1000 >>> rx.A: ~6800 >>> rx.B: ~4200 >>> ifb0: 4651 sent, 0 dropped >>> >>> Sender B is always correctly rate limited to 1 MBps or less. With a >>> short queue, it ends up dropping a lot and sending even less. >>> >>> When a queue builds up for sender B, sender A throughput is strongly >>> correlated with queue length. With queue length 1, it can send almost >>> at unthrottled speed. But even at limit 100 its throughput is on the >>> same order as sender B. >>> >>> What is surprising to me is that this happens even though the number >>> of ubuf_info in use at limit 100 is around 100 at all times. In other >>> words, >>> it does not exhaust the pool. >>> >>> When forcing zcopy_used to be false for all packets, this effect of >>> sender A throughput being correlated with sender B does not happen. >>> >>> no filter >>> rx.A: ~850,000 >>> rx.B: ~850,000 >>> >>> limit 100 >>> rx.A: ~850,000 >>> rx.B: ~4200 >>> ifb0: 4518 sent, 876182 dropped >>> >>> Also relevant is that with zerocopy, the sender processes back off >>> and report the same count as the receiver. Without zerocopy, >>> both senders send at full speed, even if only 4200 packets from flow >>> B arrive at the receiver. >>> >>> This is with the default virtio_net driver, so without napi-tx. >>> >>> It appears that the zerocopy notifications are pausing the guest. >>> Will look at that now. >> >> It was indeed as simple as that. With 256 descriptors, queuing even >> a hundred or so packets causes the guest to stall the device as soon >> as the qdisc is installed. >> >> Adding this check >> >> + in_use = nvq->upend_idx - nvq->done_idx; >> + if (nvq->upend_idx < nvq->done_idx) >> + in_use += UIO_MAXIOV; >> + >> + if (in_use > (vq->num >> 2)) >> + zcopy_used = false; >> >> Has the desired behavior of reverting zerocopy requests to copying. >> >> Without this change, the result is, as previously reported, throughput >> dropping to hundreds of packets per second on both flows. >> >> With the change, pps as observed for a few seconds at handle_tx is >> >> zerocopy=165 copy=168435 >> zerocopy=0 copy=168500 >> zerocopy=65 copy=168535 >> >> Both flows continue to send at more or less normal rate, with only >> sender B observing massive drops at the netem. >> >> With the queue removed the rate reverts to >> >> zerocopy=58878 copy=110239 >> zerocopy=58833 copy=110207 >> >> This is not a 50/50 split, which impliesTw that some packets from the >> large >> packet flow are still converted to copying. Without the change the rate >> without queue was 80k zerocopy vs 80k copy, so this choice of >> (vq->num >> 2) appears too conservative. >> >> However, testing with (vq->num >> 1) was not as effective at mitigating >> stalls. I did not save that data, unfortunately. Can run more tests on >> fine >> tuning this variable, if the idea sounds good. > > > Looks like there're still two cases were left:To be clear, this patch is not intended to fix all issues. It is a small improvement to avoid HoL blocking due to queued zerocopy skbs. The trade-off is that reverting to copying in these cases increases cycle cost. I think that that is a trade-off worth making compared to the alternative drop in throughput. It probably would be good to be able to measure this without kernel instrumentation: export counters similar to net->tx_zcopy_err and net->tx_packets (though without reset to zero, as in vhost_net_tx_packet).> 1) sndbuf is not INT_MAXYou mean the case where the device stalls, later zerocopy notifications are queued, but these are never cleaned in free_old_xmit_skbs, because it requires a start_xmit and by now the (only) socket is out of descriptors? A watchdog would help somewhat. With tx-napi, this case cannot occur, either, as free_old_xmit_skbs no longer depends on a call to start_xmit.> 2) tx napi is used for virtio-netI am not aware of any issue specific to the use of tx-napi?> 1) could be a corner case, and for 2) what your suggest here may not solve > the issue since it still do in order completion.Somewhat tangential, but it might also help to break the in-order completion processing in vhost_zerocopy_signal_used. Complete all descriptors between done_idx and upend_idx. done_idx should then only be forward to the oldest still not-completed descriptor. In the test I ran, where the oldest descriptors are held in a queue and all newer ones are tail-dropped, this would avoid blocking a full ring of completions, when only a small number (or 1) is actually delayed. Dynamic switching between copy and zerocopy using zcopy_used already returns completions out-of-order, so this is not a huge leap.
Willem de Bruijn
2017-Sep-01 16:17 UTC
[PATCH net-next] virtio-net: invoke zerocopy callback on xmit path if no tx napi
>>> This is not a 50/50 split, which impliesTw that some packets from the >>> large >>> packet flow are still converted to copying. Without the change the rate >>> without queue was 80k zerocopy vs 80k copy, so this choice of >>> (vq->num >> 2) appears too conservative. >>> >>> However, testing with (vq->num >> 1) was not as effective at mitigating >>> stalls. I did not save that data, unfortunately. Can run more tests on >>> fine >>> tuning this variable, if the idea sounds good. >> >> >> Looks like there're still two cases were left: > > To be clear, this patch is not intended to fix all issues. It is a small > improvement to avoid HoL blocking due to queued zerocopy skbs. > > The trade-off is that reverting to copying in these cases increases > cycle cost. I think that that is a trade-off worth making compared to > the alternative drop in throughput. It probably would be good to be > able to measure this without kernel instrumentation: export > counters similar to net->tx_zcopy_err and net->tx_packets (though > without reset to zero, as in vhost_net_tx_packet). > >> 1) sndbuf is not INT_MAX > > You mean the case where the device stalls, later zerocopy notifications > are queued, but these are never cleaned in free_old_xmit_skbs, > because it requires a start_xmit and by now the (only) socket is out of > descriptors?Typo, sorry. I meant out of sndbuf.> A watchdog would help somewhat. With tx-napi, this case cannot occur, > either, as free_old_xmit_skbs no longer depends on a call to start_xmit. > >> 2) tx napi is used for virtio-net > > I am not aware of any issue specific to the use of tx-napi? > >> 1) could be a corner case, and for 2) what your suggest here may not solve >> the issue since it still do in order completion. > > Somewhat tangential, but it might also help to break the in-order > completion processing in vhost_zerocopy_signal_used. Complete > all descriptors between done_idx and upend_idx. done_idx should > then only be forward to the oldest still not-completed descriptor. > > In the test I ran, where the oldest descriptors are held in a queue and > all newer ones are tail-dropped, this would avoid blocking a full ring > of completions, when only a small number (or 1) is actually delayed. > > Dynamic switching between copy and zerocopy using zcopy_used > already returns completions out-of-order, so this is not a huge leap.
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