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authorDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>2014-03-07 15:57:47 -0500
committerDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>2014-03-07 15:57:47 -0500
commit4caeccb4de76440e433a15009636e77d003eb3d6 (patch)
tree05898b0d8dab616b2936783964cae4f77b06af84 /Documentation
parent31c70d5956fc3d1abf83e9ab5e1d8237dea59498 (diff)
parente9275f5e2df1b2098a8cc405d87b88b9affd73e6 (diff)
Merge branch 'xen-netback-next'
Zoltan Kiss says: ==================== xen-netback: TX grant mapping with SKBTX_DEV_ZEROCOPY instead of copy A long known problem of the upstream netback implementation that on the TX path (from guest to Dom0) it copies the whole packet from guest memory into Dom0. That simply became a bottleneck with 10Gb NICs, and generally it's a huge perfomance penalty. The classic kernel version of netback used grant mapping, and to get notified when the page can be unmapped, it used page destructors. Unfortunately that destructor is not an upstreamable solution. Ian Campbell's skb fragment destructor patch series [1] tried to solve this problem, however it seems to be very invasive on the network stack's code, and therefore haven't progressed very well. This patch series use SKBTX_DEV_ZEROCOPY flags to tell the stack it needs to know when the skb is freed up. That is the way KVM solved the same problem, and based on my initial tests it can do the same for us. Avoiding the extra copy boosted up TX throughput from 6.8 Gbps to 7.9 (I used a slower AMD Interlagos box, both Dom0 and guest on upstream kernel, on the same NUMA node, running iperf 2.0.5, and the remote end was a bare metal box on the same 10Gb switch) Based on my investigations the packet get only copied if it is delivered to Dom0 IP stack through deliver_skb, which is due to this [2] patch. This affects DomU->Dom0 IP traffic and when Dom0 does routing/NAT for the guest. That's a bit unfortunate, but luckily it doesn't cause a major regression for this usecase. In the future we should try to eliminate that copy somehow. There are a few spinoff tasks which will be addressed in separate patches: - grant copy the header directly instead of map and memcpy. This should help us avoiding TLB flushing - use something else than ballooned pages - fix grant map to use page->index properly I've tried to broke it down to smaller patches, with mixed results, so I welcome suggestions on that part as well: 1: Use skb->cb to store pending_idx 2: Some refactoring 3: Change RX path for mapped SKB fragments (moved here to keep bisectability, review it after #4) 4: Introduce TX grant mapping 5: Remove old TX grant copy definitons and fix indentations 6: Add stat counters for zerocopy 7: Handle guests with too many frags 8: Timeout packets in RX path 9: Aggregate TX unmap operations v2: I've fixed some smaller things, see the individual patches. I've added a few new stat counters, and handling the important use case when an older guest sends lots of slots. Instead of delayed copy now we timeout packets on the RX path, based on the assumption that otherwise packets should get stucked anywhere else. Finally some unmap batching to avoid too much TLB flush v3: Apart from fixing a few things mentioned in responses the important change is the use the hypercall directly for grant [un]mapping, therefore we can avoid m2p override. v4: Now we are using a new grant mapping API to avoid m2p_override. The RX queue timeout logic changed also. v5: Only minor fixes based on Wei's comments v6: Important bugfixes for xenvif_poll exit path and zerocopy callback, see first 2 patches. Also rework of handling packets with too many slots, and reorder the series a bit. v7: Small fixes in comments/log messages/error paths, and merging the frag overflow stats patch into its parent. [1] http://lwn.net/Articles/491522/ [2] https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/7/20/363 ==================== Signed-off-by: Zoltan Kiss <zoltan.kiss@citrix.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
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