[Intel-wired-lan] [PATCH bpf-next 0/6] xsk: exit NAPI loop when AF_XDP Rx ring is full

Björn Töpel bjorn.topel at intel.com
Mon Sep 7 13:37:40 UTC 2020


On 2020-09-05 01:58, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
 > On Fri, 4 Sep 2020 16:32:56 +0200 Björn Töpel wrote:
 >> On 2020-09-04 16:27, Jesper Dangaard Brouer wrote:
 >>> On Fri,  4 Sep 2020 15:53:25 +0200
 >>> Björn Töpel <bjorn.topel at gmail.com> wrote:
 >>>
 >>>> On my machine the "one core scenario Rx drop" performance went from
 >>>> ~65Kpps to 21Mpps. In other words, from "not usable" to
 >>>> "usable". YMMV.
 >>>
 >>> We have observed this kind of dropping off an edge before with softirq
 >>> (when userspace process runs on same RX-CPU), but I thought that Eric
 >>> Dumazet solved it in 4cd13c21b207 ("softirq: Let ksoftirqd do its 
job").
 >>>
 >>> I wonder what makes AF_XDP different or if the problem have come back?
 >>>
 >>
 >> I would say this is not the same issue. The problem is that the softirq
 >> is busy dropping packets since the AF_XDP Rx is full. So, the cycles
 >> *are* split 50/50, which is not what we want in this case. :-)
 >>
 >> This issue is more of a "Intel AF_XDP ZC drivers does stupid work", than
 >> fairness. If the Rx ring is full, then there is really no use to let the
 >> NAPI loop continue.
 >>
 >> Would you agree, or am I rambling? :-P
 >
 > I wonder if ksoftirqd never kicks in because we are able to discard
 > the entire ring before we run out of softirq "slice".
 >

This is exactly what's happening, so we're entering a "busy poll like"
behavior; syscall, return from syscall softirq/napi, userland.

 >
 > I've been pondering the exact problem you're solving with Maciej
 > recently. The efficiency of AF_XDP on one core with the NAPI processing.
 >
 > Your solution (even though it admittedly helps, and is quite simple)
 > still has the application potentially not able to process packets
 > until the queue fills up. This will be bad for latency.
 >
 > Why don't we move closer to application polling? Never re-arm the NAPI
 > after RX, let the application ask for packets, re-arm if 0 polled.
 > You'd get max batching, min latency.
 >
 > Who's the rambling one now? :-D
 >

:-D No, these are all very good ideas! We've actually experimented
with it with the busy-poll series a while back -- NAPI busy-polling
does exactly "application polling".

However, I wonder if the busy-polling would have better performance
than the scenario above (i.e. when the ksoftirqd never kicks in)?
Executing the NAPI poll *explicitly* in the syscall, or implicitly
from the softirq.

Hmm, thinking out loud here. A simple(r) patch enabling busy poll;
Exporting the napi_id to the AF_XDP socket (xdp->rxq->napi_id to
sk->sk_napi_id), and do the sk_busy_poll_loop() in sendmsg.

Or did you have something completely different in mind?

As for this patch set, I think it would make sense to pull it in since
it makes the single-core scenario *much* better, and it is pretty
simple. Then do the application polling as another, potentially,
improvement series.


Thoughts? Thanks a lot for the feedback!
Björn


More information about the Intel-wired-lan mailing list