[Intel-wired-lan] [PATCH RFC net-next 05/34] idpf: convert header split mode to libie + napi_build_skb()

Alexander Lobakin aleksander.lobakin at intel.com
Thu Jan 11 13:09:18 UTC 2024


From: Willem De Bruijn <willemdebruijn.kernel at gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2024 08:59:27 -0500

> Alexander Lobakin wrote:
>> From: Willem De Bruijn <willemdebruijn.kernel at gmail.com>
>> Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2023 10:30:48 -0500
>>
>>> Alexander Lobakin wrote:
>>>> Currently, idpf uses the following model for the header buffers:
>>>>
>>>> * buffers are allocated via dma_alloc_coherent();
>>>> * when receiving, napi_alloc_skb() is called and then the header is
>>>>   copied to the newly allocated linear part.
>>>>
>>>> This is far from optimal as DMA coherent zone is slow on many systems
>>>> and memcpy() neutralizes the idea and benefits of the header split.
>>>
>>> Do you have data showing this?
>>
>> Showing slow coherent DMA or memcpy()?
>> Try MIPS for the first one.
>> For the second -- try comparing performance on ice with the "legacy-rx"
>> private flag disabled and enabled.
>>
>>>
>>> The assumption for the current model is that the headers will be
>>> touched shortly after, so the copy just primes the cache.
>>
>> They won't be touched in many cases. E.g. XDP_DROP.
>> Or headers can be long. memcpy(32) != memcpy(128).
>> The current model allocates a new skb with a linear part, which is a
>> real memory allocation. napi_build_skb() doesn't allocate anything
>> except struct sk_buff, which is usually available in the NAPI percpu cache.
>> If build_skb() wasn't more effective, it wouldn't be introduced.
>> The current model just assumes default socket traffic with ~40-byte
>> headers and no XDP etc.
>>
>>>
>>> The single coherently allocated region for all headers reduces
>>> IOTLB pressure.
>>
>> page_pool pages are mapped once at allocation.
>>
>>>
>>> It is possible that the alternative model is faster. But that is not
>>> trivially obvious.
>>>
>>> I think patches like this can stand on their own. Probably best to
>>> leave them out of the dependency series to enable XDP and AF_XDP.
>>
>> You can't do XDP on DMA coherent zone. To do this memcpy(), you need
>> allocate a new skb with a linear part, which is usually done after XDP,
>> otherwise it's too much overhead and little-to-no benefits comparing to
>> generic skb XDP.
>> The current idpf code is just not compatible with the XDP code in this
>> series, it's pointless to do double work.
>>
>> Disabling header split when XDP is enabled (alternative option) means
>> disabling TCP zerocopy and worse performance in general, I don't
>> consider this.
> 
> My concern is if optimizations for XDP might degrade the TCP/IP common

We take care of this. Please don't think that my team allows perf
degradation when developing stuff, it's not true.

> path. XDP_DROP and all of XDP even is a niche feature by comparison.
> 
> The current driver behavior was not the first for IDPF, but arrived
> at based on extensive performance debugging. An earlier iteration used
> separate header buffers. Switching to a single coherent allocated
> buffer region significantly increased throughput / narrowed the gap
> between header-split and non-header-split mode.
> 
> I follow your argument and the heuristics are reasonable. My request
> is only that this decision is based on real data for this driver and
> modern platforms. We cannot regress TCP/IP hot path performance.

Sure, I'll provide numbers in the next iteration. Please go ahead with
further review (if you're interested).

Thanks,
Olek


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