[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [Xen-devel] [PATCH 0/4] [Net] Support accelerated network plugin modules
This is a another iteration of some earlier patches sent to the xen- devel mailing list, with a number of changes thanks to some useful suggestions from others. I've also CC'd netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx at Herbert Xu's request as some of the files being patched may be merged into upstream linux soon, and so folks there may have opinions too. Major changes from last time: - Modify protection in frontend to use an atomic ref count to reduce the number of spinlocks that are required, as suggested by Keir Fraser and Zhu Han. This change required an improvement to the protection of the hooks when they are being installed for a second (or subsequent time) to prevent the new copy being inserted before the old ones have been completely finished with. - Move the majority of the acceleration code out of existing netfront/netback source files and into separate accel.c source file in each of those directories, as requested by Keir. Unfortunately separate header files don't make a lot of sense due to mutual dependencies. - A number of coding style changes, again requested by Keir. Apologies for not getting this right first time. What follows is the full description from the earlier posting, included here for ease of access should anyone need them: This set of patches provides the hooks and support necessary for accelerated network plugin modules to attach to Xen's netback and netfront. These modules provide a fast path for network traffic where there is hardware support available for the netfront driver to send and receive packets directly to a NIC (such as those available from Solarflare). As there are currently no available plugins, I've attached a couple of dummy ones to illustrate how the hooks could be used. These are incomplete (and clearly wouldn't even compile) in that they only include code to show the interface between the accelerated module and netfront/netback. A lot of the comments hint at what code should go where. They don't show any interface between the accelerated frontend and accelerated backend, or hardware access, for example, as those would both be specific to the implementation. I hope they help illustrate this, but if you have any questions I'm happy to provide more information. A brief overview of the operation of the plugins: When the accelerated modules are loaded, a VI is created by the accelerated backend to allow the accelerated frontend to safely access portions of the NIC. For RX, when packets are received by the accelerated backend, it will examine them and if appropriate insert filters into the NIC to deliver future packets on that address directly to the accelerated frontend's VI. For TX, netfront gives each accelerated frontend the option of sending each packet, which it can accept (if it wants to send it directly to the hardware) or decline (if it thinks this is more appropriate to send via the normal network path). We have found that using this approach to accelerating network traffic, domU to domU connections (across the network) can achieve close to the performance of dom0 to dom0 connections on a 10Gbps ethernet. This is roughly double the bandwidth seen with unmodified Xen. Attachment:
dummy_accel_backend.c Attachment:
dummy_accel_frontend.c _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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