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Re: [Xen-devel] Poor network performance between DomU with multiqueue support



On Fri, Dec 05, 2014 at 03:20:55PM +0000, Zoltan Kiss wrote:
> 
> 
> On 04/12/14 14:31, Zhangleiqiang (Trump) wrote:
> >>-----Original Message-----
> >>From: Zoltan Kiss [mailto:zoltan.kiss@xxxxxxxxxx]
> >>Sent: Thursday, December 04, 2014 9:35 PM
> >>To: Zhangleiqiang (Trump); Wei Liu; xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >>Cc: Xiaoding (B); Zhuangyuxin; zhangleiqiang; Luohao (brian); Yuzhou (C)
> >>Subject: Re: [Xen-devel] Poor network performance between DomU with
> >>multiqueue support
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>On 04/12/14 12:09, Zhangleiqiang (Trump) wrote:
> >>>>I think that's expected, because guest RX data path still uses
> >>>>grant_copy while
> >>>>>guest TX uses grant_map to do zero-copy transmit.
> >>>As I understand, the RX process is as follows:
> >>>1. Phy NIC receive packet
> >>>2. XEN Hypervisor trigger interrupt to Dom0 3. Dom0' s NIC driver do
> >>>the "RX" operation, and the packet is stored into SKB which is also
> >>>owned/shared with netback
> >>Not that easy. There is something between the NIC driver and netback which
> >>directs the packets, e.g. the old bridge driver, ovs, or the IP stack of 
> >>the kernel.
> >>>4. NetBack notify netfront through event channel that a packet is
> >>>receiving 5. Netfront grant a buffer for receiving and notify netback
> >>>the GR (if using grant-resue mechanism, netfront just notify the GR to
> >>>netback) through IO Ring
> >>It looks a bit confusing in the code, but netfront put "requests" on the 
> >>ring
> >>buffer, which contains the grant ref of the guest page where the backend can
> >>copy. When the packet comes, netback consumes these requests and send
> >>back a response telling the guest the grant copy of the packet finished, it 
> >>can
> >>start handling the data. (sending a response means it's placing a response 
> >>in
> >>the ring and trigger the event channel) And ideally netback should always 
> >>have
> >>requests in the ring, so it doesn't have to wait for the guest to fill it 
> >>up.
> >
> >>>6. NetBack do the grant_copy to copy packet from its SKB to the buffer
> >>>referenced by GR, and notify netfront through event channel 7.
> >>>Netfront copy the data from buffer to user-level app's SKB
> >>Or wherever that SKB should go, yes. Like with any received packet on a real
> >>network interface.
> >>>
> >>>Am I right? Why not using zero-copy transmit in guest RX data pash too ?
> >>Because that means you are mapping that memory to the guest, and you won't
> >>have any guarantee when the guest will release them. And netback can't just
> >>unmap them forcibly after a timeout, because finding a correct timeout value
> >>would be quite impossible.
> >>A malicious/buggy/overloaded guest can hold on to Dom0 memory indefinitely,
> >>but it even becomes worse if the memory came from another
> >>guest: you can't shutdown that guest for example, until all its memory is
> >>returned to him.
> >
> >Thanks for your detailed explanation about RX data path, I have get it, :)
> >
> >About the issue that poor performance between DomU to DomU, but high 
> >throughout between Dom0 to remote Dom0/DomU mentioned in my previous mail, 
> >do you have any idea about it?
> >
> >I am wondering if netfront/netback can be optimized to reach the 10Gbps 
> >throughout between DomUs running on different hosts connected with 10GE 
> >network. Currently, it seems like the TX is not the bottleneck, because we 
> >can reach the aggregate throughout of 9Gbps when sending packets from one 
> >DomU to other 3 DomUs running on different host. So I think the bottleneck 
> >maybe the RX, are you agreed with me?
> >
> >I am wondering what is the main reason that prevent RX to reach the higher 
> >throughout? Compared to KVM+virtio+vhost, which can reach high throughout, 
> >the RX has extra grantcopy operation, and the grantcopy operation may be one 
> >reason for it. Do you have any idea about it too?
> It's quite sure that the grant copy is the bottleneck for a single queue RX
> traffic. I don't know what's the plan to help that, currently only a faster
> CPU can help you with that.

Could the Intel QuickData help with that?
> 
> >
> >>
> >>Regards,
> >>
> >>Zoli
> 
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> http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel

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