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From: "Nélio Laranjeiro" <nelio.laranjeiro@6wind.com>
To: Yongseok Koh <yskoh@mellanox.com>
Cc: Sagi Grimberg <sagi@grimberg.me>,
	adrien.mazarguil@6wind.com, nelio.laranjeiro@6wind.com,
	dev@dpdk.org, stable@dpdk.org,
	Alexander Solganik <solganik@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [dpdk-stable] [dpdk-dev] [PATCH] net/mlx5: fix Tx doorbell memory barrier
Date: Mon, 23 Oct 2017 09:50:14 +0200	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20171023075014.bzubdh2y37s3dirk@laranjeiro-vm> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20171022220103.GA18571@minint-98vp2qg>

Yongseok, Sagi, my small contribution to this discussion,

On Sun, Oct 22, 2017 at 03:01:04PM -0700, Yongseok Koh wrote:
> On Sun, Oct 22, 2017 at 12:46:53PM +0300, Sagi Grimberg wrote:
> > 
> > > Configuring UAR as IO-mapped makes maximum throughput decline by noticeable
> > > amount. If UAR is configured as write-combining register, a write memory
> > > barrier is needed on ringing a doorbell. rte_wmb() is mostly effective when
> > > the size of a burst is comparatively small.
> > 
> > Personally I don't think that the flag is really a good interface
> > choice. But also I'm not convinced that its dependent on the burst size.
> > 
> > What guarantees that even for larger bursts the mmio write was flushed?
> > it comes after a set of writes that were flushed prior to the db update
> > and its not guaranteed that the application will immediately have more
> > data to trigger this writes to flush.
> 
> Yes, I already knew the concern. I don't know you were aware but that can only
> happen when burst size is exactly multiple of 32 in the vectorized Tx. If you
> look at the mlx5_tx_burst_raw_vec(), every Tx bursts having more than 32 packets
> will be calling txq_burst_v() more than one time. For example, if pkts_n is 45,
> then it will firstly call txq_burst_v(32) and txq_burst_v(13) will follow with
> setting barrier at the end. The only pitfall is when pkts_n is exactly multiple
> of 32, e.g. 32, 64, 96 and so on. This shall not be likely when an app is
> forwarding packets and the rate is low (if packet rate is high, we are good).
>
> So, the only possible case of it is when an app generates traffic at
> comparatively low rate in bursty way with burst size being multiple of 32.

A routing application will consume more than the 50 cycles the PMD needs
to process such burst.  It is not a rare case, it is the real one,
routing lookup table, parsing the packet to find the layers, modifying
them (decreasing the TTL, changing addresses and updating the checksum)
is not something fast.
The probability to have a full 32 packets burst entering in the PMD is
something "normal".

> If a user encounters such a rare case and latency is critical in their app, we will
> recommend to set MLX5_SHUT_UP_BF=1 either by exporting in a shell or by
> embedding it in their app's initialization. Or, they can use other
> non-vectorized tx_burst() functions because the barrier is still enforced in
> such functions like you firstly suggested.
> 
> It is always true that we can't make everyone satisfied. Some apps prefers
> better performance to better latency. As vectorized Tx outperforms all the other
> tx_burst() functions, I want to leave it as only one exceptional case. Actually,
> we already received a complaint that 1-core performance of vPMD declined by 10%
> (53Mpps -> 48Mpps) due to the patch (MLX5_SHUT_UP_BF=1). So, I wanted to give
> users/apps more versatile options/knobs.

DPDK is written for throughput, that the reason why Tx/Rx burst
functions are "burst" and written to consider it will process a large
amount of packets at each call and this to minimize the cost of all
memory barriers and doorbells.

If there are some application which also needs latency, it is maybe time
to introduce new API for that i.e. a dedicated to send/receive with a single
packet or a little more in an efficient way.
By the way, I am not sure such application handles such big sizes of
burst, Sagi you may have more informations, that you may want to share.

> Before sending out this patch, I've done RFC2544 latency tests with Ixia and the
> result was as good as before (actually same). That's why we think it is a good
> compromise. 

You cannot do that with testpmd, it does not match the real application
behavior as it receives a burst of packets and send them back without
touching them.  An application will at least process/route all received
packets to some other destination or port.  The send action will only be
triggered when the whole routing process is finished to maximize the
burst sizes.  According to the traffic, the latency will change.
>From what I know, we don't have such kind of example/tool in DPDK.

> Thanks for your comment,
> Yongseok

Thanks,

-- 
Nélio Laranjeiro
6WIND

  reply	other threads:[~2017-10-23  7:50 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 10+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2017-10-22  8:00 [dpdk-stable] " Yongseok Koh
2017-10-22  9:46 ` [dpdk-stable] [dpdk-dev] " Sagi Grimberg
2017-10-22 22:01   ` Yongseok Koh
2017-10-23  7:50     ` Nélio Laranjeiro [this message]
2017-10-23 17:24       ` Yongseok Koh
2017-10-24  6:49         ` Nélio Laranjeiro
2017-10-23  7:00 ` [dpdk-stable] " Nélio Laranjeiro
2017-10-25  0:27 ` [dpdk-stable] [PATCH v2] " Yongseok Koh
2017-10-25  9:19   ` Nélio Laranjeiro
2017-10-25 21:34     ` Ferruh Yigit

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