* [dpdk-dev] Calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times @ 2015-10-15 8:32 Younghwan Go 2015-10-15 10:23 ` Zoltan Kiss 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Younghwan Go @ 2015-10-15 8:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: dev Hi, I'm pretty new to playing with DPDK. I was trying to see if I can always receive MAX_BURST packets by calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times on same <port, queue> pair (code shown below). I'm using DPDK-2.1.0 on 2 dual-port Intel 82599ES 10Gbps NICs with Ubuntu 14.04.3 (kernel 3.13.0-63-generic). Since packet processing is slower (~10 Gbps) than pure RX speed (~40 Gbps), I assumed rte_eth_rx_burst() would always receive some number of packets, eventually filling up MAX_BURST. But for multi-core case (4 CPUs, 4 ports), rte_eth_rx_burst() starts to always return 0 after some time, causing all cores to be blocked forever. Analyzing the DPDK code (drivers/net/ixgbe/ixgbe_rxtx.c), I'm seeing that inside ixgbe_rx_scan_hw_ring() function, "rxdp->wb.upper.status.error" always returns 0 (where is this value set by the way?). I didn't see this problem for single-core case, in which it returned MAX_BURST packets at every rte_eth_rx_burst() call. Also, if I break out of while loop when I receive 0, I keep receiving packets in next <port, queue> pairs. Does anyone know why this block might happen? Or am I not allowed to call rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times on same <port, queue> pair if I get 0? Any help will be great! Thank you! ------------------------------------------------------------------------ int cnt = MAX_BURST; // MAX_BURST = 32 int off = 0; do { ret = rte_eth_rx_burst(port_id, queue_id, &m_table[off], cnt); if (ret == 0) { // don't break out but continue } else if (ret > 0) { off += ret; cnt -= ret; } } while (cnt > 0); ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Best, Younghwan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] Calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times 2015-10-15 8:32 [dpdk-dev] Calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times Younghwan Go @ 2015-10-15 10:23 ` Zoltan Kiss 2015-10-15 10:43 ` Younghwan Go 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Zoltan Kiss @ 2015-10-15 10:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Younghwan Go, dev On 15/10/15 09:32, Younghwan Go wrote: > Hi, > > I'm pretty new to playing with DPDK. I was trying to see if I can always > receive MAX_BURST packets by calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times > on same <port, queue> pair (code shown below). I'm using DPDK-2.1.0 on 2 > dual-port Intel 82599ES 10Gbps NICs with Ubuntu 14.04.3 (kernel > 3.13.0-63-generic). > > Since packet processing is slower (~10 Gbps) than pure RX speed (~40 > Gbps), I assumed rte_eth_rx_burst() would always receive some number of > packets, eventually filling up MAX_BURST. But for multi-core case (4 > CPUs, 4 ports), rte_eth_rx_burst() starts to always return 0 after some > time, causing all cores to be blocked forever. Analyzing the DPDK code > (drivers/net/ixgbe/ixgbe_rxtx.c), I'm seeing that inside > ixgbe_rx_scan_hw_ring() function, "rxdp->wb.upper.status.error" always > returns 0 (where is this value set by the way?). I think it is set by the hardware. > > I didn't see this problem for single-core case, in which it returned > MAX_BURST packets at every rte_eth_rx_burst() call. Also, if I break out > of while loop when I receive 0, I keep receiving packets in next <port, > queue> pairs. Does anyone know why this block might happen? Or am I not > allowed to call rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times on same <port, queue> > pair if I get 0? Any help will be great! Thank you! Although not mentioned in the documentation itself, as far as I know rte_eth_rx_burst() is not thread-safe. If you look in to receive functions, there are no locking anywhere. You should call it on separate queues from different threads, and configure e.g RSS to distribute the traffic by the hardware. > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > int cnt = MAX_BURST; // MAX_BURST = 32 > int off = 0; > do { > ret = rte_eth_rx_burst(port_id, queue_id, &m_table[off], cnt); > if (ret == 0) { > // don't break out but continue > } else if (ret > 0) { > off += ret; > cnt -= ret; > } > } while (cnt > 0); > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > Best, > Younghwan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] Calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times 2015-10-15 10:23 ` Zoltan Kiss @ 2015-10-15 10:43 ` Younghwan Go 2015-10-15 11:51 ` Zoltan Kiss 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Younghwan Go @ 2015-10-15 10:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Zoltan Kiss, dev Hi Zoltan, Thanks for the email. 2015-10-15 오후 7:23에 Zoltan Kiss 이(가) 쓴 글: > > > On 15/10/15 09:32, Younghwan Go wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I'm pretty new to playing with DPDK. I was trying to see if I can always >> receive MAX_BURST packets by calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times >> on same <port, queue> pair (code shown below). I'm using DPDK-2.1.0 on 2 >> dual-port Intel 82599ES 10Gbps NICs with Ubuntu 14.04.3 (kernel >> 3.13.0-63-generic). >> >> Since packet processing is slower (~10 Gbps) than pure RX speed (~40 >> Gbps), I assumed rte_eth_rx_burst() would always receive some number of >> packets, eventually filling up MAX_BURST. But for multi-core case (4 >> CPUs, 4 ports), rte_eth_rx_burst() starts to always return 0 after some >> time, causing all cores to be blocked forever. Analyzing the DPDK code >> (drivers/net/ixgbe/ixgbe_rxtx.c), I'm seeing that inside >> ixgbe_rx_scan_hw_ring() function, "rxdp->wb.upper.status.error" always >> returns 0 (where is this value set by the way?). > > I think it is set by the hardware. > >> >> I didn't see this problem for single-core case, in which it returned >> MAX_BURST packets at every rte_eth_rx_burst() call. Also, if I break out >> of while loop when I receive 0, I keep receiving packets in next <port, >> queue> pairs. Does anyone know why this block might happen? Or am I not >> allowed to call rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times on same <port, queue> >> pair if I get 0? Any help will be great! Thank you! > > Although not mentioned in the documentation itself, as far as I know > rte_eth_rx_burst() is not thread-safe. If you look in to receive > functions, there are no locking anywhere. You should call it on > separate queues from different threads, and configure e.g RSS to > distribute the traffic by the hardware. I'm calling rte_eth_rx_burst() on separate queue ids for each thread. I'm actually using lcore_id (= 0, 1, 2, 3 for 4 threads pinned to each separate CPU core) as queue_id. I also made sure that this problem is not caused by threads conflicting by locking before calling rte_eth_rx_burst(). For RSS, I configured with ETH_RSS_IP for load balancing traffic to each port and queue. But even if RSS wasn't set, shouldn't at least one core be receiving packets? What I'm seeing is all threads getting stuck at rte_eth_rx_burst() with return value of 0s indefinitely. >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> int cnt = MAX_BURST; // MAX_BURST = 32 >> int off = 0; >> do { >> ret = rte_eth_rx_burst(port_id, queue_id, &m_table[off], cnt); >> if (ret == 0) { >> // don't break out but continue >> } else if (ret > 0) { >> off += ret; >> cnt -= ret; >> } >> } while (cnt > 0); >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> >> Best, >> Younghwan Thanks, Younghwan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] Calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times 2015-10-15 10:43 ` Younghwan Go @ 2015-10-15 11:51 ` Zoltan Kiss 0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Zoltan Kiss @ 2015-10-15 11:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Younghwan Go, dev On 15/10/15 11:43, Younghwan Go wrote: > Hi Zoltan, > > Thanks for the email. > > 2015-10-15 오후 7:23에 Zoltan Kiss 이(가) 쓴 글: >> >> >> On 15/10/15 09:32, Younghwan Go wrote: >>> Hi, >>> >>> I'm pretty new to playing with DPDK. I was trying to see if I can always >>> receive MAX_BURST packets by calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times >>> on same <port, queue> pair (code shown below). I'm using DPDK-2.1.0 on 2 >>> dual-port Intel 82599ES 10Gbps NICs with Ubuntu 14.04.3 (kernel >>> 3.13.0-63-generic). >>> >>> Since packet processing is slower (~10 Gbps) than pure RX speed (~40 >>> Gbps), I assumed rte_eth_rx_burst() would always receive some number of >>> packets, eventually filling up MAX_BURST. But for multi-core case (4 >>> CPUs, 4 ports), rte_eth_rx_burst() starts to always return 0 after some >>> time, causing all cores to be blocked forever. Analyzing the DPDK code >>> (drivers/net/ixgbe/ixgbe_rxtx.c), I'm seeing that inside >>> ixgbe_rx_scan_hw_ring() function, "rxdp->wb.upper.status.error" always >>> returns 0 (where is this value set by the way?). >> >> I think it is set by the hardware. >> >>> >>> I didn't see this problem for single-core case, in which it returned >>> MAX_BURST packets at every rte_eth_rx_burst() call. Also, if I break out >>> of while loop when I receive 0, I keep receiving packets in next <port, >>> queue> pairs. Does anyone know why this block might happen? Or am I not >>> allowed to call rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times on same <port, queue> >>> pair if I get 0? Any help will be great! Thank you! >> >> Although not mentioned in the documentation itself, as far as I know >> rte_eth_rx_burst() is not thread-safe. If you look in to receive >> functions, there are no locking anywhere. You should call it on >> separate queues from different threads, and configure e.g RSS to >> distribute the traffic by the hardware. > > I'm calling rte_eth_rx_burst() on separate queue ids for each thread. > I'm actually using lcore_id (= 0, 1, 2, 3 for 4 threads pinned to each > separate CPU core) as queue_id. I also made sure that this problem is > not caused by threads conflicting by locking before calling > rte_eth_rx_burst(). > > For RSS, I configured with ETH_RSS_IP for load balancing traffic to each > port and queue. But even if RSS wasn't set, shouldn't at least one core > be receiving packets? What I'm seeing is all threads getting stuck at > rte_eth_rx_burst() with return value of 0s indefinitely. > >>> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >>> int cnt = MAX_BURST; // MAX_BURST = 32 >>> int off = 0; >>> do { >>> ret = rte_eth_rx_burst(port_id, queue_id, &m_table[off], cnt); Another thing which might cause your problem is that I don't see where do you release the buffers after received into m_table. You need to call rte_pktmbuf_free() on them at some point, otherwise your pool can get depleted, and the receive function can't refill the descriptor rings. >>> if (ret == 0) { >>> // don't break out but continue >>> } else if (ret > 0) { >>> off += ret; >>> cnt -= ret; >>> } >>> } while (cnt > 0); >>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >>> >>> Best, >>> Younghwan > > Thanks, > Younghwan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2015-10-15 11:51 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2015-10-15 8:32 [dpdk-dev] Calling rte_eth_rx_burst() multiple times Younghwan Go 2015-10-15 10:23 ` Zoltan Kiss 2015-10-15 10:43 ` Younghwan Go 2015-10-15 11:51 ` Zoltan Kiss
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