Re: [PATCH 08/16] virtio_ring: virtqueue_add_outbuf /virtqueue_add_inbuf.

From: Michael S. Tsirkin
Date: Thu Feb 28 2013 - 02:01:21 EST


On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 03:38:44PM +1030, Rusty Russell wrote:
> "Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> > On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 10:32:46AM +1030, Rusty Russell wrote:
> >> "Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> >> > On Tue, Feb 19, 2013 at 06:26:26PM +1030, Rusty Russell wrote:
> >> >> These are specialized versions of virtqueue_add_buf(), which cover
> >> >> over 50% of cases and are far clearer.
> >> >>
> >> >> In particular, the scatterlists passed to these functions don't have
> >> >> to be clean (ie. we ignore end markers).
> >> >>
> >> >> FIXME: I'm not sure about the unclean sglist bit. I had a more
> >> >> ambitious one which conditionally ignored end markers in the iterator,
> >> >> but it was ugly and I suspect this is just as fast. Maybe we should
> >> >> just fix all the drivers?
> >> >>
> >> >> Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> >> >
> >> > Looking at code, it seems that most users really have a single sg, in
> >> > low memory. So how about simply passing void * instead of sg? Whoever
> >> > has multiple sgs can use the rich interface.
> >>
> >> Good point, let's do that:
> >> 1) Make virtqueue_add_outbuf()/inbuf() take a void * and len.
> >> 2) Transfer users across to use that.
> >> 3) Make everyone else use clean scatterlists with virtqueue_add_sgs[].
> >> 4) Remove virtqueue_add_bufs().
> >>
> >> > Long term we might optimize this unrolling some loops, I think
> >> > I saw this giving a small performance gain for -net.
> >>
> >> I *think* we could make virtqueue_add() an inline and implement an
> >> virtqueue_add_outsg() wrapper and gcc will eliminate the loops for us.
> >> But not sure it's worth the text bloat...
> >>
> >> Cheers,
> >> Rusty.
> >
> > inline is mostly useless nowdays... We can make it a static function and
> > let gcc decide.
>
> I know I've said before that inline is the register keyword of the '90s.
> But not at -O2 with i686-linux-gnu-gcc-4.7 (Ubuntu/Linaro
> 4.7.2-2ubuntu1) 4.7.2.
>
> Without the inline keywords, it doesn't inline virtqueue_add, and thus
> sg_next_chained and sg_next_add aren't inlined:
>
> $ for i in `seq 50`; do /usr/bin/time --format=%U ./vringh_test --indirect --eventidx --parallel; done 2>&1 | stats --trim-outliers
> Using CPUS 0 and 3
> Guest: notified 39102-39145(39105), pinged 39060-39063(39063)
> Host: notified 39060-39063(39063), pinged 19551-19581(19553)
> 3.050000-3.220000(3.136875)
>
> With inline:
>
> $ for i in `seq 50`; do /usr/bin/time --format=%U ./vringh_test --indirect --eventidx --parallel; done 2>&1 | stats --trim-outliers
> Using CPUS 0 and 3
> Guest: notified 39084-39148(39099), pinged 39062-39063(39062)
> Host: notified 39062-39063(39062), pinged 19542-19574(19550)
> 2.940000-3.140000(3.014583)
>
> Cheers,
> Rusty.

Cool and did it actually unroll all loops?
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