Re: IRQ balancing on a router

From: Jason Baron
Date: Fri Oct 03 2008 - 10:30:49 EST


On Fri, Oct 03, 2008 at 06:38:57AM -0700, Arjan van de Ven wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I have a dual-CPU router/firewall with five gigabit NICs. Recently I
> > have found that irqbalance (0.55 from Fedora 9/x86_64) gives a
> > suboptimal IRQ to CPU mapping on this box:
> >
> > During traffic spikes, it assings two NICs to one CPU, and the
> > other three to the second CPU. However, this does not account for
> > the fact that packets coming from the uplink interface are way more
> > expensive to handle than the rest of the traffic: most iptables rules
> > apply to the packets received from the uplink interface. The result is
> > that the CPU which receives IRQs for the uplink interface
> > is 100 % busy (softirq mostly), while the other one is 90% idle.
> >
> > Setting the IRQ mapping by hand (uplink to one CPU, all the
> > other NICs to the other CPU) makes a well balanced system (both CPUs
> > 30-60 % busy). I am not sure whether my configuration is too special,
> > but it might be worth trying to make irqbalance daemon cope also with
> > this usage pattern.
> >
>
> one of the hard cases for irqbalance is that irqbalance doesn't have a
> way to find out the actual cpu time spend in the handlers. For
> networking it makes an estimate just based on the number of packets
> (which is better than nothing)... but that breaks down if you have an
> non-symmetry in CPU costs per packet like you have.
>
> The good news is that irqthreads at least have the potential to solve
> this "lack of information"; if not, we could consider doing a form of
> microaccounting for irq handlers....
>
>

perhaps, this could be addressed using tracepoints. The currently
proposed ones are at the beginning and end of 'handle_IRQ_event()'. See:
http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=121616099830280&w=2

thanks,

-Jason
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