[PATCH V7 0/4 net-next] macvtap/vhost TX zero-copy support

From: Shirley Ma
Date: Sat May 28 2011 - 15:34:58 EST


This patchset add supports for TX zero-copy between guest and host
kernel through vhost. It significantly reduces CPU utilization on the
local host on which the guest is located (It reduced about 50% CPU usage
for single stream test on the host, while 4K message size BW has
increased about 50%). The patchset is based on previous submission and
comments from the community regarding when/how to handle guest kernel
buffers to be released. This is the simplest approach I can think of
after comparing with several other solutions.

This patchset has integrated V3 review comments from community:

1. Add more comments on how to use device ZEROCOPY flag;
2. Change device ZEROCOPY to available bit 31
3. Fix skb header linear allocation when virtio_net GSO is not enabled

It has integrated V4 review comments from MST and Sridhar:
1. In vhost, using socket poll wake up for outstanding DMAs
2. Add detailed comments for vhost_zerocopy_signal_used call
3. Add sleep in vhost shutting down instead of busy-wait for outstanding
DMAs.
4. Copy small packets, don't do zero-copy callback in mavtap, mark it's
DMA done in vhost
5. change zerocopy to bool in macvtap.

It has integrated V5 review comments from MST and
MichaÅ MirosÅaw <mirqus@xxxxxxxxx>
1. Prevent userspace apps from holding skb userspace buffers by copying
userspace buffers to kernel in skb_clone, skb_copy, pskb_copy,
pskb_expand_head.
2. It is also used HIGHDMA, SG feature bits to enable ZEROCOPY to remove
the dependency of a new feature bit, we can add it later when new
feature bit is available.

It has integrated V6 review comments from Eric Dumazet.
1. Moving ubuf_info object from skb to caller, just use one pointer in
skb_share_info to point ubuf_info object.

2. Change the zero-copy size from 256 bytes to PAGE_SIZE (4K) because of
the small message size performance issue.

3. During vhost shutting down, release outstanding userspace buffers w/o
waiting for lower device DMAs done if any. Do we really care about the
possible wrong data being sent on the wire during shutting down?

This patchset includes:
1/4: Add a new sock zero-copy flag, SOCK_ZEROCOPY;

2/4: Add a new struct skb_ubuf_info in skb_share_info for userspace
buffers release callback when lower device DMA has done for that skb,
which is the last reference count gone; Or whenever skb_clone, skb_copy,
pskb_copy, pskb_expand_head get call from tcpdump, filtering, these
userspace buffers will be copied into kernel ... we don't want userspace
apps to hold userspace buffers too long.

3/4: Add vhost zero-copy callback in vhost when skb last refcnt is gone;
add vhost_zerocopy_signal_used to notify guest to release TX skb
buffers.

4/4: Add macvtap zero-copy in lower device when sending packet is
greater than PAGE_SIZE.

The patchset is built against linux-2.6.39. It has passed
netperf/netserver multiple streams stress test, tcpdump
suspended test, dynamically SG change test.

Single TCP_STREAM 120 secs test results 2.6.39-rc3 over ixgbe 10Gb NIC
results:

Message BW(Gb/s)qemu-kvm (NumCPU)vhost-net(NumCPU) PerfTop irq/s
4K 7408.57 92.1% 22.6% 1229
4K(Orig)4913.17 118.1% 84.1% 2086
8K 9129.90 89.3% 23.3% 1141
8K(Orig)7094.55 115.9% 84.7% 2157
16K 9178.81 89.1% 23.3% 1139
16K(Orig)8927.1 118.7% 83.4% 2262
64K 9171.43 88.4% 24.9% 1253
64K(Orig)9085.85 115.9% 82.4% 2229

For message size less or equal than 2K, there is a known KVM guest TX
overrun issue. With this zero-copy patch, the issue becomes more severe,
guest io_exits has tripled than before, so the performance is not good.
Once the TX overrun problem has been addressed, I will retest the small
message size performance.

drivers/net/macvtap.c | 131
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----
drivers/vhost/net.c | 45 ++++++++++++++++-
drivers/vhost/vhost.c | 51 +++++++++++++++++++
drivers/vhost/vhost.h | 15 ++++++
include/linux/skbuff.h | 25 +++++++++
include/net/sock.h | 1 +
net/core/skbuff.c | 83 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
7 files changed, 338 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)


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