Re: [PATCH] virtio-net: Reporting traffic queue distribution statisticsthrough ethtool

From: Jason Wang
Date: Tue May 21 2013 - 01:11:59 EST


On 05/21/2013 09:26 AM, Narasimhan, Sriram wrote:
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Michael S. Tsirkin [mailto:mst@xxxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Monday, May 20, 2013 2:59 AM
> To: Narasimhan, Sriram
> Cc: rusty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; virtualization@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; kvm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Jason Wang
> Subject: Re: [PATCH] virtio-net: Reporting traffic queue distribution statistics through ethtool
>
> On Sun, May 19, 2013 at 10:56:16PM +0000, Narasimhan, Sriram wrote:
>> Hi Michael,
>>
>> Comments inline...
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Michael S. Tsirkin [mailto:mst@xxxxxxxxxx]
>> Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2013 1:03 PM
>> To: Narasimhan, Sriram
>> Cc: rusty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; virtualization@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; kvm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Jason Wang
>> Subject: Re: [PATCH] virtio-net: Reporting traffic queue distribution statistics through ethtool
>>
>> On Sun, May 19, 2013 at 04:09:48PM +0000, Narasimhan, Sriram wrote:
>>> Hi Michael,
>>>
>>> I was getting all packets on the same inbound queue which
>>> is why I added this support to virtio-net (and some more
>>> instrumentation at tun as well). But, it turned out to be
>>> my misconfiguration - I did not enable IFF_MULTI_QUEUE on
>>> the tap device, so the real_num_tx_queues on tap netdev was
>>> always 1 (no tx distribution at tap).
>> Interesting that qemu didn't fail.
>>
>> [Sriram] void tun_set_real_num_tx_queues() does not return
>> the EINVAL return from netif_set_real_num_tx_queues() for
>> txq > dev->num_tx_queues (which would be the case if the
>> tap device were not created with IFF_MULTI_QUEUE). I think
>> it would be better to fix the code to disable the new
>> queue and fail tun_attach()
> You mean fail TUNSETQUEUE?
>
> [Sriram] No I meant TUNSETIFF. FYI, I am using QEMU 1.4.50.
> I created the tap device using tunctl. This does not
> specify the IFF_MULTI_QUEUE flag during create so 1 netdev
> queue is allocated. But, when the tun device is closed,
> tun_detach decrements tun->numqueues from 1 to 0.
>
> The following were the options I passed to qemu:
> -netdev tap,id=hostnet1,vhost=on,ifname=tap1,queues=4
> -device virtio-net-pci,netdev=hostnet1,id=net1,
> mac=52:54:00:9b:8e:24,mq=on,vectors=9,ctrl_vq=on
>
>
>> in this scenario. If you
>> agree, I can go ahead and create a separate patch for that.
> Hmm I not sure I understand what happens, so hard for me to tell.
>
> I think this code was supposed to handle it:
> err = -EBUSY;
> if (!(tun->flags & TUN_TAP_MQ) && tun->numqueues == 1)
> goto out;
>
> why doesn't it?
>
> [Sriram] This question was raised by Jason as well.
> When QEMU is started with multiple queues on the tap
> device, it calls TUNSETIFF on the existing tap device with
> IFF_MULTI_QUEUE set. The above code falls through since
> tun->numqueues = 0 due to the previous tun_detach() during
> close. At the end of this, tun_set_iff() sets TUN_TAP_MQ
> flag for the tun data structure. From that point onwards,
> subsequent TUNSETIFF will fall through resulting in the
> mismatch in #queues between tun and netdev structures.
>

Thanks, I think I get it. The problem is we only allocate a one queue
netdevice when IFF_MULTI_QUEUE were not set. So reset the multiqueue
flag for persist device should be forbidden. Looks like we need the
following patch. Could you please test this?

diff --git a/drivers/net/tun.c b/drivers/net/tun.c
index f042b03..d4fc2bd 100644
--- a/drivers/net/tun.c
+++ b/drivers/net/tun.c
@@ -1585,6 +1585,10 @@ static int tun_set_iff(struct net *net, struct
file *file, struct ifreq *ifr)
else
return -EINVAL;

+ if (((ifr->ifr_flags & IFF_MULTI_QUEUE) ==
IFF_MULTI_QUEUE) ^
+ ((tun->flags & TUN_TAP_MQ) == TUN_TAP_MQ))
+ return -EINVAL;
+
if (tun_not_capable(tun))
return -EPERM;
err = security_tun_dev_open(tun->security);


>>> I am thinking about
>>> adding a -q option to tunctl to specify multi-queue flag on
>>> the tap device.
>> Absolutely.
>>
>> [Sriram] OK, let me do that.
>
> [Sriram] I am planning to add ip tuntap multi-queue option
> instead of tunctl.
>
> Sriram
>
>>> Yes, number of exits will be most useful. I will look into
>>> adding the other statistics you mention.
>>>
>>> Sriram
>> Pls note you'll need to switch to virtqueue_kick_prepare
>> to detect exits: virtqueue_kick doesn't let you know
>> whether there was an exit.
>>
>> Also, it's best to make this a separate patch from the one
>> adding per-queue stats.
>>
>> [Sriram] OK, I will cover only the per-queue statistics in
>> this patch. Also, I will address the indentation/data
>> structure name points that you mentioned in your earlier
>> email and send a new revision for this patch.
>>
>> Sriram
>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Michael S. Tsirkin [mailto:mst@xxxxxxxxxx]
>>> Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2013 4:28 AM
>>> To: Narasimhan, Sriram
>>> Cc: rusty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; virtualization@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; kvm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>> Subject: Re: [PATCH] virtio-net: Reporting traffic queue distribution statistics through ethtool
>>>
>>> On Thu, May 16, 2013 at 01:24:29PM -0700, Sriram Narasimhan wrote:
>>>> This patch allows virtio-net driver to report traffic distribution
>>>> to inbound/outbound queues through ethtool -S. The per_cpu
>>>> virtnet_stats is split into receive and transmit stats and are
>>>> maintained on a per receive_queue and send_queue basis.
>>>> virtnet_stats() is modified to aggregate interface level statistics
>>>> from per-queue statistics. Sample output below:
>>>>
>>> Thanks for the patch. The idea itself looks OK to me.
>>> Ben Hutchings already sent some comments
>>> so I won't repeat them. Some minor more comments
>>> and questions below.
>>>
>>>> NIC statistics:
>>>> rxq0: rx_packets: 4357802
>>>> rxq0: rx_bytes: 292642052
>>>> txq0: tx_packets: 824540
>>>> txq0: tx_bytes: 55256404
>>>> rxq1: rx_packets: 0
>>>> rxq1: rx_bytes: 0
>>>> txq1: tx_packets: 1094268
>>>> txq1: tx_bytes: 73328316
>>>> rxq2: rx_packets: 0
>>>> rxq2: rx_bytes: 0
>>>> txq2: tx_packets: 1091466
>>>> txq2: tx_bytes: 73140566
>>>> rxq3: rx_packets: 0
>>>> rxq3: rx_bytes: 0
>>>> txq3: tx_packets: 1093043
>>>> txq3: tx_bytes: 73246142
>>> Interesting. This example implies that all packets are coming in
>>> through the same RX queue - is this right?
>>> If yes that's worth exploring - could be a tun bug -
>>> and shows how this patch is useful.
>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Sriram Narasimhan <sriram.narasimhan@xxxxxx>
>>> BTW, while you are looking at the stats, one other interesting
>>> thing to add could be checking more types of stats: number of exits,
>>> queue full errors, etc.
>>>
>>>> ---
>>>> drivers/net/virtio_net.c | 157 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------
>>>> 1 files changed, 128 insertions(+), 29 deletions(-)
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/drivers/net/virtio_net.c b/drivers/net/virtio_net.c
>>>> index 3c23fdc..3c58c52 100644
>>>> --- a/drivers/net/virtio_net.c
>>>> +++ b/drivers/net/virtio_net.c
>>>> @@ -41,15 +41,46 @@ module_param(gso, bool, 0444);
>>>>
>>>> #define VIRTNET_DRIVER_VERSION "1.0.0"
>>>>
>>>> -struct virtnet_stats {
>>>> - struct u64_stats_sync tx_syncp;
>>>> +struct virtnet_rx_stats {
>>>> struct u64_stats_sync rx_syncp;
>>>> - u64 tx_bytes;
>>>> + u64 rx_packets;
>>>> + u64 rx_bytes;
>>>> +};
>>>> +
>>>> +struct virtnet_tx_stats {
>>>> + struct u64_stats_sync tx_syncp;
>>>> u64 tx_packets;
>>>> + u64 tx_bytes;
>>>> +};
>>>>
>>>> - u64 rx_bytes;
>>>> - u64 rx_packets;
>>> I think maintaining the stats in a per-queue data structure like this is
>>> fine. if # of CPUs == # of queues which is typical, we use same amount
>>> of memory. And each queue access is under a lock,
>>> or from napi thread, so no races either.
>>>
>>>> +struct virtnet_ethtool_stats {
>>>> + char desc[ETH_GSTRING_LEN];
>>>> + int type;
>>>> + int size;
>>>> + int offset;
>>>> +};
>>>> +
>>>> +enum {VIRTNET_STATS_TX, VIRTNET_STATS_RX};
>>>> +
>>>> +#define VIRTNET_RX_STATS_INFO(_struct, _field) \
>>>> + {#_field, VIRTNET_STATS_RX, FIELD_SIZEOF(_struct, _field), \
>>>> + offsetof(_struct, _field)}
>>>> +
>>>> +#define VIRTNET_TX_STATS_INFO(_struct, _field) \
>>>> + {#_field, VIRTNET_STATS_TX, FIELD_SIZEOF(_struct, _field), \
>>>> + offsetof(_struct, _field)}
>>>> +
>>>> +static const struct virtnet_ethtool_stats virtnet_et_rx_stats[] = {
>>>> + VIRTNET_RX_STATS_INFO(struct virtnet_rx_stats, rx_packets),
>>>> + VIRTNET_RX_STATS_INFO(struct virtnet_rx_stats, rx_bytes)
>>>> +};
>>>> +#define VIRTNET_RX_STATS_NUM (ARRAY_SIZE(virtnet_et_rx_stats))
>>>> +
>>>> +static const struct virtnet_ethtool_stats virtnet_et_tx_stats[] = {
>>>> + VIRTNET_TX_STATS_INFO(struct virtnet_tx_stats, tx_packets),
>>>> + VIRTNET_TX_STATS_INFO(struct virtnet_tx_stats, tx_bytes)
>>>> };
>>>> +#define VIRTNET_TX_STATS_NUM (ARRAY_SIZE(virtnet_et_tx_stats))
>>> I'd prefer a full name: virtnet_ethtool_tx_stats, or
>>> just virtnet_tx_stats.
>>>
>>>>
>>>> /* Internal representation of a send virtqueue */
>>>> struct send_queue {
>>>> @@ -61,6 +92,9 @@ struct send_queue {
>>>>
>>>> /* Name of the send queue: output.$index */
>>>> char name[40];
>>>> +
>>>> + /* Active send queue statistics */
>>>> + struct virtnet_tx_stats stats;
>>>> };
>>>>
>>>> /* Internal representation of a receive virtqueue */
>>>> @@ -81,6 +115,9 @@ struct receive_queue {
>>>>
>>>> /* Name of this receive queue: input.$index */
>>>> char name[40];
>>>> +
>>>> + /* Active receive queue statistics */
>>>> + struct virtnet_rx_stats stats;
>>>> };
>>>>
>>>> struct virtnet_info {
>>>> @@ -109,9 +146,6 @@ struct virtnet_info {
>>>> /* enable config space updates */
>>>> bool config_enable;
>>>>
>>>> - /* Active statistics */
>>>> - struct virtnet_stats __percpu *stats;
>>>> -
>>>> /* Work struct for refilling if we run low on memory. */
>>>> struct delayed_work refill;
>>>>
>>>> @@ -330,7 +364,7 @@ static void receive_buf(struct receive_queue *rq, void *buf, unsigned int len)
>>>> {
>>>> struct virtnet_info *vi = rq->vq->vdev->priv;
>>>> struct net_device *dev = vi->dev;
>>>> - struct virtnet_stats *stats = this_cpu_ptr(vi->stats);
>>>> + struct virtnet_rx_stats *stats = &rq->stats;
>>>> struct sk_buff *skb;
>>>> struct page *page;
>>>> struct skb_vnet_hdr *hdr;
>>>> @@ -650,8 +684,7 @@ static void free_old_xmit_skbs(struct send_queue *sq)
>>>> {
>>>> struct sk_buff *skb;
>>>> unsigned int len;
>>>> - struct virtnet_info *vi = sq->vq->vdev->priv;
>>>> - struct virtnet_stats *stats = this_cpu_ptr(vi->stats);
>>>> + struct virtnet_tx_stats *stats = &sq->stats;
>>>>
>>>> while ((skb = virtqueue_get_buf(sq->vq, &len)) != NULL) {
>>>> pr_debug("Sent skb %p\n", skb);
>>>> @@ -841,24 +874,25 @@ static struct rtnl_link_stats64 *virtnet_stats(struct net_device *dev,
>>>> struct rtnl_link_stats64 *tot)
>>>> {
>>>> struct virtnet_info *vi = netdev_priv(dev);
>>>> - int cpu;
>>>> + int i;
>>>> unsigned int start;
>>>>
>>>> - for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) {
>>>> - struct virtnet_stats *stats = per_cpu_ptr(vi->stats, cpu);
>>>> + for (i = 0; i < vi->max_queue_pairs; i++) {
>>>> + struct virtnet_tx_stats *tstats = &vi->sq[i].stats;
>>>> + struct virtnet_rx_stats *rstats = &vi->rq[i].stats;
>>>> u64 tpackets, tbytes, rpackets, rbytes;
>>>>
>>>> do {
>>>> - start = u64_stats_fetch_begin_bh(&stats->tx_syncp);
>>>> - tpackets = stats->tx_packets;
>>>> - tbytes = stats->tx_bytes;
>>>> - } while (u64_stats_fetch_retry_bh(&stats->tx_syncp, start));
>>>> + start = u64_stats_fetch_begin_bh(&tstats->tx_syncp);
>>>> + tpackets = tstats->tx_packets;
>>>> + tbytes = tstats->tx_bytes;
>>>> + } while (u64_stats_fetch_retry_bh(&tstats->tx_syncp, start));
>>>>
>>>> do {
>>>> - start = u64_stats_fetch_begin_bh(&stats->rx_syncp);
>>>> - rpackets = stats->rx_packets;
>>>> - rbytes = stats->rx_bytes;
>>>> - } while (u64_stats_fetch_retry_bh(&stats->rx_syncp, start));
>>>> + start = u64_stats_fetch_begin_bh(&rstats->rx_syncp);
>>>> + rpackets = rstats->rx_packets;
>>>> + rbytes = rstats->rx_bytes;
>>>> + } while (u64_stats_fetch_retry_bh(&rstats->rx_syncp, start));
>>>>
>>>> tot->rx_packets += rpackets;
>>>> tot->tx_packets += tpackets;
>>>> @@ -1177,12 +1211,83 @@ static void virtnet_get_channels(struct net_device *dev,
>>>> channels->other_count = 0;
>>>> }
>>>>
>>>> +static void virtnet_get_stat_strings(struct net_device *dev,
>>>> + u32 stringset,
>>>> + u8 *data)
>>>> +{
>>>> + struct virtnet_info *vi = netdev_priv(dev);
>>>> + int i, j;
>>>> +
>>>> + switch (stringset) {
>>>> + case ETH_SS_STATS:
>>>> + for (i = 0; i < vi->max_queue_pairs; i++) {
>>>> + for (j = 0; j < VIRTNET_RX_STATS_NUM; j++) {
>>>> + sprintf(data, "rxq%d: %s", i,
>>>> + virtnet_et_rx_stats[j].desc);
>>>> + data += ETH_GSTRING_LEN;
>>>> + }
>>>> + for (j = 0; j < VIRTNET_TX_STATS_NUM; j++) {
>>>> + sprintf(data, "txq%d: %s", i,
>>>> + virtnet_et_tx_stats[j].desc);
>>>> + data += ETH_GSTRING_LEN;
>>>> + }
>>>> + }
>>>> + break;
>>>> + }
>>>> +}
>>>> +
>>>> +static int virtnet_get_sset_count(struct net_device *dev, int stringset)
>>>> +{
>>>> + struct virtnet_info *vi = netdev_priv(dev);
>>>> + switch (stringset) {
>>>> + case ETH_SS_STATS:
>>>> + return vi->max_queue_pairs *
>>>> + (VIRTNET_RX_STATS_NUM + VIRTNET_TX_STATS_NUM);
>>>> + default:
>>>> + return -EINVAL;
>>>> + }
>>>> +}
>>>> +
>>>> +static void virtnet_get_ethtool_stats(struct net_device *dev,
>>>> + struct ethtool_stats *stats,
>>>> + u64 *data)
>>>> +{
>>>> + struct virtnet_info *vi = netdev_priv(dev);
>>>> + unsigned int i, base;
>>>> + unsigned int start;
>>>> +
>>>> + for (i = 0, base = 0; i < vi->max_queue_pairs; i++) {
>>>> + struct virtnet_tx_stats *tstats = &vi->sq[i].stats;
>>>> + struct virtnet_rx_stats *rstats = &vi->rq[i].stats;
>>>> +
>>>> + do {
>>>> + start = u64_stats_fetch_begin_bh(&rstats->rx_syncp);
>>>> + data[base] = rstats->rx_packets;
>>>> + data[base+1] = rstats->rx_bytes;
>>> nitpicking:
>>> We normally has spaces around +, like this:
>>> data[base + 1] = rstats->rx_bytes;
>>>
>>>> + } while (u64_stats_fetch_retry_bh(&rstats->rx_syncp, start));
>>>> +
>>>> + base += VIRTNET_RX_STATS_NUM;
>>>> +
>>>> + do {
>>>> + start = u64_stats_fetch_begin_bh(&tstats->tx_syncp);
>>>> + data[base] = tstats->tx_packets;
>>>> + data[base+1] = tstats->tx_bytes;
>>>
>>> nitpicking:
>>> Here, something strange happened to indentation.
>>>
>>>> + } while (u64_stats_fetch_retry_bh(&tstats->tx_syncp, start));
>>>> +
>>>> + base += VIRTNET_TX_STATS_NUM;
>>>> + }
>>>> +}
>>>> +
>>>> +
>>>> static const struct ethtool_ops virtnet_ethtool_ops = {
>>>> .get_drvinfo = virtnet_get_drvinfo,
>>>> .get_link = ethtool_op_get_link,
>>>> .get_ringparam = virtnet_get_ringparam,
>>>> .set_channels = virtnet_set_channels,
>>>> .get_channels = virtnet_get_channels,
>>>> + .get_strings = virtnet_get_stat_strings,
>>>> + .get_sset_count = virtnet_get_sset_count,
>>>> + .get_ethtool_stats = virtnet_get_ethtool_stats,
>>>> };
>>>>
>>>> #define MIN_MTU 68
>>>> @@ -1531,14 +1636,11 @@ static int virtnet_probe(struct virtio_device *vdev)
>>>> vi->dev = dev;
>>>> vi->vdev = vdev;
>>>> vdev->priv = vi;
>>>> - vi->stats = alloc_percpu(struct virtnet_stats);
>>>> err = -ENOMEM;
>>>> - if (vi->stats == NULL)
>>>> - goto free;
>>>>
>>>> vi->vq_index = alloc_percpu(int);
>>>> if (vi->vq_index == NULL)
>>>> - goto free_stats;
>>>> + goto free;
>>>>
>>>> mutex_init(&vi->config_lock);
>>>> vi->config_enable = true;
>>>> @@ -1616,8 +1718,6 @@ free_vqs:
>>>> virtnet_del_vqs(vi);
>>>> free_index:
>>>> free_percpu(vi->vq_index);
>>>> -free_stats:
>>>> - free_percpu(vi->stats);
>>>> free:
>>>> free_netdev(dev);
>>>> return err;
>>>> @@ -1653,7 +1753,6 @@ static void virtnet_remove(struct virtio_device *vdev)
>>>> flush_work(&vi->config_work);
>>>>
>>>> free_percpu(vi->vq_index);
>>>> - free_percpu(vi->stats);
>>>> free_netdev(vi->dev);
>>>> }
>>> Thanks!
>>>
>>>> --
>>>> 1.7.1

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