[RFC] [PATCH v1 0/3] isolation: limit msix vectors based on housekeeping CPUs

From: Nitesh Narayan Lal
Date: Wed Sep 09 2020 - 13:17:48 EST


This is a follow-up posting for "[v1] i40e: limit the msix vectors based on
housekeeping CPUs" [1] (It took longer than expected for me to get back to
this).


Issue
=====
With the current implementation device drivers while creating their MSIX
vectors only takes num_online_cpus() into consideration which works quite well
for a non-RT environment, but in an RT environment that has a large number of
isolated CPUs and a very few housekeeping CPUs this could lead to a problem.
The problem will be triggered when something like tuned will try to move all
the IRQs from isolated CPUs to the limited number of housekeeping CPUs to
prevent interruptions for a latency sensitive workload that will be runing on
the isolated CPUs. This failure is caused because of the per CPU vector
limitation.


Proposed Fix
============
In this patch-set, the following changes are proposed:
- A generic API num_housekeeping_cpus() which is meant to return the available
  housekeeping CPUs in an environment with isolated CPUs and all online CPUs
  otherwise.
- i40e: Specifically for the i40e driver the num_online_cpus() used in
  i40e_init_msix() to calculate numbers msix vectors is replaced with the above
  defined API. This is done to restrict the number of msix vectors for i40e in
RT environments.
- pci_alloc_irq_vector(): With the help of num_housekeeping_cpus() the max_vecs
  passed in pci_alloc_irq_vector() is restricted only to the available
  housekeeping CPUs only in an environment that has isolated CPUs. However, if
  the min_vecs exceeds the num_housekeeping_cpus(), no change is made to make
sure that a device initialization is not prevented due to lack of
housekeeping CPUs.



Reproducing the Issue
=====================
I have triggered this issue on a setup that had a total of 72 cores among which
68 were isolated and only 4 were left for housekeeping tasks. I was using
tuned's realtime-virtual-host profile to configure the system. In this
scenario, Tuned reported the error message 'Failed to set SMP affinity of IRQ
xxx to '00000040,00000010,00000005': [Errno 28] No space left on the device'
for several IRQs in tuned.log due to the per CPU vector limit.


Testing
=======
Functionality:
- To test that the issue is resolved with i40e change I added a tracepoint
  in i40e_init_msix() to find the number of CPUs derived for vector creation
  with and without tuned's realtime-virtual-host profile. As per expectation
  with the profile applied I was only getting the number of housekeeping CPUs
  and all available CPUs without it.

Performance:
- To analyze the performance impact I have targetted the change introduced in
  pci_alloc_irq_vectors() and compared the results against a vanilla kernel
  (5.9.0-rc3) results.

  Setup Information:
  + I had a couple of 24-core machines connected back to back via a couple of
    mlx5 NICs and I analyzed the average bitrate for server-client TCP and UDP
    transmission via iperf.
  + To minimize the Bitrate variation of iperf TCP and UDP stream test I have
    applied the tuned's network-throughput profile and disabled HT.
 Test Information:
  + For the environment that had no isolated CPUs:
    I have tested with single stream and 24 streams (same as that of online
    CPUs).
  + For the environment that had 20 isolated CPUs:
    I have tested with single stream, 4 streams (same as that the number of
    housekeeping) and 24 streams (same as that of online CPUs).

 Results:
  # UDP Stream Test:
  + There was no degradation observed in UDP stream tests in both
environments. (With isolated CPUs and without isolated CPUs after the
introduction of the patches).
  # TCP Stream Test - No isolated CPUs:
  + No noticeable degradation was observed.
  # TCP Stream Test - With isolated CPUs:
  + Multiple Stream (4)  - Average degradation of around 5-6%
  + Multiple Stream (24) - Average degradation of around 2-3%
  + Single Stream        - Even on a vanilla kernel the Bitrate observed for
a TCP single stream test seem to vary
significantly across different runs (eg. the %
variation between the best and the worst case on
a vanilla kernel was around 8-10%). A similar
variation was observed with the kernel that
included my patches. No additional degradation
was observed.

Since the change specifically for pci_alloc_irq_vectors is going to impact
several drivers I have posted this patch-set as RFC. I would be happy to
perform more testing based on any suggestions or incorporate any comments to
ensure that the change is not breaking anything.

[1] https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1256308/ ;

Nitesh Narayan Lal (3):
sched/isolation: API to get num of hosekeeping CPUs
i40e: limit msix vectors based on housekeeping CPUs
PCI: Limit pci_alloc_irq_vectors as per housekeeping CPUs

drivers/net/ethernet/intel/i40e/i40e_main.c | 3 ++-
include/linux/pci.h | 16 ++++++++++++++
include/linux/sched/isolation.h | 7 +++++++
kernel/sched/isolation.c | 23 +++++++++++++++++++++
4 files changed, 48 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

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2.27.0