Re: [PATCH 1/3] sfc: revert "reduce the number of requested xdp ev queues"

From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer
Date: Fri Jul 09 2021 - 11:07:14 EST




On 09/07/2021 16.07, Edward Cree wrote:
On 08/07/2021 13:14, Íñigo Huguet wrote:
In my opinion, there is no reason to make that distinction between
normal traffic and XDP traffic.
[...]
If the user wants to prevent XDP from mixing with normal traffic, just
not attaching an XDP program to the interface, or not using
XDP_TX/REDIRECT in it would be enough. Probably I don't understand
what you want to say here.

I think it's less about that and more about avoiding lock contention.
If two sources (XDP and the regular stack) are both trying to use a TXQ,
and contending for a lock, it's possible that the resulting total
throughput could be far less than either source alone would get if it
had exclusive use of a queue.
There don't really seem to be any good answers to this; any CPU in the
system can initiate an XDP_REDIRECT at any time and if they can't each
get a queue to themselves then I don't see how the arbitration can be
performant. (There is the middle-ground possibility of TXQs shared by
multiple XDP CPUs but not shared with the regular stack, in which case
if only a subset of CPUs are actually handling RX on the device(s) with
an XDP_REDIRECTing program it may be possible to avoid contention if
the core-to-XDP-TXQ mapping can be carefully configured.)

Yes, I prefer the 'middle-ground' fallback you describe. XDP gets it's own set of TXQ-queues, and when driver detect TXQ's are less than CPUs that can redirect packets it uses an ndo_xdp_xmit function that takes a (hashed) lock (happens per packet burst (max 16)).

--Jesper