Documentation: Add explanation for XPS using Rx-queue(s) map

Signed-off-by: Amritha Nambiar <amritha.nambiar@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This commit is contained in:
Amritha Nambiar 2018-06-29 21:27:12 -07:00 committed by David S. Miller
parent 8af2c06ff4
commit a4fd1f4bab
2 changed files with 61 additions and 11 deletions

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@ -42,6 +42,17 @@ Description:
network device transmit queue. Possible vaules depend on the
number of available CPU(s) in the system.
What: /sys/class/<iface>/queues/tx-<queue>/xps_rxqs
Date: June 2018
KernelVersion: 4.18.0
Contact: netdev@vger.kernel.org
Description:
Mask of the receive queue(s) currently enabled to participate
into the Transmit Packet Steering packet processing flow for this
network device transmit queue. Possible values depend on the
number of available receive queue(s) in the network device.
Default is disabled.
What: /sys/class/<iface>/queues/tx-<queue>/byte_queue_limits/hold_time
Date: November 2011
KernelVersion: 3.3

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@ -366,8 +366,13 @@ XPS: Transmit Packet Steering
Transmit Packet Steering is a mechanism for intelligently selecting
which transmit queue to use when transmitting a packet on a multi-queue
device. To accomplish this, a mapping from CPU to hardware queue(s) is
recorded. The goal of this mapping is usually to assign queues
device. This can be accomplished by recording two kinds of maps, either
a mapping of CPU to hardware queue(s) or a mapping of receive queue(s)
to hardware transmit queue(s).
1. XPS using CPUs map
The goal of this mapping is usually to assign queues
exclusively to a subset of CPUs, where the transmit completions for
these queues are processed on a CPU within this set. This choice
provides two benefits. First, contention on the device queue lock is
@ -377,15 +382,40 @@ transmit queue). Secondly, cache miss rate on transmit completion is
reduced, in particular for data cache lines that hold the sk_buff
structures.
XPS is configured per transmit queue by setting a bitmap of CPUs that
may use that queue to transmit. The reverse mapping, from CPUs to
transmit queues, is computed and maintained for each network device.
When transmitting the first packet in a flow, the function
get_xps_queue() is called to select a queue. This function uses the ID
of the running CPU as a key into the CPU-to-queue lookup table. If the
2. XPS using receive queues map
This mapping is used to pick transmit queue based on the receive
queue(s) map configuration set by the administrator. A set of receive
queues can be mapped to a set of transmit queues (many:many), although
the common use case is a 1:1 mapping. This will enable sending packets
on the same queue associations for transmit and receive. This is useful for
busy polling multi-threaded workloads where there are challenges in
associating a given CPU to a given application thread. The application
threads are not pinned to CPUs and each thread handles packets
received on a single queue. The receive queue number is cached in the
socket for the connection. In this model, sending the packets on the same
transmit queue corresponding to the associated receive queue has benefits
in keeping the CPU overhead low. Transmit completion work is locked into
the same queue-association that a given application is polling on. This
avoids the overhead of triggering an interrupt on another CPU. When the
application cleans up the packets during the busy poll, transmit completion
may be processed along with it in the same thread context and so result in
reduced latency.
XPS is configured per transmit queue by setting a bitmap of
CPUs/receive-queues that may use that queue to transmit. The reverse
mapping, from CPUs to transmit queues or from receive-queues to transmit
queues, is computed and maintained for each network device. When
transmitting the first packet in a flow, the function get_xps_queue() is
called to select a queue. This function uses the ID of the receive queue
for the socket connection for a match in the receive queue-to-transmit queue
lookup table. Alternatively, this function can also use the ID of the
running CPU as a key into the CPU-to-queue lookup table. If the
ID matches a single queue, that is used for transmission. If multiple
queues match, one is selected by using the flow hash to compute an index
into the set.
into the set. When selecting the transmit queue based on receive queue(s)
map, the transmit device is not validated against the receive device as it
requires expensive lookup operation in the datapath.
The queue chosen for transmitting a particular flow is saved in the
corresponding socket structure for the flow (e.g. a TCP connection).
@ -404,11 +434,15 @@ acknowledged.
XPS is only available if the kconfig symbol CONFIG_XPS is enabled (on by
default for SMP). The functionality remains disabled until explicitly
configured. To enable XPS, the bitmap of CPUs that may use a transmit
queue is configured using the sysfs file entry:
configured. To enable XPS, the bitmap of CPUs/receive-queues that may
use a transmit queue is configured using the sysfs file entry:
For selection based on CPUs map:
/sys/class/net/<dev>/queues/tx-<n>/xps_cpus
For selection based on receive-queues map:
/sys/class/net/<dev>/queues/tx-<n>/xps_rxqs
== Suggested Configuration
For a network device with a single transmission queue, XPS configuration
@ -421,6 +455,11 @@ best CPUs to share a given queue are probably those that share the cache
with the CPU that processes transmit completions for that queue
(transmit interrupts).
For transmit queue selection based on receive queue(s), XPS has to be
explicitly configured mapping receive-queue(s) to transmit queue(s). If the
user configuration for receive-queue map does not apply, then the transmit
queue is selected based on the CPUs map.
Per TX Queue rate limitation:
=============================