On Jan 29, Jesper Dangaard Brouer wrote: > On Fri, 29 Jan 2021 17:02:16 +0100 > Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > + for (i = 0; i < n_skb; i++) { > > > + struct sk_buff *skb = skbs[i]; > > > + > > > + memset(skb, 0, offsetof(struct sk_buff, tail)); > > > > It is very subtle, but the memset operation on Intel CPU translates > > into a "rep stos" (repeated store) operation. This operation need to > > save CPU-flags (to support being interrupted) thus it is actually > > expensive (and in my experience cause side effects on pipeline > > efficiency). I have a kernel module for testing memset here[1]. > > > > In CPUMAP I have moved the clearing outside this loop. But via asking > > the MM system to clear the memory via gfp_t flag __GFP_ZERO. This > > cause us to clear more memory 256 bytes, but it is aligned. Above > > offsetof(struct sk_buff, tail) is 188 bytes, which is unaligned making > > the rep-stos more expensive in setup time. It is below 3-cachelines, > > which is actually interesting and an improvement since last I checked. > > I actually have to re-test with time_bench_memset[1], to know that is > > better now. > > After much testing (with [1]), yes please use gfp_t flag __GFP_ZERO. I run some comparison tests using memset and __GFP_ZERO and with VETH_XDP_BATCH set to 8 and 16. Results are pretty close so not completely sure the delta is just a noise: - VETH_XDP_BATCH= 8 + __GFP_ZERO: ~3.737Mpps - VETH_XDP_BATCH= 16 + __GFP_ZERO: ~3.79Mpps - VETH_XDP_BATCH= 8 + memset: ~3.766Mpps - VETH_XDP_BATCH= 16 + __GFP_ZERO: ~3.765Mpps Regards, Lorenzo > > SKB: offsetof-tail:184 bytes > - memset_skb_tail Per elem: 37 cycles(tsc) 10.463 ns > > SKB: ROUNDUP(offsetof-tail: 192) > - memset_skb_tail_roundup Per elem: 37 cycles(tsc) 10.468 ns > > I though it would be better/faster to round up to full cachelines, but > measurements show that the cost was the same for 184 vs 192. It does > validate the theory that it is the cacheline boundary that is important. > > When doing the gfp_t flag __GFP_ZERO, the kernel cannot know the > constant size, and instead end up calling memset_erms(). > > The cost of memset_erms(256) is: > - memset_variable_step(256) Per elem: 31 cycles(tsc) 8.803 ns > > The const version with 256 that uses rep-stos cost more: > - memset_256 Per elem: 41 cycles(tsc) 11.552 ns > > > Below not relevant for your patch, but an interesting data point is > that memset_erms(512) only cost 4 cycles more: > - memset_variable_step(512) Per elem: 35 cycles(tsc) 9.893 ns > > (but don't use rep-stos for const 512 it is 72 cycles(tsc) 20.069 ns.) > > [1] https://github.com/netoptimizer/prototype-kernel/blob/master/kernel/lib/time_bench_memset.c > CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-1650 v4 @ 3.60GHz > -- > Best regards, > Jesper Dangaard Brouer > MSc.CS, Principal Kernel Engineer at Red Hat > LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/brouer >
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