Re: [RFC][PATCH v2 0/3] Provide a zero-copy method on KVM virtio-net.

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On Fri, Apr 02, 2010 at 03:25:00PM +0800, xiaohui.xin@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
> The idea is simple, just to pin the guest VM user space and then
> let host NIC driver has the chance to directly DMA to it. 
> The patches are based on vhost-net backend driver. We add a device
> which provides proto_ops as sendmsg/recvmsg to vhost-net to
> send/recv directly to/from the NIC driver. KVM guest who use the
> vhost-net backend may bind any ethX interface in the host side to
> get copyless data transfer thru guest virtio-net frontend.
> 
> The scenario is like this:
> 
> The guest virtio-net driver submits multiple requests thru vhost-net
> backend driver to the kernel. And the requests are queued and then
> completed after corresponding actions in h/w are done.
> 
> For read, user space buffers are dispensed to NIC driver for rx when
> a page constructor API is invoked. Means NICs can allocate user buffers
> from a page constructor. We add a hook in netif_receive_skb() function
> to intercept the incoming packets, and notify the zero-copy device.
> 
> For write, the zero-copy deivce may allocates a new host skb and puts
> payload on the skb_shinfo(skb)->frags, and copied the header to skb->data.
> The request remains pending until the skb is transmitted by h/w.
> 
> Here, we have ever considered 2 ways to utilize the page constructor
> API to dispense the user buffers.
> 
> One:	Modify __alloc_skb() function a bit, it can only allocate a 
> 	structure of sk_buff, and the data pointer is pointing to a 
> 	user buffer which is coming from a page constructor API.
> 	Then the shinfo of the skb is also from guest.
> 	When packet is received from hardware, the skb->data is filled
> 	directly by h/w. What we have done is in this way.
> 
> 	Pros:	We can avoid any copy here.
> 	Cons:	Guest virtio-net driver needs to allocate skb as almost
> 		the same method with the host NIC drivers, say the size
> 		of netdev_alloc_skb() and the same reserved space in the
> 		head of skb. Many NIC drivers are the same with guest and
> 		ok for this. But some lastest NIC drivers reserves special
> 		room in skb head. To deal with it, we suggest to provide
> 		a method in guest virtio-net driver to ask for parameter
> 		we interest from the NIC driver when we know which device 
> 		we have bind to do zero-copy. Then we ask guest to do so.
> 		Is that reasonable?

Unfortunately, this would break compatibility with existing virtio.
This also complicates migration. What is the room in skb head used for?

> Two:	Modify driver to get user buffer allocated from a page constructor
> 	API(to substitute alloc_page()), the user buffer are used as payload
> 	buffers and filled by h/w directly when packet is received. Driver
> 	should associate the pages with skb (skb_shinfo(skb)->frags). For 
> 	the head buffer side, let host allocates skb, and h/w fills it. 
> 	After that, the data filled in host skb header will be copied into
> 	guest header buffer which is submitted together with the payload buffer.
> 
> 	Pros:	We could less care the way how guest or host allocates their
> 		buffers.
> 	Cons:	We still need a bit copy here for the skb header.
> 
> We are not sure which way is the better here.

The obvious question would be whether you see any speed difference
with the two approaches. If no, then the second approach would be
better.

> This is the first thing we want
> to get comments from the community. We wish the modification to the network
> part will be generic which not used by vhost-net backend only, but a user
> application may use it as well when the zero-copy device may provides async
> read/write operations later.
> 
> Please give comments especially for the network part modifications.
> 
> 
> We provide multiple submits and asynchronous notifiicaton to 
> vhost-net too.
> 
> Our goal is to improve the bandwidth and reduce the CPU usage.
> Exact performance data will be provided later. But for simple
> test with netperf, we found bindwidth up and CPU % up too,
> but the bindwidth up ratio is much more than CPU % up ratio.
> 
> What we have not done yet:
> 	packet split support

What does this mean, exactly?

> 	To support GRO

And TSO/GSO?

> 	Performance tuning
> 
> what we have done in v1:
> 	polish the RCU usage
> 	deal with write logging in asynchroush mode in vhost
> 	add notifier block for mp device
> 	rename page_ctor to mp_port in netdevice.h to make it looks generic
> 	add mp_dev_change_flags() for mp device to change NIC state
> 	add CONIFG_VHOST_MPASSTHRU to limit the usage when module is not load
> 	a small fix for missing dev_put when fail
> 	using dynamic minor instead of static minor number
> 	a __KERNEL__ protect to mp_get_sock()
> 
> what we have done in v2:
> 	
> 	remove most of the RCU usage, since the ctor pointer is only
> 	changed by BIND/UNBIND ioctl, and during that time, NIC will be
> 	stopped to get good cleanup(all outstanding requests are finished),
> 	so the ctor pointer cannot be raced into wrong situation.
> 
> 	Remove the struct vhost_notifier with struct kiocb.
> 	Let vhost-net backend to alloc/free the kiocb and transfer them
> 	via sendmsg/recvmsg.
> 
> 	use get_user_pages_fast() and set_page_dirty_lock() when read.
> 
> 	Add some comments for netdev_mp_port_prep() and handle_mpassthru().
> 
> 
> Comments not addressed yet in this time:
> 	the async write logging is not satified by vhost-net
> 	Qemu needs a sync write
> 	a limit for locked pages from get_user_pages_fast()
> 	
> 		
> performance:
> 	using netperf with GSO/TSO disabled, 10G NIC, 
> 	disabled packet split mode, with raw socket case compared to vhost.
> 
> 	bindwidth will be from 1.1Gbps to 1.7Gbps
> 	CPU % from 120%-140% to 140%-160%
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