Re: [RFC net-next 0/5] Suspend IRQs during preferred busy poll

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On 08/12, Martin Karsten wrote:
> On 2024-08-12 21:54, Stanislav Fomichev wrote:
> > On 08/12, Martin Karsten wrote:
> > > On 2024-08-12 19:03, Stanislav Fomichev wrote:
> > > > On 08/12, Martin Karsten wrote:
> > > > > On 2024-08-12 16:19, Stanislav Fomichev wrote:
> > > > > > On 08/12, Joe Damato wrote:
> > > > > > > Greetings:
> > > > > > > 
> > > > > > > Martin Karsten (CC'd) and I have been collaborating on some ideas about
> > > > > > > ways of reducing tail latency when using epoll-based busy poll and we'd
> > > > > > > love to get feedback from the list on the code in this series. This is
> > > > > > > the idea I mentioned at netdev conf, for those who were there. Barring
> > > > > > > any major issues, we hope to submit this officially shortly after RFC.
> > > > > > > 
> > > > > > > The basic idea for suspending IRQs in this manner was described in an
> > > > > > > earlier paper presented at Sigmetrics 2024 [1].
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > Let me explicitly call out the paper. Very nice analysis!
> > > > > 
> > > > > Thank you!
> > > > > 
> > > > > [snip]
> > > > > 
> > > > > > > Here's how it is intended to work:
> > > > > > >      - An administrator sets the existing sysfs parameters for
> > > > > > >        defer_hard_irqs and gro_flush_timeout to enable IRQ deferral.
> > > > > > > 
> > > > > > >      - An administrator sets the new sysfs parameter irq_suspend_timeout
> > > > > > >        to a larger value than gro-timeout to enable IRQ suspension.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > Can you expand more on what's the problem with the existing gro_flush_timeout?
> > > > > > Is it defer_hard_irqs_count? Or you want a separate timeout only for the
> > > > > > perfer_busy_poll case(why?)? Because looking at the first two patches,
> > > > > > you essentially replace all usages of gro_flush_timeout with a new variable
> > > > > > and I don't see how it helps.
> > > > > 
> > > > > gro-flush-timeout (in combination with defer-hard-irqs) is the default irq
> > > > > deferral mechanism and as such, always active when configured. Its static
> > > > > periodic softirq processing leads to a situation where:
> > > > > 
> > > > > - A long gro-flush-timeout causes high latencies when load is sufficiently
> > > > > below capacity, or
> > > > > 
> > > > > - a short gro-flush-timeout causes overhead when softirq execution
> > > > > asynchronously competes with application processing at high load.
> > > > > 
> > > > > The shortcomings of this are documented (to some extent) by our experiments.
> > > > > See defer20 working well at low load, but having problems at high load,
> > > > > while defer200 having higher latency at low load.
> > > > > 
> > > > > irq-suspend-timeout is only active when an application uses
> > > > > prefer-busy-polling and in that case, produces a nice alternating pattern of
> > > > > application processing and networking processing (similar to what we
> > > > > describe in the paper). This then works well with both low and high load.
> > > > 
> > > > So you only want it for the prefer-busy-pollingc case, makes sense. I was
> > > > a bit confused by the difference between defer200 and suspend200,
> > > > but now I see that defer200 does not enable busypoll.
> > > > 
> > > > I'm assuming that if you enable busypool in defer200 case, the numbers
> > > > should be similar to suspend200 (ignoring potentially affecting
> > > > non-busypolling queues due to higher gro_flush_timeout).
> > > 
> > > defer200 + napi busy poll is essentially what we labelled "busy" and it does
> > > not perform as well, since it still suffers interference between application
> > > and softirq processing.
> > 
> > With all your patches applied? Why? Userspace not keeping up?
> 
> Note our "busy" case does not utilize our patches.

Great, thanks for confirming, that makes sense!

> As illustrated by our performance numbers, its performance is better than
> the base case, but at the cost of higher cpu utilization and it's still not
> as good as suspend20.
> 
> Explanation (conjecture):
> 
> It boils down to having to set a particular static value for
> gro-flush-timeout that is then always active.
> 
> If busy-poll + application processing takes longer than this timeout, the
> next softirq runs while the application is still active, which causes
> interference.
> 
> Once a softirq runs, the irq-loop (Loop 2) takes control. When the
> application thread comes back to epoll_wait, it already finds data, thus
> ep_poll does not run napi_busy_poll at all, thus the irq-loop stays in
> control.
> 
> This continues until by chance the application finds no readily available
> data when calling epoll_wait and ep_poll runs another napi_busy_poll. Then
> the system switches back to busy-polling mode.
> 
> So essentially the system non-deterministically alternates between
> busy-polling and irq deferral. irq deferral determines the high-order tail
> latencies, but there is still enough interference to make a difference. It's
> not as bad as in the base case, but not as good as properly controlled irq
> suspension.
> 
> > > > > > Maybe expand more on what code paths are we trying to improve? Existing
> > > > > > busy polling code is not super readable, so would be nice to simplify
> > > > > > it a bit in the process (if possible) instead of adding one more tunable.
> > > > > 
> > > > > There are essentially three possible loops for network processing:
> > > > > 
> > > > > 1) hardirq -> softirq -> napi poll; this is the baseline functionality
> > > > > 
> > > > > 2) timer -> softirq -> napi poll; this is deferred irq processing scheme
> > > > > with the shortcomings described above
> > > > > 
> > > > > 3) epoll -> busy-poll -> napi poll
> > > > > 
> > > > > If a system is configured for 1), not much can be done, as it is difficult
> > > > > to interject anything into this loop without adding state and side effects.
> > > > > This is what we tried for the paper, but it ended up being a hack.
> > > > > 
> > > > > If however the system is configured for irq deferral, Loops 2) and 3)
> > > > > "wrestle" with each other for control. Injecting the larger
> > > > > irq-suspend-timeout for 'timer' in Loop 2) essentially tilts this in favour
> > > > > of Loop 3) and creates the nice pattern describe above.
> > > > 
> > > > And you hit (2) when the epoll goes to sleep and/or when the userspace
> > > > isn't fast enough to keep up with the timer, presumably? I wonder
> > > > if need to use this opportunity and do proper API as Joe hints in the
> > > > cover letter. Something over netlink to say "I'm gonna busy-poll on
> > > > this queue / napi_id and with this timeout". And then we can essentially make
> > > > gro_flush_timeout per queue (and avoid
> > > > napi_resume_irqs/napi_suspend_irqs). Existing gro_flush_timeout feels
> > > > too hacky already :-(
> > > 
> > > If someone would implement the necessary changes to make these parameters
> > > per-napi, this would improve things further, but note that the current
> > > proposal gives strong performance across a range of workloads, which is
> > > otherwise difficult to impossible to achieve.
> > 
> > Let's see what other people have to say. But we tried to do a similar
> > setup at Google recently and getting all these parameters right
> > was not trivial. Joe's recent patch series to push some of these into
> > epoll context are a step in the right direction. It would be nice to
> > have more explicit interface to express busy poling preference for
> > the users vs chasing a bunch of global tunables and fighting against softirq
> > wakups.
> 
> One of the goals of this patch set is to reduce parameter tuning and make
> the parameter setting independent of workload dynamics, so it should make
> things easier. This is of course notwithstanding that per-napi settings
> would be even better.
> 
> If you are able to share more details of your previous experiments (here or
> off-list), I would be very interested.

We went through a similar exercise of trying to get the tail latencies down.
Starting with SO_BUSY_POLL, then switching to the per-epoll variant (except
we went with a hard-coded napi_id argument instead of tracking) and trying to
get a workable set of budget/timeout/gro_flush. We were fine with burning all
cpu capacity we had and no sleep at all, so we ended up having a bunch
of special cases in epoll loop to avoid the sleep.

But we were trying to make a different model work (the one you mention in the
paper as well) where the userspace busy-pollers are just running napi_poll
on one cpu and the actual work is consumed by the userspace on a different cpu.
(we had two epoll fds - one with napi_id=xxx and no sockets to drive napi_poll
and another epoll fd with actual sockets for signaling).

This mode has a different set of challenges with socket lock, socket rx
queue and the backlog processing :-(

> > > Note that napi_suspend_irqs/napi_resume_irqs is needed even for the sake of
> > > an individual queue or application to make sure that IRQ suspension is
> > > enabled/disabled right away when the state of the system changes from busy
> > > to idle and back.
> > 
> > Can we not handle everything in napi_busy_loop? If we can mark some napi
> > contexts as "explicitly polled by userspace with a larger defer timeout",
> > we should be able to do better compared to current NAPI_F_PREFER_BUSY_POLL
> > which is more like "this particular napi_poll call is user busy polling".
> 
> Then either the application needs to be polling all the time (wasting cpu
> cycles) or latencies will be determined by the timeout.
> 
> Only when switching back and forth between polling and interrupts is it
> possible to get low latencies across a large spectrum of offered loads
> without burning cpu cycles at 100%.

Ah, I see what you're saying, yes, you're right. In this case ignore my comment
about ep_suspend_napi_irqs/napi_resume_irqs.

Let's see how other people feel about per-dev irq_suspend_timeout. Properly
disabling napi during busy polling is super useful, but it would still
be nice to plumb irq_suspend_timeout via epoll context or have it set on
a per-napi basis imho.




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