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

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On 2024-08-16 13:01, Willem de Bruijn wrote:
Joe Damato wrote:
On Fri, Aug 16, 2024 at 10:59:51AM -0400, Willem de Bruijn wrote:
Willem de Bruijn wrote:
Martin Karsten wrote:
On 2024-08-14 15:53, Samiullah Khawaja wrote:
On Tue, Aug 13, 2024 at 6:19 AM Martin Karsten <mkarsten@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On 2024-08-13 00:07, Stanislav Fomichev wrote:
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:

[snip]

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.
But if I understand correctly, this means that if the application
thread that is supposed
to do napi busy polling gets busy doing work on the new data/events in
userspace, napi polling
will not be done until the suspend_timeout triggers? Do you dispatch
work to a separate worker
threads, in userspace, from the thread that is doing epoll_wait?

Yes, napi polling is suspended while the application is busy between
epoll_wait calls. That's where the benefits are coming from.

The consequences depend on the nature of the application and overall
preferences for the system. If there's a "dominant" application for a
number of queues and cores, the resulting latency for other background
applications using the same queues might not be a problem at all.

One other simple mitigation is limiting the number of events that each
epoll_wait call accepts. Note that this batch size also determines the
worst-case latency for the application in question, so there is a
natural incentive to keep it limited.

A more complex application design, like you suggest, might also be an
option.

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.

Thanks for probing and double-checking everything! Feedback is important
for us to properly document our proposal.

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.
I agree, this would allow each napi queue to tune itself based on
heuristics. But I think
doing it through epoll independent interface makes more sense as Stan
suggested earlier.

The question is whether to add a useful mechanism (one sysfs parameter
and a few lines of code) that is optional, but with demonstrable and
significant performance/efficiency improvements for an important class
of applications - or wait for an uncertain future?

The issue is that this one little change can never be removed, as it
becomes ABI.

Let's get the right API from the start.

Not sure that a global variable, or sysfs as API, is the right one.

Sorry per-device, not global.

My main concern is that it adds yet another user tunable integer, for
which the right value is not obvious.

This is a feature for advanced users just like SO_INCOMING_NAPI_ID
and countless other features.

The value may not be obvious, but guidance (in the form of
documentation) can be provided.

Okay. Could you share a stab at what that would look like?

The timeout needs to be large enough that an application can get a meaningful number of incoming requests processed without softirq interference. At the same time, the timeout value determines the worst-case delivery delay that a concurrent application using the same queue(s) might experience. Please also see my response to Samiullah quoted above. The specific circumstances and trade-offs might vary, that's why a simple constant likely won't do.

If the only goal is to safely reenable interrupts when the application
stops calling epoll_wait, does this have to be user tunable?

Can it be either a single good enough constant, or derived from
another tunable, like busypoll_read.

I believe you meant busy_read here, is that right?

At any rate:

   - I don't think a single constant is appropriate, just as it
     wasn't appropriate for the existing mechanism
     (napi_defer_hard_irqs/gro_flush_timeout), and

   - Deriving the value from a pre-existing parameter to preserve the
     ABI, like busy_read, makes using this more confusing for users
     and complicates the API significantly.

I agree we should get the API right from the start; that's why we've
submit this as an RFC ;)

We are happy to take suggestions from the community, but, IMHO,
re-using an existing parameter for a different purpose only in
certain circumstances (if I understand your suggestions) is a much
worse choice than adding a new tunable that clearly states its
intended singular purpose.

Ack. I was thinking whether an epoll flag through your new epoll
ioctl interface to toggle the IRQ suspension (and timer start)
would be preferable. Because more fine grained.

A value provided by an application through the epoll ioctl would not be subject to admin oversight, so a misbehaving application could set an arbitrary timeout value. A sysfs value needs to be set by an admin. The ideal timeout value depends both on the particular target application as well as concurrent applications using the same queue(s) - as sketched above.

Also, the value is likely dependent more on the expected duration
of userspace processing? If so, it would be the same for all
devices, so does a per-netdev value make sense?

It is per-netdev in the current proposal to be at the same granularity as gro_flush_timeout and napi_defer_hard_irqs, because irq suspension operates at the same level/granularity. This allows for more control than a global setting and it can be migrated to per-napi settings along with gro_flush_timeout and napi_defer_hard_irqs when the time comes.

Thanks,
Martin






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