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. > 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. - Joe