Re: [EXTERNAL] Re: [PATCH V2 net-next] net: mana: Assigning IRQ affinity on HT cores

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On Thu, Nov 30, 2023 at 04:05:12AM -0800, Souradeep Chakrabarti wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 29, 2023 at 06:16:17PM -0800, Yury Norov wrote:
> > On Mon, Nov 27, 2023 at 09:36:38AM +0000, Souradeep Chakrabarti wrote:
> > > 
> > > 
> > > >-----Original Message-----
> > > >From: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > > >Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2023 5:19 AM
> > > >To: Souradeep Chakrabarti <schakrabarti@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > > >Cc: KY Srinivasan <kys@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; Haiyang Zhang
> > > ><haiyangz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; wei.liu@xxxxxxxxxx; Dexuan Cui
> > > ><decui@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; davem@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; edumazet@xxxxxxxxxx;
> > > >pabeni@xxxxxxxxxx; Long Li <longli@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>;
> > > >sharmaajay@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; leon@xxxxxxxxxx; cai.huoqing@xxxxxxxxx;
> > > >ssengar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; vkuznets@xxxxxxxxxx; tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-
> > > >hyperv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx;
> > > >linux-rdma@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Souradeep Chakrabarti
> > > ><schakrabarti@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; Paul Rosswurm <paulros@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > > >Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [PATCH V2 net-next] net: mana: Assigning IRQ affinity on
> > > >HT cores
> > > >
> > > >On Tue, 21 Nov 2023 05:54:37 -0800 Souradeep Chakrabarti wrote:
> > > >> Existing MANA design assigns IRQ to every CPUs, including sibling
> > > >> hyper-threads in a core. This causes multiple IRQs to work on same CPU
> > > >> and may reduce the network performance with RSS.
> > > >>
> > > >> Improve the performance by adhering the configuration for RSS, which
> > > >> assigns IRQ on HT cores.
> > > >
> > > >Drivers should not have to carry 120 LoC for something as basic as spreading IRQs.
> > > >Please take a look at include/linux/topology.h and if there's nothing that fits your
> > > >needs there - add it. That way other drivers can reuse it.
> > > Because of the current design idea, it is easier to keep things inside
> > > the mana driver code here. As the idea of IRQ distribution here is :
> > > 1)Loop through interrupts to assign CPU
> > > 2)Find non sibling online CPU from local NUMA and assign the IRQs
> > > on them.
> > > 3)If number of IRQs is more than number of non-sibling CPU in that
> > > NUMA node, then assign on sibling CPU of that node.
> > > 4)Keep doing it till all the online CPUs are used or no more IRQs.
> > > 5)If all CPUs in that node are used, goto next NUMA node with CPU.
> > > Keep doing 2 and 3.
> > > 6) If all CPUs in all NUMA nodes are used, but still there are IRQs
> > > then wrap over from first local NUMA node and continue
> > > doing 2, 3 4 till all IRQs are assigned.
> > 
> > Hi Souradeep,
> > 
> > (Thanks Jakub for sharing this thread with me)
> > 
> > If I understand your intention right, you can leverage the existing
> > cpumask_local_spread().
> > 
> > But I think I've got something better for you. The below series adds
> > a for_each_numa_cpu() iterator, which may help you doing most of the
> > job without messing with nodes internals.
> > 
> > https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/ZD3l6FBnUh9vTIGc@yury-ThinkPad/T/
> >
> Thanks Yur and Jakub. I was trying to find this patch, but unable to find it on that thread.
> Also in net-next I am unable to find it. Can you please tell, if it has been committed?
> If not can you please point me out the correct patch for this macro. It will be
> really helpful.

Try this branch. I just rebased it on top of bitmap-for-next,
but didn't re-test. You may need to exclude the "sched: drop
for_each_numa_hop_mask()" patch.

https://github.com/norov/linux/commits/for_each_numa_cpu

> > By using it, the pseudocode implementing your algorithm may look
> > like this:
> > 
> >         unsigned int cpu, hop;
> >         unsigned int irq = 0;
> > 
> > again:
> >         cpu = get_cpu();
> >         node = cpu_to_node(cpu);
> >         cpumask_copy(cpus, cpu_online_mask);
> > 
> >         for_each_numa_cpu(cpu, hop, node, cpus) {
> >                 /* All siblings are the same for IRQ spreading purpose */
> >                 irq_set_affinity_and_hint(irq, topology_sibling_cpumask());
> > 
> >                 /* One IRQ per sibling group */
> >                 cpumask_andnot(cpus, cpus, topology_sibling_cpumask());
> > 
> >                 if (++irq == num_irqs)
> >                         break;
> >         }
> > 
> >         if (irq < num_irqs)
> >                 goto again;
> > 
> > (Completely not tested, just an idea.)
> >
> I have done similar kind of change for our driver, but constraint here is that total number of IRQs
> can be equal to the total number of online CPUs, in some setup. It is either equal
> to the number of online CPUs or maximum 64 IRQs if online CPUs are more than that.

Not sure I understand you. If you're talking about my proposal,
there's seemingly no constraints on number of CPUs/IRQs.

> So my proposed change is following:
> 
> +static int irq_setup(int *irqs, int nvec, int start_numa_node)
> +{
> +       cpumask_var_t node_cpumask;
> +       int i, cpu, err = 0;
> +       unsigned int  next_node;
> +       cpumask_t visited_cpus;
> +       unsigned int start_node = start_numa_node;
> +       i = 0;
> +       if (!alloc_cpumask_var(&node_cpumask, GFP_KERNEL)) {
> +               err = -ENOMEM;
> +               goto free_mask;
> +       }
> +       cpumask_andnot(&visited_cpus, &visited_cpus, &visited_cpus);
> +       start_node = 1;
> +       for_each_next_node_with_cpus(start_node, next_node) {

If your goal is to maximize locality, this doesn't seem to be correct.
for_each_next_node_with_cpus() is based on next_node(), and so enumerates
nodes in a numerically increasing order. On real machines, it's possible
that numerically adjacent node is not the topologically nearest.

To approach that, for every node kernel maintains a list of equally distant
nodes grouped into hops. You may likely want to use for_each_numa_hop_mask
iterator, which iterated over hops in increasing distance order, instead of
NUMA node numbers.

But I would like to see for_each_numa_cpu() finally merged as a simpler and
nicer alternative.

> +               cpumask_copy(node_cpumask, cpumask_of_node(next_node));
> +               for_each_cpu(cpu, node_cpumask) {
> +                       cpumask_andnot(node_cpumask, node_cpumask,
> +                                      topology_sibling_cpumask(cpu));
> +                       irq_set_affinity_and_hint(irqs[i], cpumask_of(cpu));
> +                       if(++i == nvec)
> +                               goto free_mask;
> +                       cpumask_set_cpu(cpu, &visited_cpus);
> +                       if (cpumask_empty(node_cpumask) && cpumask_weight(&visited_cpus) <
> +                           nr_cpus_node(next_node)) {
> +                               cpumask_copy(node_cpumask, cpumask_of_node(next_node));
> +                               cpumask_andnot(node_cpumask, node_cpumask, &visited_cpus);
> +                               cpu = cpumask_first(node_cpumask);
> +                       }
> +               }
> +               if (next_online_node(next_node) == MAX_NUMNODES)
> +                       next_node = first_online_node;
> +       }
> +free_mask:
> +       free_cpumask_var(node_cpumask);
> +       return err;
> +} 
> 
> I can definitely use the for_each_numa_cpu() instead of my proposed for_each_next_node_with_cpus()
> macro here and that will make it cleaner.
> Thanks for the suggestion.

Sure.

Can you please share performance measurements for a solution you'll
finally choose? Would be interesting to compare different approaches.

Thanks,
Yury




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