Re: [PATCH v3 0/2] kvm: level irqfd and new eoifd

From: Avi Kivity
Date: Sun Jul 15 2012 - 06:11:01 EST


On 07/12/2012 08:38 PM, Alex Williamson wrote:
> On Thu, 2012-07-12 at 10:19 -0600, Alex Williamson wrote:
>> On Thu, 2012-07-12 at 12:35 +0300, Avi Kivity wrote:
>> > On 07/11/2012 10:57 PM, Alex Williamson wrote:
>> > >>
>> > >> > We still have classic KVM device assignment to provide fast-path INTx.
>> > >> > But if we want to replace it midterm, I think it's necessary for VFIO to
>> > >> > be able to provide such a path as well.
>> > >>
>> > >> I would like VFIO to have no regressions vs. kvm device assignment,
>> > >> except perhaps in uncommon corner cases. So I agree.
>> > >
>> > > I ran a few TCP_RR netperf tests forcing a 1Gb tg3 nic to use INTx.
>> > > Without irqchip support vfio gets a bit more than 60% of KVM device
>> > > assignment. That's a little bit of an unfair comparison since it's more
>> > > than just the I/O path. With the proposed interfaces here, enabling
>> > > irqchip, vfio is within 10% of KVM device assignment for INTx. For MSI,
>> > > I can actually make vfio come out more than 30% better than KVM device
>> > > assignment if I send the eventfd from the hard irq handler. Using a
>> > > threaded handler as the code currently does, vfio is still behind KVM.
>> > > It's hard to beat a direct call chain.
>> >
>> > We can have a direct call chain with vfio too, using a custom eventfd
>> > poll function, no? Assuming we set up a fast path for unicast msi.
>>
>> You'll have to help me out a little, eventfd_signal walks the wait_queue
>> and calls each function. On the injection path that includes
>> irqfd_wakeup. For an MSI that seems to already provide direct
>> injection. For level we'll schedule_work, so that explains the overhead
>> in that path, but it's not too dissimilar to a a threaded irq. vfio
>> does something very similar, so there's a schedule_work both on inject
>> and on eoi. I'll have to check whether anything prevents the unmask
>> from the wait_queue function in vfio, that could be a significant chunk
>> of the gap.
>
> Yep, the schedule_work in the eoi is the culprit. A direct unmask from
> the wait queue function gives me better results than kvm for INTx.
> We'll have to see how the leapfrogging goes once KVM switches to
> injection from the hard handler. I'm still curious what this custom
> poll function would give us though. Thanks,
>

btw, why is the overhead so large? A context switch should be on the
order of 1 microsecond or less. Given that, every 5000 context switches
per second cost a 1% cpu load on one core. You would need a very heavy
interrupt load to see a large degradation. Or is the extra latency the
problem?

--
error compiling committee.c: too many arguments to function


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