Re: [PATCH net-next v3 1/3] r8169: Implement dynamic ASPM mechanism

From: Kai-Heng Feng
Date: Tue Aug 24 2021 - 03:45:52 EST


On Sat, Aug 21, 2021 at 5:03 AM Bjorn Helgaas <helgaas@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Aug 19, 2021 at 05:45:22PM +0200, Heiner Kallweit wrote:
> > On 19.08.2021 13:42, Bjorn Helgaas wrote:
> > > On Thu, Aug 19, 2021 at 01:45:40PM +0800, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
> > >> r8169 NICs on some platforms have abysmal speed when ASPM is enabled.
> > >> Same issue can be observed with older vendor drivers.
> > >
> > > On some platforms but not on others? Maybe the PCIe topology is a
> > > factor? Do you have bug reports with data, e.g., "lspci -vv" output?
> > >
> > >> The issue is however solved by the latest vendor driver. There's a new
> > >> mechanism, which disables r8169's internal ASPM when the NIC traffic has
> > >> more than 10 packets, and vice versa.
> > >
> > > Presumably there's a time interval related to the 10 packets? For
> > > example, do you want to disable ASPM if 10 packets are received (or
> > > sent?) in a certain amount of time?
> > >
> > >> The possible reason for this is
> > >> likely because the buffer on the chip is too small for its ASPM exit
> > >> latency.
> > >
> > > Maybe this means the chip advertises incorrect exit latencies? If so,
> > > maybe a quirk could override that?
> > >
> > >> Realtek confirmed that all their PCIe LAN NICs, r8106, r8168 and r8125
> > >> use dynamic ASPM under Windows. So implement the same mechanism here to
> > >> resolve the issue.
> > >
> > > What exactly is "dynamic ASPM"?
> > >
> > > I see Heiner's comment about this being intended only for a downstream
> > > kernel. But why?
> > >
> > We've seen various more or less obvious symptoms caused by the broken
> > ASPM support on Realtek network chips. Unfortunately Realtek releases
> > neither datasheets nor errata information.
> > Last time we attempted to re-enable ASPM numerous problem reports came
> > in. These Realtek chips are used on basically every consumer mainboard.
> > The proposed workaround has potential side effects: In case of a
> > congestion in the chip it may take up to a second until ASPM gets
> > disabled, what may affect performance, especially in case of alternating
> > traffic patterns. Also we can't expect support from Realtek.
> > Having said that my decision was that it's too risky to re-enable ASPM
> > in mainline even with this workaround in place. Kai-Heng weights the
> > power saving higher and wants to take the risk in his downstream kernel.
> > If there are no problems downstream after few months, then this
> > workaround may make it to mainline.
>
> Since ASPM apparently works well on some platforms but not others, I'd
> suspect some incorrect exit latencies.

Can be, but if their dynamic ASPM mechanism can workaround the issue,
maybe their hardware is just designed that way?

>
> Ideally we'd have some launchpad/bugzilla links, and a better
> understanding of the problem, and maybe a quirk that makes this work
> on all platforms without mucking up the driver with ASPM tweaks.

The tweaks is OS-agnostic and is also implemented in Windows.

>
> But I'm a little out of turn here because the only direct impact to
> the PCI core is the pcie_aspm_supported() interface. It *looks* like
> these patches don't actually touch the PCIe architected ASPM controls
> in Link Control; all I see is mucking with Realtek-specific registers.

AFAICT, Realtek ethernet NIC and wireless NIC both have two layers of
ASPM, one is the regular PCIe ASPM, and a Realtek specific internal
ASPM.
Both have to be enabled to really make ASPM work for them.

Kai-Heng

>
> I think this is more work than it should be and likely to be not as
> reliable as it should be. But I guess that's up to you guys.
>
> Bjorn