On Tue, Jun 23, 2020 at 6:15 PM Eugenio Perez Martin
<eperezma@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2020 at 6:29 PM Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:Regarding UDP_STREAM:
On Mon, Jun 22, 2020 at 06:11:21PM +0200, Eugenio Perez Martin wrote:Ok, I will do it!
On Mon, Jun 22, 2020 at 5:55 PM Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:Oh ok, so this is without guest, with virtio-user.
On Fri, Jun 19, 2020 at 08:07:57PM +0200, Eugenio Perez Martin wrote:Hi Michael.
On Mon, Jun 15, 2020 at 2:28 PM Eugenio Perez Martin
<eperezma@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Thu, Jun 11, 2020 at 5:22 PM Konrad Rzeszutek WilkI have repeated the tests with v9, and results are a little bit different:
<konrad.wilk@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Thu, Jun 11, 2020 at 07:34:19AM -0400, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:Hi Konrad.
As testing shows no performance change, switch to that now.What kind of testing? 100GiB? Low latency?
I tested this version of the patch:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/10/13/42
It was tested for throughput with DPDK's testpmd (as described in
http://doc.dpdk.org/guides/howto/virtio_user_as_exceptional_path.html)
and kernel pktgen. No latency tests were performed by me. Maybe it is
interesting to perform a latency test or just a different set of tests
over a recent version.
Thanks!
* If I test opening it with testpmd, I see no change between versions
OK that is testpmd on guest, right? And vhost-net on the host?
No, sorry, as described in
http://doc.dpdk.org/guides/howto/virtio_user_as_exceptional_path.html.
But I could add to test it in the guest too.
These kinds of raw packets "bursts" do not show performance
differences, but I could test deeper if you think it would be worth
it.
It might be worth checking dpdk within guest too just
as another data point.
Sorry, I think I should have provided more context about that.Yes, sorry: Two virtio-net interfaces connected with a linux bridge in* If I forward packets between two vhost-net interfaces in the guestAnd here I guess you mean virtio-net in the guest kernel?
using a linux bridge in the host:
the host. More precisely:
* Adding one of the interfaces to another namespace, assigning it an
IP, and starting netserver there.
* Assign another IP in the range manually to the other virtual net
interface, and start the desired test there.
If you think it would be better to perform then differently please let me know.
Not sure why you bother with namespaces since you said you are
using L2 bridging. I guess it's unimportant.
The only reason to use namespaces is to force the traffic of these
netperf tests to go through the external bridge. To test netperf
different possibilities than the testpmd (or pktgen or others "blast
of frames unconditionally" tests).
This way, I make sure that is the same version of everything in the
guest, and is a little bit easier to manage cpu affinity, start and
stop testing...
I could use a different VM for sending and receiving, but I find this
way a faster one and it should not introduce a lot of noise. I can
test with two VM if you think that this use of network namespace
introduces too much noise.
Thanks!
- netperf UDP_STREAM shows a performance increase of 1.8, almost
doubling performance. This gets lower as frame size increase.
* with event_idx=on: The performance difference is reduced a lot if
applied affinity properly (manually assigning CPU on host/guest and
setting IRQs on guest), making them perform equally with and without
the patch again. Maybe the batching makes the scheduler perform
better.
* Regarding UDP_RR, TCP_STREAM, and TCP_RR, proper CPU pinning makes- rests of the test goes noticeably worse: UDP_RR goes from ~6347
transactions/sec to 5830
them perform similarly again, only a very small performance drop
observed. It could be just noise.
** All of them perform better than vanilla if event_idx=off, not sure
why. I can try to repeat them if you suspect that can be a test
failure.
* With testpmd and event_idx=off, if I send from the VM to host, I see
a performance increment especially in small packets. The buf api also
increases performance compared with only batching: Sending the minimum
packet size in testpmd makes pps go from 356kpps to 473 kpps.
Sending
1024 length UDP-PDU makes it go from 570kpps to 64 kpps.
Something strange I observe in these tests: I get more pps the bigger
the transmitted buffer size is. Not sure why.
** Sending from the host to the VM does not make a big change with the
patches in small packets scenario (minimum, 64 bytes, about 645
without the patch, ~625 with batch and batch+buf api). If the packets
are bigger, I can see a performance increase: with 256 bits,
it goes
from 590kpps to about 600kpps, and in case of 1500 bytes payload it
gets from 348kpps to 528kpps, so it is clearly an improvement.
* with testpmd and event_idx=on, batching+buf api perform similarly in
both directions.
All of testpmd tests were performed with no linux bridge, just a
host's tap interface (<interface type='ethernet'> in xml),
with a
testpmd txonly and another in rxonly forward mode, and using the
receiving side packets/bytes data. Guest's rps, xps and interrupts,
and host's vhost threads affinity were also tuned in each test to
schedule both testpmd and vhost in different processors.
I will send the v10 RFC with the small changes requested by Stefan and Jason.
Thanks!
OK so it seems plausible that we still have a bug where an interruptGot it, will get back with the results.
is delayed. That is the main difference between pmd and virtio.
Let's try disabling event index, and see what happens - that's
the trickiest part of interrupts.
Thank you very much!
- TCP_STREAM goes from ~10.7 gbps to ~7Gbps
- TCP_RR from 6223.64 transactions/sec to 5739.44