Commit 320f24e4 authored by Willem de Bruijn's avatar Willem de Bruijn Committed by David S. Miller

net: minor update to Documentation/networking/scaling.txt

Incorporate last comments about hyperthreading, interrupt coalescing and
the definition of cache domains into the network scaling document scaling.txt
Signed-off-by: default avatarWillem de Bruijn <willemb@google.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
parent b88cf73d
......@@ -52,7 +52,8 @@ module parameter for specifying the number of hardware queues to
configure. In the bnx2x driver, for instance, this parameter is called
num_queues. A typical RSS configuration would be to have one receive queue
for each CPU if the device supports enough queues, or otherwise at least
one for each cache domain at a particular cache level (L1, L2, etc.).
one for each memory domain, where a memory domain is a set of CPUs that
share a particular memory level (L1, L2, NUMA node, etc.).
The indirection table of an RSS device, which resolves a queue by masked
hash, is usually programmed by the driver at initialization. The
......@@ -82,11 +83,17 @@ RSS should be enabled when latency is a concern or whenever receive
interrupt processing forms a bottleneck. Spreading load between CPUs
decreases queue length. For low latency networking, the optimal setting
is to allocate as many queues as there are CPUs in the system (or the
NIC maximum, if lower). Because the aggregate number of interrupts grows
with each additional queue, the most efficient high-rate configuration
NIC maximum, if lower). The most efficient high-rate configuration
is likely the one with the smallest number of receive queues where no
CPU that processes receive interrupts reaches 100% utilization. Per-cpu
load can be observed using the mpstat utility.
receive queue overflows due to a saturated CPU, because in default
mode with interrupt coalescing enabled, the aggregate number of
interrupts (and thus work) grows with each additional queue.
Per-cpu load can be observed using the mpstat utility, but note that on
processors with hyperthreading (HT), each hyperthread is represented as
a separate CPU. For interrupt handling, HT has shown no benefit in
initial tests, so limit the number of queues to the number of CPU cores
in the system.
RPS: Receive Packet Steering
......@@ -145,7 +152,7 @@ the bitmap.
== Suggested Configuration
For a single queue device, a typical RPS configuration would be to set
the rps_cpus to the CPUs in the same cache domain of the interrupting
the rps_cpus to the CPUs in the same memory domain of the interrupting
CPU. If NUMA locality is not an issue, this could also be all CPUs in
the system. At high interrupt rate, it might be wise to exclude the
interrupting CPU from the map since that already performs much work.
......@@ -154,7 +161,7 @@ For a multi-queue system, if RSS is configured so that a hardware
receive queue is mapped to each CPU, then RPS is probably redundant
and unnecessary. If there are fewer hardware queues than CPUs, then
RPS might be beneficial if the rps_cpus for each queue are the ones that
share the same cache domain as the interrupting CPU for that queue.
share the same memory domain as the interrupting CPU for that queue.
RFS: Receive Flow Steering
......@@ -326,7 +333,7 @@ The queue chosen for transmitting a particular flow is saved in the
corresponding socket structure for the flow (e.g. a TCP connection).
This transmit queue is used for subsequent packets sent on the flow to
prevent out of order (ooo) packets. The choice also amortizes the cost
of calling get_xps_queues() over all packets in the connection. To avoid
of calling get_xps_queues() over all packets in the flow. To avoid
ooo packets, the queue for a flow can subsequently only be changed if
skb->ooo_okay is set for a packet in the flow. This flag indicates that
there are no outstanding packets in the flow, so the transmit queue can
......
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