Yes, we're on 1.6r2. That said, I've tried a number of different values for the thresholds without a lot of luck. Setting wthresh/hthresh/pthresh to 0/0/32 or 0/0/0 doesn't appear to fix things. And, as Matthew suggested, I'm pretty sure using 0 for the thresholds leads to auto-config by the driver. I also tried 1/1/32, which required that I also change the rs_thresh value from 0 to 1 to work around a panic in PMD initialization ("TX WTHRESH must be set to 0 if tx_rs_thresh is greater than 1").
Any other suggestions? On Mon, Nov 16, 2015 at 7:31 PM, Stephen Hemminger < stephen at networkplumber.org> wrote: > On Mon, 16 Nov 2015 18:49:15 -0600 > Matt Laswell <laswell at infiniteio.com> wrote: > > > Hey Stephen, > > > > Thanks a lot; that's really useful information. Unfortunately, I'm at a > > stage in our release cycle where upgrading to a new version of DPDK isn't > > feasible. Any chance you (or others reading this) has a pointer to the > > relevant changes? While I can't afford to upgrade DPDK entirely, > > backporting targeted fixes is more doable. > > > > Again, thanks. > > > > - Matt > > > > > > On Mon, Nov 16, 2015 at 6:12 PM, Stephen Hemminger < > > stephen at networkplumber.org> wrote: > > > > > On Mon, 16 Nov 2015 17:48:35 -0600 > > > Matt Laswell <laswell at infiniteio.com> wrote: > > > > > > > Hey Folks, > > > > > > > > I sent this to the users email list, but I'm not sure how many > people are > > > > actively reading that list at this point. I'm dealing with a > situation > > > in > > > > which my application loses the ability to transmit packets out of a > port > > > > during times of moderate stress. I'd love to hear suggestions for > how to > > > > approach this problem, as I'm a bit at a loss at the moment. > > > > > > > > Specifically, I'm using DPDK 1.6r2 running on Ubuntu 14.04LTS on > Haswell > > > > processors. I'm using the 82599 controller, configured to spread > packets > > > > across multiple queues. Each queue is accessed by a different lcore > in > > > my > > > > application; there is therefore concurrent access to the controller, > but > > > > not to any of the queues. We're binding the ports to the igb_uio > driver. > > > > The symptoms I see are these: > > > > > > > > > > > > - All transmit out of a particular port stops > > > > - rte_eth_tx_burst() indicates that it is sending all of the > packets > > > > that I give to it > > > > - rte_eth_stats_get() gives me stats indicating that no packets > are > > > > being sent on the affected port. Also, no tx errors, and no pause > > > frames > > > > sent or received (opackets = 0, obytes = 0, oerrors = 0, etc.) > > > > - All other ports continue to work normally > > > > - The affected port continues to receive packets without problems; > > > only > > > > TX is affected > > > > - Resetting the port via rte_eth_dev_stop() and > rte_eth_dev_start() > > > > restores things and packets can flow again > > > > - The problem is replicable on multiple devices, and doesn't > follow > > > one > > > > particular port > > > > > > > > I've tried calling rte_mbuf_sanity_check() on all packets before > sending > > > > them. I've also instrumented my code to look for packets that have > > > already > > > > been sent or freed, as well as cycles in chained packets being > sent. I > > > > also put a lock around all accesses to rte_eth* calls to synchronize > > > access > > > > to the NIC. Given some recent discussion here, I also tried > changing the > > > > TX RS threshold from 0 to 32, 16, and 1. None of these strategies > proved > > > > effective. > > > > > > > > Like I said at the top, I'm a little at a loss at this point. If you > > > were > > > > dealing with this set of symptoms, how would you proceed? > > > > > > > > > > I remember some issues with old DPDK 1.6 with some of the prefetch > > > thresholds on 82599. You would be better off going to a later DPDK > > > version. > > > > > I hope you are on 1.6.0r2 at least?? > > With older DPDK there was no way to get driver to tell you what the > preferred settings were for pthresh/hthresh/wthresh. And the values > in Intel sample applications were broken on some hardware. > > I remember reverse engineering the safe values from reading the Linux > driver. > > The Linux driver is much better tested than the DPDK one... > In the Linux driver, the Transmit Descriptor Controller (txdctl) > is fixed at (for transmit) > wthresh = 1 > hthresh = 1 > pthresh = 32 > > The DPDK 2.2 driver uses: > wthresh = 0 > hthresh = 0 > pthresh = 32 > > > > > > >