Hi, I got a freeBSD 8.1 polling issue on my PC. It is a dual-core Intel Pentium x86 PC (2.8GHz each core). The Ethernet interface is Broadcom NetXtreme 57xx Gigabit Ethernet interface. I set the following options (enable polling and zero-buffer copy) and rebuilt the kernel:
Code: # To make an SMP kernel, the next two lines are needed options SMP # Symmetric MultiProcessor Kernel device apic # I/O APIC options DEVICE_POLLING # Open Polling options HZ=1000 options ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS The following were appended to the /etc/sysctl.conf Code: kern.polling.enable=1 # increase BPF buffer to 10M net.bpf.bufsize=10485760 net.bpf.maxbufsize=10485760 kern.polling.idle_poll=1 kern.polling.burst_max=1000 After installed and rebooted the system, kern.polling.enable was not found in MIB so I had to ignore this error. Looks like kern.polling.enable is removed from FreeBSD v8.1? Everything looked good so build my application to received data from another HP server. I wrote the application using libpcap-1.1.1 with BFP zero-copy turned on (I found the #define HAVE_ZEROCOPY_BPF 1 in config.h). Attached please find the source code of my application. Before running the application, I set the following parameters: Code: ifconfig bge0 polling # This will turn on the polling of the Broadcom driver. Code: sysctl -w net.bpf.bufsize=10485760 sysctl -w net.bpf.maxbufsize=10485760 sysctl -w kern.polling.idle_poll=1 sysctl -w kern.polling.burst_max=1000 sysctl -w kern.polling.each_burst=128 sysctl -w net.inet.ip.intr_queue_maxlen=256 Then I ran the application to receive data from the HP server. I ran multiple iperf on the HP server to send around 133Mbits/s UDP load to the PC under test. The UDP payload size was 47 bytes. The entire IP packet size is 76 bytes. First of all, the receiving application worked well and received around 205K packets/second without packet losing (I checked the receiving status using pcap_stats). However, after 2 minutes, the application can not received data any more. The packets/second is 0. I ran the ping from the PC under test and found that the ping reporting timeout and destination unreachable (the ping from HP to the PC also failed). Looked like the link between the HP server and PC was broken so the application could receive data. No packet was dropped. Then I restart the bge0 interface using: ifconfig bge0 down && ifconfig bge0 up And then I re-ran the application and it continued receiving data. But after 1 or 2 minutes, the link broke again. I think it was my application that caused the bge0 interface down. I started the tcpdump and it worked well without breaking the link. I tried to increase the kern.polling.each_burst from 128 to 500 but the application would cause the bge0 down within 1 minute. No packet was dropped before the link was down. I checked the CPU usage of the PC. The sys used is around 90% (might be caused by kern.polling.idle_poll=1), user land is 13%. I don't understand why the application would break the bge0. I tried changing the parameters: options HZ=2000 sysctl -w net.bpf.bufsize=20485760 sysctl -w net.bpf.maxbufsize=20485760 sysctl -w kern.polling.idle_poll=1 sysctl -w kern.polling.burst_max=10000 sysctl -w kern.polling.each_burst=5000 The performance was better: I got 307K packet/second (the HP server sended around 250Mbits/s, my PC got 200Mbits/s). But after 2 minutes, the bge0 was down again. Could anybody have a look at this issue? How can <<cap.cpp>> I optimize the performance of the polling? Thanks, Jin Best regards =========================== Jin Alcatel Shanghai Bell (Nanjing) Co. Ltd. Alcatel-Net: 2735-5011 Tel: (+86)-25-8473 1240-5011 Addr: 11F, Yangtse River Tech Park. Building No.40 of Nanchang Road, Gulou District, Nanjing, China Zip: 210037 jin....@alcatel-sbell.com.cn ASB/MoAD/RDR/BSR APL
cap.cpp
Description: cap.cpp
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