On Feb 4, 2013, at 3:24 PM, John Baldwin wrote: > On Monday, February 04, 2013 12:22:49 pm Randy Stewart wrote: >> All: >> >> I have been working with TCP in gigabit networks (igb driver actually) and >> have >> found a very nasty problem with the way the driver is doing its put back when >> it fills the out-bound transmit queue. >> >> Basically it has taken a packet from the head of the ring buffer, and then >> realizes it can't fit it into the transmit queue. So it just re-enqueue's it >> into the ring buffer. Whats wrong with that? Well most of the time there >> are anywhere from 10-50 packets (maybe more) in that ring buffer when you are >> operating at full speed (or trying to). This means you will see 10 duplicate >> ACKs, do a fast retransmit and cut your cwnd in half.. not very nice >> actually. >> >> The patch I have attached makes it so that >> >> 1) There are ways to swap back. >> 2) Use the peek in the ring buffer and only >> dequeue the packet if we put it into the transmit ring >> 3) If something goes wrong and the transmit frees the packet we dequeue it. >> 4) If the transmit changed it (defrag etc) then swap out the new mbuf that >> has taken its place. >> >> I have fixed the four intel drivers that had this systemic issue, but there >> are still more to fix. >> >> Comments/review .. rotten egg's etc.. would be most welcome before >> I commit this.. > > Does this only happen in drivers that use buffering?
Yep, there are a lot of drivers that *do not* use the drbr_xxxx() functions and for those they do the IFQ_DRV_PREPEND().. its only the newer drivers like the intel 1Gig and 10Gig ones that seem effected Also effected are : bxe cxgb oce en I have not fixed those yet. > I seem to recall that > drivers using IFQ would just stuff the packet at the head of the IFQ via > IFQ_DRV_PREPEND() in this case so it is still the next packet to transmit. > See, for example, this bit in dc_start_locked(): > > for (queued = 0; !IFQ_DRV_IS_EMPTY(&ifp->if_snd); ) { > /* > * If there's no way we can send any packets, return now. > */ > if (sc->dc_cdata.dc_tx_cnt > DC_TX_LIST_CNT - DC_TX_LIST_RSVD) { > ifp->if_drv_flags |= IFF_DRV_OACTIVE; > break; > } > IFQ_DRV_DEQUEUE(&ifp->if_snd, m_head); > if (m_head == NULL) > break; > > if (dc_encap(sc, &m_head)) { > if (m_head == NULL) > break; > IFQ_DRV_PREPEND(&ifp->if_snd, m_head); > ifp->if_drv_flags |= IFF_DRV_OACTIVE; > break; > } > > It sounds like drbr/buf_ring just don't handle this case correctly? It > seems a shame to have to duplicate so much code in the various drivers to > fix this, but that seems to be par for the course when using buf_ring. :( > (buggy in edge cases and lots of duplicated code that is). > Also, doing the drbr_swap() just so that drbr_dequeue() returns what you > just swapped in seems... odd. It seems that it would be nicer instead > to have some sort of drbr_peek() / drbr_advance() where the latter just > skips over whatever the current head is? Then you could have something > like: > > while ((next = drbr_peek()) != NULL) { > if (!foo_encap(&next)) { > if (next == NULL) > drbr_advance(); > break; > } > drbr_advance(); > } > That was what I originally did (without the rename), but there is a sure crash waiting in that. The only difference from what I originally had was just drbr_dequeue().. but I was being a bit lazy and not wanting to add yet another function to the drbr_xxxx code since essential it would be a clone of drbr_dequeue() without returning the mbuf. The crash potential here is in that foo_encap(&next) often times will return a different mbuf (at least in the igb driver it does). I believe its due to either the m_pullup() which could change the lead mbuf you want in the drbr_ring, or the m_defrag all within igb_xmit. Thus you have to track what comes back from the !foo_encap() call and compare it to see if you must swap it out. > I guess the sticky widget is the case of ATLQ as you need to dequeue the > packet always in the ALTQ case and put it back if the encap fails. Yeah ALTQ is ugly and IMO we need to re-write it anyway.. maybe re-think this whole layer ;-0 > For > your patch it's not clear to me how that works. It seems that if the > encap routine frees the mbuf you try to dereference a freed pointer when > you call drbr_dequeue(). Hmm you are right.. I forgot how we keep those using the mbuf itself... > I really think you will instead need some sort > of 'drbr_putback()' and have 'drbr_peek()' dequeue in the ALTQ case and > use 'drbr_putback()' to put it back (PREPEND) in the ALTQ case. We could do that but drbr_putback() would probably need both the old and new pointers and then we could make it do the ring_swap() to put the right mbuf in place.. Let me go explore that and come up with a better patch ;-) R > > -- > John Baldwin > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-net-unsubscr...@freebsd.org" > ----- Randall Stewart rand...@lakerest.net _______________________________________________ freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-net-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"