On 10/13/2016 10:24 AM, David Miller wrote: > From: Paolo Abeni <pab...@redhat.com> > Date: Tue, 11 Oct 2016 19:15:44 +0200 > >> After the commit 9207f9d45b0a ("net: preserve IP control block >> during GSO segmentation"), the GSO CB and the IPoIB CB conflict. >> That destroy the IPoIB address information cached there, >> causing a severe performance regression, as better described here: >> >> http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=146787279825501&w=2 >> >> This change moves the data cached by the IPoIB driver from the >> skb control lock into the IPoIB hard header, as done before >> the commit 936d7de3d736 ("IPoIB: Stop lying about hard_header_len >> and use skb->cb to stash LL addresses"). >> In order to avoid GRO issue, on packet reception, the IPoIB driver >> stash into the skb a dummy pseudo header, so that the received >> packets have actually a hard header matching the declared length. >> Also the connected mode maximum mtu is reduced by 16 bytes to >> cope with the increased hard header len. >> >> After this commit, IPoIB performances are back to pre-regression >> value. >> >> Fixes: 9207f9d45b0a ("net: preserve IP control block during GSO >> segmentation") >> Signed-off-by: Paolo Abeni <pab...@redhat.com> > > Not providing an accurate hard_header_len causes many problems. > > In fact we recently fixed the mlxsw driver to stop doing this. >
Sure, but there are too many users of the cb struct, and whatever problems you are saying there are by lying about the hard header len are dwarfed by the problems caused by the inability to store the ll address anywhere between hard_header and send time. -- Doug Ledford <dledf...@redhat.com> GPG Key ID: 0E572FDD
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature