On 11/04/2017 07:35 PM, Wei Xu wrote: > On Fri, Nov 03, 2017 at 12:30:12AM -0400, Matthew Rosato wrote: >> On 10/31/2017 03:07 AM, Wei Xu wrote: >>> On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 01:53:12PM -0400, Matthew Rosato wrote: >>>> >>>>> >>>>> Are you using the same binding as mentioned in previous mail sent by you? >>>>> it >>>>> might be caused by cpu convention between pktgen and vhost, could you >>>>> please >>>>> try to run pktgen from another idle cpu by adjusting the binding? >>>> >>>> I don't think that's the case -- I can cause pktgen to hang in the guest >>>> without any cpu binding, and with vhost disabled even. >>> >>> Yes, I did a test and it also hangs in guest, before we figure it out, >>> maybe you try udp with uperf with this case? >>> >>> VM -> Host >>> Host -> VM >>> VM -> VM >>> >> >> Here are averaged run numbers (Gbps throughput) across 4.12, 4.13 and >> net-next with and without Jason's recent "vhost_net: conditionally >> enable tx polling" applied (referred to as 'patch' below). 1 uperf >> instance in each case: > > Thanks a lot for the test. > >> >> uperf TCP: >> 4.12 4.13 4.13+patch net-next net-next+patch >> ---------------------------------------------------------------------- >> VM->VM 35.2 16.5 20.84 22.2 24.36 > > Are you using the same server/test suite? You mentioned the number was around > 28Gb for 4.12 and it dropped about 40% for 4.13, it seems thing changed, are > there any options for performance tuning on the server to maximize the cpu > utilization?
I experience some volatility as I am running on 1 of multiple LPARs available to this system (they are sharing physical resources). But I think the real issue was that I left my guest environment set to 4 vcpus, but was binding assuming there was 1 vcpu (was working on something else, forgot to change back). This likely tainted my most recent results, sorry. > > I had similar experience on x86 server and desktop before and it made that > the result number always went up and down pretty much. > >> VM->Host 42.15 43.57 44.90 30.83 32.26 >> Host->VM 53.17 41.51 42.18 37.05 37.30 > > This is a bit odd, I remember you said there was no regression while > testing Host>VM, wasn't it? > >> >> uperf UDP: >> 4.12 4.13 4.13+patch net-next net-next+patch >> ---------------------------------------------------------------------- >> VM->VM 24.93 21.63 25.09 8.86 9.62 >> VM->Host 40.21 38.21 39.72 8.74 9.35 >> Host->VM 31.26 30.18 31.25 7.2 9.26 > > This case should be quite similar with pkgten, if you got improvement with > pktgen, usually it was also the same for UDP, could you please try to disable > tso, gso, gro, ufo on all host tap devices and guest virtio-net devices? > Currently > the most significant tests would be like this AFAICT: > > Host->VM 4.12 4.13 > TCP: > UDP: > pktgen: > > Don't want to bother you too much, so maybe 4.12 & 4.13 without Jason's patch > should > work since we have seen positive number for that, you can also temporarily > skip > net-next as well. Here are the requested numbers, averaged over numerous runs -- guest is 4GB+1vcpu, host uperf/pktgen bound to 1 host CPU + qemu and vhost thread pinned to other unique host CPUs. tso, gso, gro, ufo disabled on host taps / guest virtio-net devs as requested: Host->VM 4.12 4.13 TCP: 9.92Gb/s 6.44Gb/s UDP: 5.77Gb/s 6.63Gb/s pktgen: 1572403pps 1904265pps UDP/pktgen both show improvement from 4.12->4.13. More interesting, however, is that I am seeing the TCP regression for the first time from host->VM. I wonder if the combination of CPU binding + disabling of one or more of tso/gso/gro/ufo is related. > > If you see UDP and pktgen are aligned, then it might be helpful to continue > the other two cases, otherwise we fail in the first place. I will start gathering those numbers tomorrow. > >> The net is that Jason's recent patch definitely improves things across >> the board at 4.13 as well as at net-next -- But the VM<->VM TCP numbers >> I am observing are still lower than base 4.12. > > Cool. > >> >> A separate concern is why my UDP numbers look so bad on net-next (have >> not bisected this yet). > > This might be another issue, I am in vacation, will try it on x86 once back > to work on next Wednesday. > > Wei > >> >