Re: Regression: ftdi_sio is slow (since Wed Oct 10 15:05:06 2012)

From: Stas Sergeev
Date: Fri May 03 2013 - 13:29:20 EST


03.05.2013 21:16, Greg KH ÐÐÑÐÑ:

Sounds like an application is doing a foolish thing and should stop it.
Its not.
The app is quering only for _input_ (specifying only read fds
to select). But the select() in linux is implemented the way that
even when it polls for input, it will still call tty_chars_in_buffer()...

There's no guarantee as to how long select or an ioctl will take, and
now that we have fixed another bug, this device is slower.

If you change hardware types to use a different usb to serial chip, that
select call might take 4 times as long. Are we somehow supposed to
change the kernel to "fix" that?
Previously, the kernel was not calling to a device at all, so
select() was independent of the chip, and it was fast. I was
not aware you changed that willingly.

I asked the customer to comment out
tty_chars_in_buffer(tty) < WAKEUP_CHARS
line in n_tty.c, and he said that cured his problems,
so I think my guess was right.
What exactly is the "problem" being seen?
No idea.
Well, I can make a test-case that does 1000000 select() calls
in a loop and time it. This is probably the best I can do.
That's really not a valid test case, as it's nothing that we ever
optimize a serial driver for. Throughput is the proper thing to care
about, right?
Sure, but the throughput was not improved by the aforementioned
patch, so what was the upside of it?

To actually determine how many characters the device has in its buffer.
You are adding only 1 char, but the time to query TEMT is
probably longer than to xmit 1 char. So how could it help
in some real scenario? When you done quering TEMT, the
char is actually already sent, so the effect is quite the reverse.

My scenario is:
the app calls select() before xmitting every char. It seems
it can never fill up the output buffer now, so the throughput
have suffered.
What would you suggest to improve it?
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/