Re: [PATCH v2 net-next 0/8] API set for HW Buffer management

From: Gregory CLEMENT
Date: Thu Feb 18 2016 - 12:33:23 EST


Hi Willy,

On mer., fÃvr. 17 2016, Willy Tarreau <w@xxxxxx> wrote:

> Hi Gregory,
>
> On Tue, Feb 16, 2016 at 04:33:35PM +0100, Gregory CLEMENT wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> A few weeks ago I sent a proposal for a API set for HW Buffer
>> management, to have a better view of the motivation for this API see
>> the cover letter of this proposal:
>> http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/2125152
>>
>> Since this version I took into account the review from Florian:
>> - The hardware buffer management helpers are no more built by default
>> and now depend on a hidden config symbol which has to be selected
>> by the driver if needed
>> - The hwbm_pool_refill() and hwbm_pool_add() now receive a gfp_t as
>> argument allowing the caller to specify the flag it needs.
>> - buf_num is now tested to ensure there is no wrapping
>> - A spinlock has been added to protect the hwbm_pool_add() function in
>> SMP or irq context.
>>
>> I also used pr_warn instead of pr_debug in case of errors.
>>
>> I fixed the mvneta implementation by returning the buffer to the pool
>> at various place instead of ignoring it.
>>
>> About the series itself I tried to make this series easier to merge:
>> - Squashed "bus: mvenus-mbus: Fix size test for
>> mvebu_mbus_get_dram_win_info" into bus: mvebu-mbus: provide api for
>> obtaining IO and DRAM window information.
>> - Added my signed-otf-by on all the patches as submitter of the series.
>> - Renamed the dts patches with the pattern "ARM: dts: platform:"
>> - Removed the patch "ARM: mvebu: enable SRAM support in
>> mvebu_v7_defconfig" of this series and already applied it
>> - Rodified the order of the patches.
>>
>> In order to ease the test the branch mvneta-BM-framework-v2 is
>> available at git@xxxxxxxxxx:MISL-EBU-System-SW/mainline-public.git.
>
> Well, I tested this patch series on top of latest master (from today)
> on my fresh new clearfog board. I compared carefully with and without
> the patchset. My workload was haproxy receiving connections and forwarding
> them to my PC via the same port. I tested both with short connections
> (HTTP GET of an empty file) and long ones (1 MB or more). No trouble
> was detected at all, which is pretty good. I noticed a very tiny
> performance drop which is more noticeable on short connections (high
> packet rates), my forwarded connection rate went down from 17500/s to
> 17300/s. But I have not checked yet what can be tuned when using the
> BM, nor did I compare CPU usage. I remember having run some tests in
> the past, I guess it was on the XP-GP board, and noticed that the BM
> could save a significant amount of CPU and improve cache efficiency,
> so if this is the case here, we don't really care about a possible 1%
> performance drop.
>
> I'll try to provide more results as time permits.
>
> In the mean time if you want (or plan to submit a next batch), feel
> free to add a Tested-by: Willy Tarreau <w@xxxxxx>.

Great! thanks for testing.

Gregory

>
> cheers,
> Willy
>

--
Gregory Clement, Free Electrons
Kernel, drivers, real-time and embedded Linux
development, consulting, training and support.
http://free-electrons.com