2022-09-28 15:30:00

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

This patch adds the initial XDP support to Freescale driver. It supports
XDP_PASS, XDP_DROP and XDP_REDIRECT actions. Upcoming patches will add
support for XDP_TX and Zero Copy features.

This patch also optimizes the RX buffers by using the page pool, which
uses one frame per page for easy management. In the future, it can be
further improved to use two frames per page.

This patch has been tested with the sample apps of "xdpsock" and "xdp2" in
samples/bpf directory for both SKB and Native (XDP) mode. The following
are the testing result comparing with the XDP skb-mode.

# xdpsock -i eth0
sock0@eth0:0 rxdrop xdp-drv
pps pkts 1.00
rx 198798 1040011
tx 0 0

# xdpsock -S -i eth0 // skb-mode
sock0@eth0:0 rxdrop xdp-skb
pps pkts 1.00
rx 95638 717251
tx 0 0

# xdp2 eth0
proto 0: 475362 pkt/s
proto 0: 475549 pkt/s
proto 0: 475480 pkt/s
proto 0: 143258 pkt/s

# xdp2 -S eth0 // skb-mode
proto 17: 56468 pkt/s
proto 17: 71999 pkt/s
proto 17: 72000 pkt/s
proto 17: 71988 pkt/s

Signed-off-by: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>
---
drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h | 34 +-
drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c | 414 +++++++++++++++++++---
2 files changed, 393 insertions(+), 55 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
index b0100fe3c9e4..f7531503aa95 100644
--- a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
+++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
@@ -346,8 +346,10 @@ struct bufdesc_ex {
* the skbuffer directly.
*/

+#define FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM (512) /* XDP_PACKET_HEADROOM + NET_IP_ALIGN) */
+
#define FEC_ENET_RX_PAGES 256
-#define FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE 2048
+#define FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE (PAGE_SIZE - FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM)
#define FEC_ENET_RX_FRPPG (PAGE_SIZE / FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE)
#define RX_RING_SIZE (FEC_ENET_RX_FRPPG * FEC_ENET_RX_PAGES)
#define FEC_ENET_TX_FRSIZE 2048
@@ -517,6 +519,22 @@ struct bufdesc_prop {
unsigned char dsize_log2;
};

+struct fec_enet_priv_txrx_info {
+ int offset;
+ struct page *page;
+ struct sk_buff *skb;
+};
+
+struct fec_enet_xdp_stats {
+ u64 xdp_pass;
+ u64 xdp_drop;
+ u64 xdp_xmit;
+ u64 xdp_redirect;
+ u64 xdp_xmit_err;
+ u64 xdp_tx;
+ u64 xdp_tx_err;
+};
+
struct fec_enet_priv_tx_q {
struct bufdesc_prop bd;
unsigned char *tx_bounce[TX_RING_SIZE];
@@ -532,7 +550,15 @@ struct fec_enet_priv_tx_q {

struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q {
struct bufdesc_prop bd;
- struct sk_buff *rx_skbuff[RX_RING_SIZE];
+ struct fec_enet_priv_txrx_info rx_skb_info[RX_RING_SIZE];
+
+ /* page_pool */
+ struct page_pool *page_pool;
+ struct xdp_rxq_info xdp_rxq;
+ struct fec_enet_xdp_stats stats;
+
+ /* rx queue number, in the range 0-7 */
+ u8 id;
};

struct fec_stop_mode_gpr {
@@ -644,6 +670,10 @@ struct fec_enet_private {

struct imx_sc_ipc *ipc_handle;

+ /* XDP BPF Program */
+ unsigned long *af_xdp_zc_qps;
+ struct bpf_prog *xdp_prog;
+
u64 ethtool_stats[];
};

diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
index 59921218a8a4..2e30182ed770 100644
--- a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
+++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
@@ -66,6 +66,8 @@
#include <linux/mfd/syscon.h>
#include <linux/regmap.h>
#include <soc/imx/cpuidle.h>
+#include <linux/filter.h>
+#include <linux/bpf.h>

#include <asm/cacheflush.h>

@@ -87,6 +89,11 @@ static const u16 fec_enet_vlan_pri_to_queue[8] = {0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2};
#define FEC_ENET_OPD_V 0xFFF0
#define FEC_MDIO_PM_TIMEOUT 100 /* ms */

+#define FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS 0
+#define FEC_ENET_XDP_CONSUMED BIT(0)
+#define FEC_ENET_XDP_TX BIT(1)
+#define FEC_ENET_XDP_REDIR BIT(2)
+
struct fec_devinfo {
u32 quirks;
};
@@ -422,6 +429,49 @@ fec_enet_clear_csum(struct sk_buff *skb, struct net_device *ndev)
return 0;
}

+static int
+fec_enet_create_page_pool(struct fec_enet_private *fep,
+ struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq, int size)
+{
+ struct bpf_prog *xdp_prog = READ_ONCE(fep->xdp_prog);
+ struct page_pool_params pp_params = {
+ .order = 0,
+ .flags = PP_FLAG_DMA_MAP | PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV,
+ .pool_size = size,
+ .nid = dev_to_node(&fep->pdev->dev),
+ .dev = &fep->pdev->dev,
+ .dma_dir = xdp_prog ? DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL : DMA_FROM_DEVICE,
+ .offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM,
+ .max_len = FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE,
+ };
+ int err;
+
+ rxq->page_pool = page_pool_create(&pp_params);
+ if (IS_ERR(rxq->page_pool)) {
+ err = PTR_ERR(rxq->page_pool);
+ rxq->page_pool = NULL;
+ return err;
+ }
+
+ err = xdp_rxq_info_reg(&rxq->xdp_rxq, fep->netdev, rxq->id, 0);
+ if (err < 0)
+ goto err_free_pp;
+
+ err = xdp_rxq_info_reg_mem_model(&rxq->xdp_rxq, MEM_TYPE_PAGE_POOL,
+ rxq->page_pool);
+ if (err)
+ goto err_unregister_rxq;
+
+ return 0;
+
+err_unregister_rxq:
+ xdp_rxq_info_unreg(&rxq->xdp_rxq);
+err_free_pp:
+ page_pool_destroy(rxq->page_pool);
+ rxq->page_pool = NULL;
+ return err;
+}
+
static struct bufdesc *
fec_enet_txq_submit_frag_skb(struct fec_enet_priv_tx_q *txq,
struct sk_buff *skb,
@@ -1285,7 +1335,6 @@ fec_stop(struct net_device *ndev)
}
}

-
static void
fec_timeout(struct net_device *ndev, unsigned int txqueue)
{
@@ -1450,7 +1499,7 @@ static void fec_enet_tx(struct net_device *ndev)
fec_enet_tx_queue(ndev, i);
}

-static int
+static int __maybe_unused
fec_enet_new_rxbdp(struct net_device *ndev, struct bufdesc *bdp, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev);
@@ -1470,8 +1519,9 @@ fec_enet_new_rxbdp(struct net_device *ndev, struct bufdesc *bdp, struct sk_buff
return 0;
}

-static bool fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
- struct bufdesc *bdp, u32 length, bool swap)
+static bool __maybe_unused
+fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
+ struct bufdesc *bdp, u32 length, bool swap)
{
struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev);
struct sk_buff *new_skb;
@@ -1496,6 +1546,78 @@ static bool fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
return true;
}

+static void fec_enet_update_cbd(struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq,
+ struct bufdesc *bdp, int index)
+{
+ struct page *new_page;
+ dma_addr_t phys_addr;
+
+ new_page = page_pool_dev_alloc_pages(rxq->page_pool);
+ WARN_ON(!new_page);
+ rxq->rx_skb_info[index].page = new_page;
+
+ rxq->rx_skb_info[index].offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
+ phys_addr = page_pool_get_dma_addr(new_page) + FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
+ bdp->cbd_bufaddr = cpu_to_fec32(phys_addr);
+}
+
+static u32
+fec_enet_run_xdp(struct fec_enet_private *fep, struct bpf_prog *prog,
+ struct xdp_buff *xdp, struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq, int index)
+{
+ unsigned int sync, len = xdp->data_end - xdp->data;
+ u32 ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
+ struct page *page;
+ int err;
+ u32 act;
+
+ act = bpf_prog_run_xdp(prog, xdp);
+
+ /* Due xdp_adjust_tail: DMA sync for_device cover max len CPU touch */
+ sync = xdp->data_end - xdp->data_hard_start - FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
+ sync = max(sync, len);
+
+ switch (act) {
+ case XDP_PASS:
+ rxq->stats.xdp_pass++;
+ ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
+ break;
+
+ case XDP_TX:
+ rxq->stats.xdp_tx++;
+ bpf_warn_invalid_xdp_action(fep->netdev, prog, act);
+ fallthrough;
+
+ case XDP_REDIRECT:
+ err = xdp_do_redirect(fep->netdev, xdp, prog);
+ rxq->stats.xdp_redirect++;
+ if (!err) {
+ ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_REDIR;
+ } else {
+ ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_CONSUMED;
+ page = virt_to_head_page(xdp->data);
+ page_pool_put_page(rxq->page_pool, page, sync, true);
+ }
+ break;
+
+ default:
+ bpf_warn_invalid_xdp_action(fep->netdev, prog, act);
+ fallthrough;
+
+ case XDP_ABORTED:
+ fallthrough; /* handle aborts by dropping packet */
+
+ case XDP_DROP:
+ rxq->stats.xdp_drop++;
+ ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_CONSUMED;
+ page = virt_to_head_page(xdp->data);
+ page_pool_put_page(rxq->page_pool, page, sync, true);
+ break;
+ }
+
+ return ret;
+}
+
/* During a receive, the bd_rx.cur points to the current incoming buffer.
* When we update through the ring, if the next incoming buffer has
* not been given to the system, we just set the empty indicator,
@@ -1508,7 +1630,6 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq;
struct bufdesc *bdp;
unsigned short status;
- struct sk_buff *skb_new = NULL;
struct sk_buff *skb;
ushort pkt_len;
__u8 *data;
@@ -1517,8 +1638,12 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
bool vlan_packet_rcvd = false;
u16 vlan_tag;
int index = 0;
- bool is_copybreak;
bool need_swap = fep->quirks & FEC_QUIRK_SWAP_FRAME;
+ struct page *page;
+ struct xdp_buff xdp;
+ u32 ret, xdp_result = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
+
+ struct bpf_prog *xdp_prog = READ_ONCE(fep->xdp_prog);

#ifdef CONFIG_M532x
flush_cache_all();
@@ -1529,6 +1654,7 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
* These get messed up if we get called due to a busy condition.
*/
bdp = rxq->bd.cur;
+ xdp_init_buff(&xdp, PAGE_SIZE, &rxq->xdp_rxq);

while (!((status = fec16_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_sc)) & BD_ENET_RX_EMPTY)) {

@@ -1570,31 +1696,37 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
ndev->stats.rx_bytes += pkt_len;

index = fec_enet_get_bd_index(bdp, &rxq->bd);
- skb = rxq->rx_skbuff[index];
+ page = rxq->rx_skb_info[index].page;
+
+ dma_sync_single_for_cpu(&fep->pdev->dev,
+ fec32_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_bufaddr),
+ pkt_len,
+ DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
+
+ prefetch(page_address(page));
+ fec_enet_update_cbd(rxq, bdp, index);
+
+ if (xdp_prog) {
+ xdp_prepare_buff(&xdp, page_address(page),
+ FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM, pkt_len, false);
+
+ ret = fec_enet_run_xdp(fep, xdp_prog, &xdp, rxq, index);
+ xdp_result |= ret;
+ if (ret != FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS)
+ goto rx_processing_done;
+ }

/* The packet length includes FCS, but we don't want to
* include that when passing upstream as it messes up
* bridging applications.
*/
- is_copybreak = fec_enet_copybreak(ndev, &skb, bdp, pkt_len - 4,
- need_swap);
- if (!is_copybreak) {
- skb_new = netdev_alloc_skb(ndev, FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE);
- if (unlikely(!skb_new)) {
- ndev->stats.rx_dropped++;
- goto rx_processing_done;
- }
- dma_unmap_single(&fep->pdev->dev,
- fec32_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_bufaddr),
- FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE - fep->rx_align,
- DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
- }
-
- prefetch(skb->data - NET_IP_ALIGN);
+ skb = build_skb(page_address(page), FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE);
+ skb_reserve(skb, FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM);
skb_put(skb, pkt_len - 4);
data = skb->data;
+ page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page);

- if (!is_copybreak && need_swap)
+ if (need_swap)
swap_buffer(data, pkt_len);

#if !defined(CONFIG_M5272)
@@ -1649,16 +1781,6 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
skb_record_rx_queue(skb, queue_id);
napi_gro_receive(&fep->napi, skb);

- if (is_copybreak) {
- dma_sync_single_for_device(&fep->pdev->dev,
- fec32_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_bufaddr),
- FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE - fep->rx_align,
- DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
- } else {
- rxq->rx_skbuff[index] = skb_new;
- fec_enet_new_rxbdp(ndev, bdp, skb_new);
- }
-
rx_processing_done:
/* Clear the status flags for this buffer */
status &= ~BD_ENET_RX_STATS;
@@ -1689,6 +1811,10 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
writel(0, rxq->bd.reg_desc_active);
}
rxq->bd.cur = bdp;
+
+ if (xdp_result & FEC_ENET_XDP_REDIR)
+ xdp_do_flush_map();
+
return pkt_received;
}

@@ -2584,15 +2710,46 @@ static const struct fec_stat {
{ "IEEE_rx_octets_ok", IEEE_R_OCTETS_OK },
};

-#define FEC_STATS_SIZE (ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats) * sizeof(u64))
+static struct fec_xdp_stat {
+ char name[ETH_GSTRING_LEN];
+ u32 count;
+} fec_xdp_stats[] = {
+ { "rx_xdp_redirect", 0 },
+ { "rx_xdp_pass", 0 },
+ { "rx_xdp_drop", 0 },
+ { "rx_xdp_tx", 0 },
+ { "rx_xdp_tx_errors", 0 },
+ { "tx_xdp_xmit", 0 },
+ { "tx_xdp_xmit_errors", 0 },
+};
+
+#define FEC_STATS_SIZE ((ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats) + \
+ ARRAY_SIZE(fec_xdp_stats)) * sizeof(u64))

static void fec_enet_update_ethtool_stats(struct net_device *dev)
{
struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(dev);
+ struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq;
+ struct fec_xdp_stat xdp_stats[7];
+ int off = ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats);
int i;

for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats); i++)
fep->ethtool_stats[i] = readl(fep->hwp + fec_stats[i].offset);
+
+ for (i = fep->num_rx_queues - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
+ rxq = fep->rx_queue[i];
+ xdp_stats[0].count += rxq->stats.xdp_redirect;
+ xdp_stats[1].count += rxq->stats.xdp_pass;
+ xdp_stats[2].count += rxq->stats.xdp_drop;
+ xdp_stats[3].count += rxq->stats.xdp_tx;
+ xdp_stats[4].count += rxq->stats.xdp_tx_err;
+ xdp_stats[5].count += rxq->stats.xdp_xmit;
+ xdp_stats[6].count += rxq->stats.xdp_xmit_err;
+ }
+
+ for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(fec_xdp_stats); i++)
+ fep->ethtool_stats[i + off] = xdp_stats[i].count;
}

static void fec_enet_get_ethtool_stats(struct net_device *dev,
@@ -2609,12 +2766,16 @@ static void fec_enet_get_ethtool_stats(struct net_device *dev,
static void fec_enet_get_strings(struct net_device *netdev,
u32 stringset, u8 *data)
{
+ int off = ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats);
int i;
switch (stringset) {
case ETH_SS_STATS:
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats); i++)
memcpy(data + i * ETH_GSTRING_LEN,
fec_stats[i].name, ETH_GSTRING_LEN);
+ for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(fec_xdp_stats); i++)
+ memcpy(data + (i + off) * ETH_GSTRING_LEN,
+ fec_xdp_stats[i].name, ETH_GSTRING_LEN);
break;
case ETH_SS_TEST:
net_selftest_get_strings(data);
@@ -2626,7 +2787,7 @@ static int fec_enet_get_sset_count(struct net_device *dev, int sset)
{
switch (sset) {
case ETH_SS_STATS:
- return ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats);
+ return ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats) + ARRAY_SIZE(fec_xdp_stats);
case ETH_SS_TEST:
return net_selftest_get_count();
default:
@@ -2645,6 +2806,8 @@ static void fec_enet_clear_ethtool_stats(struct net_device *dev)
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats); i++)
writel(0, fep->hwp + fec_stats[i].offset);

+ for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(fec_xdp_stats); i++)
+ fec_xdp_stats[i].count = 0;
/* Don't disable MIB statistics counters */
writel(0, fep->hwp + FEC_MIB_CTRLSTAT);
}
@@ -3011,17 +3174,14 @@ static void fec_enet_free_buffers(struct net_device *ndev)
rxq = fep->rx_queue[q];
bdp = rxq->bd.base;
for (i = 0; i < rxq->bd.ring_size; i++) {
- skb = rxq->rx_skbuff[i];
- rxq->rx_skbuff[i] = NULL;
- if (skb) {
- dma_unmap_single(&fep->pdev->dev,
- fec32_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_bufaddr),
- FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE - fep->rx_align,
- DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
- dev_kfree_skb(skb);
- }
+ page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, rxq->rx_skb_info[i].page);
bdp = fec_enet_get_nextdesc(bdp, &rxq->bd);
}
+
+ if (xdp_rxq_info_is_reg(&rxq->xdp_rxq))
+ xdp_rxq_info_unreg(&rxq->xdp_rxq);
+ page_pool_destroy(rxq->page_pool);
+ rxq->page_pool = NULL;
}

for (q = 0; q < fep->num_tx_queues; q++) {
@@ -3111,24 +3271,32 @@ static int
fec_enet_alloc_rxq_buffers(struct net_device *ndev, unsigned int queue)
{
struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev);
- unsigned int i;
- struct sk_buff *skb;
+ unsigned int i, err;
struct bufdesc *bdp;
struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq;

+ dma_addr_t phys_addr;
+ struct page *page;
+
rxq = fep->rx_queue[queue];
bdp = rxq->bd.base;
+
+ err = fec_enet_create_page_pool(fep, rxq, rxq->bd.ring_size);
+ if (err < 0) {
+ netdev_err(ndev, "%s failed queue %d (%d)\n", __func__, queue, err);
+ return err;
+ }
+
for (i = 0; i < rxq->bd.ring_size; i++) {
- skb = __netdev_alloc_skb(ndev, FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE, GFP_KERNEL);
- if (!skb)
+ page = page_pool_dev_alloc_pages(rxq->page_pool);
+ if (!page)
goto err_alloc;

- if (fec_enet_new_rxbdp(ndev, bdp, skb)) {
- dev_kfree_skb(skb);
- goto err_alloc;
- }
+ phys_addr = page_pool_get_dma_addr(page) + FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
+ bdp->cbd_bufaddr = cpu_to_fec32(phys_addr);

- rxq->rx_skbuff[i] = skb;
+ rxq->rx_skb_info[i].page = page;
+ rxq->rx_skb_info[i].offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
bdp->cbd_sc = cpu_to_fec16(BD_ENET_RX_EMPTY);

if (fep->bufdesc_ex) {
@@ -3490,6 +3658,144 @@ static u16 fec_enet_select_queue(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff *skb,
return fec_enet_vlan_pri_to_queue[vlan_tag >> 13];
}

+static int fec_enet_bpf(struct net_device *dev, struct netdev_bpf *bpf)
+{
+ struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(dev);
+ struct bpf_prog *old_prog;
+ bool is_run = netif_running(dev);
+
+ switch (bpf->command) {
+ case XDP_SETUP_PROG:
+ if (is_run)
+ fec_enet_close(dev);
+ old_prog = xchg(&fep->xdp_prog, bpf->prog);
+
+ if (is_run)
+ fec_enet_open(dev);
+
+ if (old_prog)
+ bpf_prog_put(old_prog);
+
+ return 0;
+
+ case XDP_SETUP_XSK_POOL:
+ return -EOPNOTSUPP;
+
+ default:
+ return -EOPNOTSUPP;
+ }
+}
+
+static int
+fec_enet_xdp_get_tx_queue(struct fec_enet_private *fep, int cpu)
+{
+ int index = cpu;
+
+ if (unlikely(index < 0))
+ index = 0;
+
+ while (index >= fep->num_tx_queues)
+ index -= fep->num_tx_queues;
+
+ return index;
+}
+
+static int fec_enet_txq_xmit_frame(struct fec_enet_private *fep,
+ struct fec_enet_priv_tx_q *txq,
+ struct xdp_frame *frame)
+{
+ struct bufdesc *bdp, *last_bdp;
+ dma_addr_t dma_addr;
+ unsigned int index, status, estatus;
+ int entries_free;
+
+ entries_free = fec_enet_get_free_txdesc_num(txq);
+ if (entries_free < MAX_SKB_FRAGS + 1) {
+ netdev_err(fep->netdev, "NOT enough BD for SG!\n");
+ return NETDEV_TX_OK;
+ }
+
+ /* Fill in a Tx ring entry */
+ bdp = txq->bd.cur;
+ last_bdp = bdp;
+ status = fec16_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_sc);
+ status &= ~BD_ENET_TX_STATS;
+
+ index = fec_enet_get_bd_index(bdp, &txq->bd);
+
+ dma_addr = dma_map_single(&fep->pdev->dev, frame->data,
+ frame->len, DMA_TO_DEVICE);
+ if (dma_mapping_error(&fep->pdev->dev, dma_addr))
+ return FEC_ENET_XDP_CONSUMED;
+
+ status |= (BD_ENET_TX_INTR | BD_ENET_TX_LAST);
+ if (fep->bufdesc_ex)
+ estatus = BD_ENET_TX_INT;
+
+ bdp->cbd_bufaddr = cpu_to_fec32(dma_addr);
+ bdp->cbd_datlen = cpu_to_fec16(frame->len);
+
+ if (fep->bufdesc_ex) {
+ struct bufdesc_ex *ebdp = (struct bufdesc_ex *)bdp;
+
+ if (fep->quirks & FEC_QUIRK_HAS_AVB)
+ estatus |= FEC_TX_BD_FTYPE(txq->bd.qid);
+
+ ebdp->cbd_bdu = 0;
+ ebdp->cbd_esc = cpu_to_fec32(estatus);
+ }
+
+ index = fec_enet_get_bd_index(last_bdp, &txq->bd);
+ txq->tx_skbuff[index] = NULL;
+
+ /* Send it on its way. Tell FEC it's ready, interrupt when done,
+ * it's the last BD of the frame, and to put the CRC on the end.
+ */
+ status |= (BD_ENET_TX_READY | BD_ENET_TX_TC);
+ bdp->cbd_sc = cpu_to_fec16(status);
+
+ /* If this was the last BD in the ring, start at the beginning again. */
+ bdp = fec_enet_get_nextdesc(last_bdp, &txq->bd);
+
+ txq->bd.cur = bdp;
+
+ return 0;
+}
+
+static int fec_enet_xdp_xmit(struct net_device *dev,
+ int num_frames,
+ struct xdp_frame **frames,
+ u32 flags)
+{
+ struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(dev);
+ struct fec_enet_priv_tx_q *txq;
+ int cpu = smp_processor_id();
+ struct netdev_queue *nq;
+ unsigned int queue;
+ int i, nxmit = 0;
+
+ queue = fec_enet_xdp_get_tx_queue(fep, cpu);
+ txq = fep->tx_queue[queue];
+ nq = netdev_get_tx_queue(fep->netdev, queue);
+
+ __netif_tx_lock(nq, cpu);
+
+ for (i = 0; i < num_frames; i++) {
+ fec_enet_txq_xmit_frame(fep, txq, frames[i]);
+ nxmit++;
+ }
+
+ /* Make sure the update to bdp and tx_skbuff are performed. */
+ wmb();
+
+ /* Trigger transmission start */
+ writel(0, txq->bd.reg_desc_active);
+
+ __netif_tx_unlock(nq);
+
+ return num_frames;
+}
+
static const struct net_device_ops fec_netdev_ops = {
.ndo_open = fec_enet_open,
.ndo_stop = fec_enet_close,
@@ -3504,6 +3810,8 @@ static const struct net_device_ops fec_netdev_ops = {
.ndo_poll_controller = fec_poll_controller,
#endif
.ndo_set_features = fec_set_features,
+ .ndo_bpf = fec_enet_bpf,
+ .ndo_xdp_xmit = fec_enet_xdp_xmit,
};

static const unsigned short offset_des_active_rxq[] = {
--
2.25.1


2022-09-29 01:48:18

by Andrew Lunn

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

On Wed, Sep 28, 2022 at 10:25:09AM -0500, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> This patch adds the initial XDP support to Freescale driver. It supports
> XDP_PASS, XDP_DROP and XDP_REDIRECT actions. Upcoming patches will add
> support for XDP_TX and Zero Copy features.
>
> This patch also optimizes the RX buffers by using the page pool, which
> uses one frame per page for easy management. In the future, it can be
> further improved to use two frames per page.

Please could you split this patch up. It is rather large and hard to
review. I think you can first add support for the page pool, and then
add XDP support, for example.

I would be interesting to see how the page pool helps performance for
normal traffic, since that is what most people use it for. And for a
range of devices, since we need to make sure it does not cause any
regressions for older devices.

Andrew

2022-09-29 02:20:52

by Andrew Lunn

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

> +struct fec_enet_xdp_stats {
> + u64 xdp_pass;
> + u64 xdp_drop;
> + u64 xdp_xmit;
> + u64 xdp_redirect;
> + u64 xdp_xmit_err;
> + u64 xdp_tx;
> + u64 xdp_tx_err;
> +};
> +
> + switch (act) {
> + case XDP_PASS:
> + rxq->stats.xdp_pass++;

Since the stats are u64, and most machines using the FEC are 32 bit,
you cannot just do an increment. Took a look at u64_stats_sync.h.

> -#define FEC_STATS_SIZE (ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats) * sizeof(u64))
> +static struct fec_xdp_stat {
> + char name[ETH_GSTRING_LEN];
> + u32 count;
> +} fec_xdp_stats[] = {
> + { "rx_xdp_redirect", 0 },
> + { "rx_xdp_pass", 0 },
> + { "rx_xdp_drop", 0 },
> + { "rx_xdp_tx", 0 },
> + { "rx_xdp_tx_errors", 0 },
> + { "tx_xdp_xmit", 0 },
> + { "tx_xdp_xmit_errors", 0 },
> +};
> +
> +#define FEC_STATS_SIZE ((ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats) + \
> + ARRAY_SIZE(fec_xdp_stats)) * sizeof(u64))

The page pool also has some stats. See page_pool_get_stats(),
page_pool_ethtool_stats_get_strings() etc.

Andrew

2022-09-29 02:58:57

by kernel test robot

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

Hi Shenwei,

Thank you for the patch! Perhaps something to improve:

[auto build test WARNING on net-next/master]
[also build test WARNING on next-20220928]
[cannot apply to net/master linus/master v6.0-rc7]
[If your patch is applied to the wrong git tree, kindly drop us a note.
And when submitting patch, we suggest to use '--base' as documented in
https://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch#_base_tree_information]

url: https://github.com/intel-lab-lkp/linux/commits/Shenwei-Wang/net-fec-add-initial-XDP-support/20220928-232917
base: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/davem/net-next.git b9a5cbf8ba24e88071a97a51a09ef5cdf0d1f6a1
config: parisc-randconfig-m031-20220925
compiler: hppa64-linux-gcc (GCC) 12.1.0

If you fix the issue, kindly add following tag where applicable
| Reported-by: kernel test robot <[email protected]>

New smatch warnings:
drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c:3285 fec_enet_alloc_rxq_buffers() warn: unsigned 'err' is never less than zero.

Old smatch warnings:
drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c:3658 fec_enet_select_queue() warn: potential spectre issue 'fec_enet_vlan_pri_to_queue' [r]

vim +/err +3285 drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c

3269
3270 static int
3271 fec_enet_alloc_rxq_buffers(struct net_device *ndev, unsigned int queue)
3272 {
3273 struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev);
3274 unsigned int i, err;
3275 struct bufdesc *bdp;
3276 struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq;
3277
3278 dma_addr_t phys_addr;
3279 struct page *page;
3280
3281 rxq = fep->rx_queue[queue];
3282 bdp = rxq->bd.base;
3283
3284 err = fec_enet_create_page_pool(fep, rxq, rxq->bd.ring_size);
> 3285 if (err < 0) {
3286 netdev_err(ndev, "%s failed queue %d (%d)\n", __func__, queue, err);
3287 return err;
3288 }
3289
3290 for (i = 0; i < rxq->bd.ring_size; i++) {
3291 page = page_pool_dev_alloc_pages(rxq->page_pool);
3292 if (!page)
3293 goto err_alloc;
3294
3295 phys_addr = page_pool_get_dma_addr(page) + FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
3296 bdp->cbd_bufaddr = cpu_to_fec32(phys_addr);
3297
3298 rxq->rx_skb_info[i].page = page;
3299 rxq->rx_skb_info[i].offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
3300 bdp->cbd_sc = cpu_to_fec16(BD_ENET_RX_EMPTY);
3301
3302 if (fep->bufdesc_ex) {
3303 struct bufdesc_ex *ebdp = (struct bufdesc_ex *)bdp;
3304 ebdp->cbd_esc = cpu_to_fec32(BD_ENET_RX_INT);
3305 }
3306
3307 bdp = fec_enet_get_nextdesc(bdp, &rxq->bd);
3308 }
3309
3310 /* Set the last buffer to wrap. */
3311 bdp = fec_enet_get_prevdesc(bdp, &rxq->bd);
3312 bdp->cbd_sc |= cpu_to_fec16(BD_SC_WRAP);
3313 return 0;
3314
3315 err_alloc:
3316 fec_enet_free_buffers(ndev);
3317 return -ENOMEM;
3318 }
3319

--
0-DAY CI Kernel Test Service
https://01.org/lkp


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2022-09-29 11:16:05

by Jesper Dangaard Brouer

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



On 28/09/2022 17.25, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> This patch adds the initial XDP support to Freescale driver. It supports
> XDP_PASS, XDP_DROP and XDP_REDIRECT actions. Upcoming patches will add
> support for XDP_TX and Zero Copy features.
>
> This patch also optimizes the RX buffers by using the page pool, which
> uses one frame per page for easy management. In the future, it can be
> further improved to use two frames per page.
>
> This patch has been tested with the sample apps of "xdpsock" and "xdp2" in
> samples/bpf directory for both SKB and Native (XDP) mode. The following
> are the testing result comparing with the XDP skb-mode.
>
> # xdpsock -i eth0
> sock0@eth0:0 rxdrop xdp-drv
> pps pkts 1.00
> rx 198798 1040011
> tx 0 0
>
> # xdpsock -S -i eth0 // skb-mode
> sock0@eth0:0 rxdrop xdp-skb
> pps pkts 1.00
> rx 95638 717251
> tx 0 0
>
> # xdp2 eth0
> proto 0: 475362 pkt/s
> proto 0: 475549 pkt/s
> proto 0: 475480 pkt/s
> proto 0: 143258 pkt/s
>
> # xdp2 -S eth0 // skb-mode
> proto 17: 56468 pkt/s
> proto 17: 71999 pkt/s
> proto 17: 72000 pkt/s
> proto 17: 71988 pkt/s
>
> Signed-off-by: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>
> ---
> drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h | 34 +-
> drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c | 414 +++++++++++++++++++---
> 2 files changed, 393 insertions(+), 55 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
> index b0100fe3c9e4..f7531503aa95 100644
> --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
> +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
> @@ -346,8 +346,10 @@ struct bufdesc_ex {
> * the skbuffer directly.
> */
>
> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM (512) /* XDP_PACKET_HEADROOM + NET_IP_ALIGN) */

Why the large headroom?

> +
> #define FEC_ENET_RX_PAGES 256
> -#define FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE 2048
> +#define FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE (PAGE_SIZE - FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM)

This FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE is likely wrong, because you also need to
reserve 320 bytes at the end for struct skb_shared_info.
(320 calculated as SKB_DATA_ALIGN(sizeof(struct skb_shared_info)))

> #define FEC_ENET_RX_FRPPG (PAGE_SIZE / FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE)
> #define RX_RING_SIZE (FEC_ENET_RX_FRPPG * FEC_ENET_RX_PAGES)
> #define FEC_ENET_TX_FRSIZE 2048
> @@ -517,6 +519,22 @@ struct bufdesc_prop {
[...]

> diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
> index 59921218a8a4..2e30182ed770 100644
> --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
> +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
> @@ -66,6 +66,8 @@
> #include <linux/mfd/syscon.h>
> #include <linux/regmap.h>
> #include <soc/imx/cpuidle.h>
> +#include <linux/filter.h>
> +#include <linux/bpf.h>
>
> #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
>
> @@ -87,6 +89,11 @@ static const u16 fec_enet_vlan_pri_to_queue[8] = {0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2};
> #define FEC_ENET_OPD_V 0xFFF0
> #define FEC_MDIO_PM_TIMEOUT 100 /* ms */
>
> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS 0
> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_CONSUMED BIT(0)
> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_TX BIT(1)
> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_REDIR BIT(2)
> +
> struct fec_devinfo {
> u32 quirks;
> };
> @@ -422,6 +429,49 @@ fec_enet_clear_csum(struct sk_buff *skb, struct net_device *ndev)
> return 0;
> }
>
> +static int
> +fec_enet_create_page_pool(struct fec_enet_private *fep,
> + struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq, int size)
> +{
> + struct bpf_prog *xdp_prog = READ_ONCE(fep->xdp_prog);
> + struct page_pool_params pp_params = {
> + .order = 0,
> + .flags = PP_FLAG_DMA_MAP | PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV,
> + .pool_size = size,
> + .nid = dev_to_node(&fep->pdev->dev),
> + .dev = &fep->pdev->dev,
> + .dma_dir = xdp_prog ? DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL : DMA_FROM_DEVICE,
> + .offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM,
> + .max_len = FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE,

XDP BPF-prog cannot access last 320 bytes, so FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE is
wrong here.

> + };
> + int err;
> +
> + rxq->page_pool = page_pool_create(&pp_params);
> + if (IS_ERR(rxq->page_pool)) {
> + err = PTR_ERR(rxq->page_pool);
> + rxq->page_pool = NULL;
> + return err;
> + }
> +
> + err = xdp_rxq_info_reg(&rxq->xdp_rxq, fep->netdev, rxq->id, 0);
> + if (err < 0)
> + goto err_free_pp;
> +
> + err = xdp_rxq_info_reg_mem_model(&rxq->xdp_rxq, MEM_TYPE_PAGE_POOL,
> + rxq->page_pool);
> + if (err)
> + goto err_unregister_rxq;
> +
> + return 0;
> +
> +err_unregister_rxq:
> + xdp_rxq_info_unreg(&rxq->xdp_rxq);
> +err_free_pp:
> + page_pool_destroy(rxq->page_pool);
> + rxq->page_pool = NULL;
> + return err;
> +}
> +
> static struct bufdesc *
> fec_enet_txq_submit_frag_skb(struct fec_enet_priv_tx_q *txq,
> struct sk_buff *skb,
> @@ -1285,7 +1335,6 @@ fec_stop(struct net_device *ndev)
> }
> }
>
> -
> static void
> fec_timeout(struct net_device *ndev, unsigned int txqueue)
> {
> @@ -1450,7 +1499,7 @@ static void fec_enet_tx(struct net_device *ndev)
> fec_enet_tx_queue(ndev, i);
> }
>
> -static int
> +static int __maybe_unused
> fec_enet_new_rxbdp(struct net_device *ndev, struct bufdesc *bdp, struct sk_buff *skb)
> {
> struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev);
> @@ -1470,8 +1519,9 @@ fec_enet_new_rxbdp(struct net_device *ndev, struct bufdesc *bdp, struct sk_buff
> return 0;
> }
>
> -static bool fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
> - struct bufdesc *bdp, u32 length, bool swap)
> +static bool __maybe_unused
> +fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
> + struct bufdesc *bdp, u32 length, bool swap)
> {
> struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev);
> struct sk_buff *new_skb;
> @@ -1496,6 +1546,78 @@ static bool fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
> return true;
> }
>
> +static void fec_enet_update_cbd(struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq,
> + struct bufdesc *bdp, int index)
> +{
> + struct page *new_page;
> + dma_addr_t phys_addr;
> +
> + new_page = page_pool_dev_alloc_pages(rxq->page_pool);
> + WARN_ON(!new_page);
> + rxq->rx_skb_info[index].page = new_page;
> +
> + rxq->rx_skb_info[index].offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
> + phys_addr = page_pool_get_dma_addr(new_page) + FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
> + bdp->cbd_bufaddr = cpu_to_fec32(phys_addr);
> +}
> +
> +static u32
> +fec_enet_run_xdp(struct fec_enet_private *fep, struct bpf_prog *prog,
> + struct xdp_buff *xdp, struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq, int index)
> +{
> + unsigned int sync, len = xdp->data_end - xdp->data;
> + u32 ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
> + struct page *page;
> + int err;
> + u32 act;
> +
> + act = bpf_prog_run_xdp(prog, xdp);
> +
> + /* Due xdp_adjust_tail: DMA sync for_device cover max len CPU touch */
> + sync = xdp->data_end - xdp->data_hard_start - FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
> + sync = max(sync, len);
> +
> + switch (act) {
> + case XDP_PASS:
> + rxq->stats.xdp_pass++;
> + ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
> + break;
> +
> + case XDP_TX:
> + rxq->stats.xdp_tx++;
> + bpf_warn_invalid_xdp_action(fep->netdev, prog, act);
> + fallthrough;

This fallthrough looks wrong. The next xdp_do_redirect() call will
pickup left-overs in per CPU bpf_redirect_info.

> +
> + case XDP_REDIRECT:
> + err = xdp_do_redirect(fep->netdev, xdp, prog);
> + rxq->stats.xdp_redirect++;
> + if (!err) {
> + ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_REDIR;
> + } else {
> + ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_CONSUMED;
> + page = virt_to_head_page(xdp->data);
> + page_pool_put_page(rxq->page_pool, page, sync, true);
> + }
> + break;
> +
> + default:
> + bpf_warn_invalid_xdp_action(fep->netdev, prog, act);
> + fallthrough;
> +
> + case XDP_ABORTED:
> + fallthrough; /* handle aborts by dropping packet */
> +
> + case XDP_DROP:
> + rxq->stats.xdp_drop++;
> + ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_CONSUMED;
> + page = virt_to_head_page(xdp->data);
> + page_pool_put_page(rxq->page_pool, page, sync, true);
> + break;
> + }
> +
> + return ret;
> +}
> +
> /* During a receive, the bd_rx.cur points to the current incoming buffer.
> * When we update through the ring, if the next incoming buffer has
> * not been given to the system, we just set the empty indicator,
> @@ -1508,7 +1630,6 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
> struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq;
> struct bufdesc *bdp;
> unsigned short status;
> - struct sk_buff *skb_new = NULL;
> struct sk_buff *skb;
> ushort pkt_len;
> __u8 *data;
> @@ -1517,8 +1638,12 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
> bool vlan_packet_rcvd = false;
> u16 vlan_tag;
> int index = 0;
> - bool is_copybreak;
> bool need_swap = fep->quirks & FEC_QUIRK_SWAP_FRAME;
> + struct page *page;
> + struct xdp_buff xdp;
> + u32 ret, xdp_result = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
> +
> + struct bpf_prog *xdp_prog = READ_ONCE(fep->xdp_prog);
>
> #ifdef CONFIG_M532x
> flush_cache_all();
> @@ -1529,6 +1654,7 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
> * These get messed up if we get called due to a busy condition.
> */
> bdp = rxq->bd.cur;
> + xdp_init_buff(&xdp, PAGE_SIZE, &rxq->xdp_rxq);
>
> while (!((status = fec16_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_sc)) & BD_ENET_RX_EMPTY)) {
>
> @@ -1570,31 +1696,37 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
> ndev->stats.rx_bytes += pkt_len;
>
> index = fec_enet_get_bd_index(bdp, &rxq->bd);
> - skb = rxq->rx_skbuff[index];
> + page = rxq->rx_skb_info[index].page;
> +
> + dma_sync_single_for_cpu(&fep->pdev->dev,
> + fec32_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_bufaddr),
> + pkt_len,
> + DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
> +
> + prefetch(page_address(page));
> + fec_enet_update_cbd(rxq, bdp, index);
> +
> + if (xdp_prog) {
> + xdp_prepare_buff(&xdp, page_address(page),
> + FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM, pkt_len, false);
> +
> + ret = fec_enet_run_xdp(fep, xdp_prog, &xdp, rxq, index);
> + xdp_result |= ret;
> + if (ret != FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS)
> + goto rx_processing_done;
> + }
>
> /* The packet length includes FCS, but we don't want to
> * include that when passing upstream as it messes up
> * bridging applications.
> */
> - is_copybreak = fec_enet_copybreak(ndev, &skb, bdp, pkt_len - 4,
> - need_swap);
> - if (!is_copybreak) {
> - skb_new = netdev_alloc_skb(ndev, FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE);
> - if (unlikely(!skb_new)) {
> - ndev->stats.rx_dropped++;
> - goto rx_processing_done;
> - }
> - dma_unmap_single(&fep->pdev->dev,
> - fec32_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_bufaddr),
> - FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE - fep->rx_align,
> - DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
> - }
> -
> - prefetch(skb->data - NET_IP_ALIGN);
> + skb = build_skb(page_address(page), FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE);

This looks wrong, I think FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE should be replaced by
PAGE_SIZE.
As build_skb() does:

size -= SKB_DATA_ALIGN(sizeof(struct skb_shared_info));

> + skb_reserve(skb, FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM);

The skb_reserve looks correct.

> skb_put(skb, pkt_len - 4);
> data = skb->data;
> + page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page);

Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might have looked at
drivers that didn't utilize this yet), thus you don't need to release
the page (page_pool_release_page) here. Instead you could simply mark
the SKB for recycling, unless driver does some page refcnt tricks I
didn't notice.

skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);


> - if (!is_copybreak && need_swap)
> + if (need_swap)
> swap_buffer(data, pkt_len);
>
> #if !defined(CONFIG_M5272)
> @@ -1649,16 +1781,6 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int budget, u16 queue_id)
[...]

2022-09-29 13:10:58

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> Sent: Wednesday, September 28, 2022 8:34 PM
> To: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>
> Cc: Joakim Zhang <[email protected]>; David S. Miller
> <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub
> Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>; Alexei
> Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>;
> Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John Fastabend
> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> [email protected]; [email protected]
> Subject: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>
> Caution: EXT Email
>
> On Wed, Sep 28, 2022 at 10:25:09AM -0500, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> > This patch adds the initial XDP support to Freescale driver. It
> > supports XDP_PASS, XDP_DROP and XDP_REDIRECT actions. Upcoming
> patches
> > will add support for XDP_TX and Zero Copy features.
> >
> > This patch also optimizes the RX buffers by using the page pool, which
> > uses one frame per page for easy management. In the future, it can be
> > further improved to use two frames per page.
>
> Please could you split this patch up. It is rather large and hard to review. I think
> you can first add support for the page pool, and then add XDP support, for
> example.
>

Will do it in the next version. Thanks for the review.

> I would be interesting to see how the page pool helps performance for normal
> traffic, since that is what most people use it for. And for a range of devices,
> since we need to make sure it does not cause any regressions for older devices.
>

I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for normal traffic.
So far I don't see significant improvement in the current implementation. The performance for large packets improves a little, and the performance for small packets get a little worse.

Thanks,
Shenwei

> Andrew

2022-09-29 13:32:20

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> Sent: Wednesday, September 28, 2022 8:51 PM
> To: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>
> Cc: Joakim Zhang <[email protected]>; David S. Miller
> <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub
> Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>; Alexei
> Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>;
> Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John Fastabend
> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> [email protected]; [email protected]
> Subject: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>
> Caution: EXT Email
>
> > +struct fec_enet_xdp_stats {
> > + u64 xdp_pass;
> > + u64 xdp_drop;
> > + u64 xdp_xmit;
> > + u64 xdp_redirect;
> > + u64 xdp_xmit_err;
> > + u64 xdp_tx;
> > + u64 xdp_tx_err;
> > +};
> > +
> > + switch (act) {
> > + case XDP_PASS:
> > + rxq->stats.xdp_pass++;
>
> Since the stats are u64, and most machines using the FEC are 32 bit, you cannot
> just do an increment. Took a look at u64_stats_sync.h.
>

As this increment is only executed under the NAPI kthread context, is the protection still required?

> > -#define FEC_STATS_SIZE (ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats) * sizeof(u64))
> > +static struct fec_xdp_stat {
> > + char name[ETH_GSTRING_LEN];
> > + u32 count;
> > +} fec_xdp_stats[] = {
> > + { "rx_xdp_redirect", 0 },
> > + { "rx_xdp_pass", 0 },
> > + { "rx_xdp_drop", 0 },
> > + { "rx_xdp_tx", 0 },
> > + { "rx_xdp_tx_errors", 0 },
> > + { "tx_xdp_xmit", 0 },
> > + { "tx_xdp_xmit_errors", 0 },
> > +};
> > +
> > +#define FEC_STATS_SIZE ((ARRAY_SIZE(fec_stats) + \
> > + ARRAY_SIZE(fec_xdp_stats)) * sizeof(u64))
>
> The page pool also has some stats. See page_pool_get_stats(),
> page_pool_ethtool_stats_get_strings() etc.
>

Will add those stats in the next version.

Thanks,
Shenwei

> Andrew

2022-09-29 13:38:19

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 5:17 AM
> To: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>; Joakim Zhang
> <[email protected]>; David S. Miller <[email protected]>; Eric
> Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo
> Abeni <[email protected]>
> > diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
> > b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
> > index b0100fe3c9e4..f7531503aa95 100644
> > --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
> > +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
> > @@ -346,8 +346,10 @@ struct bufdesc_ex {
> > * the skbuffer directly.
> > */
> >
> > +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM (512) /* XDP_PACKET_HEADROOM
> + NET_IP_ALIGN) */
>
> Why the large headroom?
>

The accurate value here should be "XDP_PACKET_HEADROOM (256) + NET_IP_ALIGN" which then aligns with 64 bytes. So 256 + 64 should be enough here.

> > +
> > #define FEC_ENET_RX_PAGES 256
> > -#define FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE 2048
> > +#define FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE (PAGE_SIZE - FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM)
>
> This FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE is likely wrong, because you also need to reserve 320
> bytes at the end for struct skb_shared_info.
> (320 calculated as SKB_DATA_ALIGN(sizeof(struct skb_shared_info)))
>
> > #define FEC_ENET_RX_FRPPG (PAGE_SIZE / FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE)
> > #define RX_RING_SIZE (FEC_ENET_RX_FRPPG *
> FEC_ENET_RX_PAGES)
> > #define FEC_ENET_TX_FRSIZE 2048
> > @@ -517,6 +519,22 @@ struct bufdesc_prop {
> [...]
>
> > diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
> > b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
> > index 59921218a8a4..2e30182ed770 100644
> > --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
> > +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
> > @@ -66,6 +66,8 @@
> > #include <linux/mfd/syscon.h>
> > #include <linux/regmap.h>
> > #include <soc/imx/cpuidle.h>
> > +#include <linux/filter.h>
> > +#include <linux/bpf.h>
> >
> > #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
> >
> > @@ -87,6 +89,11 @@ static const u16 fec_enet_vlan_pri_to_queue[8] = {0, 0,
> 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2};
> > #define FEC_ENET_OPD_V 0xFFF0
> > #define FEC_MDIO_PM_TIMEOUT 100 /* ms */
> >
> > +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS 0
> > +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_CONSUMED BIT(0)
> > +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_TX BIT(1)
> > +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_REDIR BIT(2)
> > +
> > struct fec_devinfo {
> > u32 quirks;
> > };
> > @@ -422,6 +429,49 @@ fec_enet_clear_csum(struct sk_buff *skb, struct
> net_device *ndev)
> > return 0;
> > }
> >
> > +static int
> > +fec_enet_create_page_pool(struct fec_enet_private *fep,
> > + struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq, int size) {
> > + struct bpf_prog *xdp_prog = READ_ONCE(fep->xdp_prog);
> > + struct page_pool_params pp_params = {
> > + .order = 0,
> > + .flags = PP_FLAG_DMA_MAP | PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV,
> > + .pool_size = size,
> > + .nid = dev_to_node(&fep->pdev->dev),
> > + .dev = &fep->pdev->dev,
> > + .dma_dir = xdp_prog ? DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL : DMA_FROM_DEVICE,
> > + .offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM,
> > + .max_len = FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE,
>
> XDP BPF-prog cannot access last 320 bytes, so FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE is wrong
> here.
>

So the FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE should subtract the sizeof(struct skb_shared_info) in the definition, right?

> > + };
> > + int err;
> > +
> > + rxq->page_pool = page_pool_create(&pp_params);
> > + if (IS_ERR(rxq->page_pool)) {
> > + err = PTR_ERR(rxq->page_pool);
> > + rxq->page_pool = NULL;
> > + return err;
> > + }
> > +
> > + err = xdp_rxq_info_reg(&rxq->xdp_rxq, fep->netdev, rxq->id, 0);
> > + if (err < 0)
> > + goto err_free_pp;
> > +
> > + err = xdp_rxq_info_reg_mem_model(&rxq->xdp_rxq,
> MEM_TYPE_PAGE_POOL,
> > + rxq->page_pool);
> > + if (err)
> > + goto err_unregister_rxq;
> > +
> > + return 0;
> > +
> > +err_unregister_rxq:
> > + xdp_rxq_info_unreg(&rxq->xdp_rxq);
> > +err_free_pp:
> > + page_pool_destroy(rxq->page_pool);
> > + rxq->page_pool = NULL;
> > + return err;
> > +}
> > +
> > static struct bufdesc *
> > fec_enet_txq_submit_frag_skb(struct fec_enet_priv_tx_q *txq,
> > struct sk_buff *skb, @@ -1285,7 +1335,6 @@
> > fec_stop(struct net_device *ndev)
> > }
> > }
> >
> > -
> > static void
> > fec_timeout(struct net_device *ndev, unsigned int txqueue)
> > {
> > @@ -1450,7 +1499,7 @@ static void fec_enet_tx(struct net_device *ndev)
> > fec_enet_tx_queue(ndev, i);
> > }
> >
> > -static int
> > +static int __maybe_unused
> > fec_enet_new_rxbdp(struct net_device *ndev, struct bufdesc *bdp, struct
> sk_buff *skb)
> > {
> > struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev); @@ -1470,8
> > +1519,9 @@ fec_enet_new_rxbdp(struct net_device *ndev, struct bufdesc
> *bdp, struct sk_buff
> > return 0;
> > }
> >
> > -static bool fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
> > - struct bufdesc *bdp, u32 length, bool swap)
> > +static bool __maybe_unused
> > +fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
> > + struct bufdesc *bdp, u32 length, bool swap)
> > {
> > struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev);
> > struct sk_buff *new_skb;
> > @@ -1496,6 +1546,78 @@ static bool fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device
> *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
> > return true;
> > }
> >
> > +static void fec_enet_update_cbd(struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq,
> > + struct bufdesc *bdp, int index) {
> > + struct page *new_page;
> > + dma_addr_t phys_addr;
> > +
> > + new_page = page_pool_dev_alloc_pages(rxq->page_pool);
> > + WARN_ON(!new_page);
> > + rxq->rx_skb_info[index].page = new_page;
> > +
> > + rxq->rx_skb_info[index].offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
> > + phys_addr = page_pool_get_dma_addr(new_page) +
> FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
> > + bdp->cbd_bufaddr = cpu_to_fec32(phys_addr); }
> > +
> > +static u32
> > +fec_enet_run_xdp(struct fec_enet_private *fep, struct bpf_prog *prog,
> > + struct xdp_buff *xdp, struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq,
> > +int index) {
> > + unsigned int sync, len = xdp->data_end - xdp->data;
> > + u32 ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
> > + struct page *page;
> > + int err;
> > + u32 act;
> > +
> > + act = bpf_prog_run_xdp(prog, xdp);
> > +
> > + /* Due xdp_adjust_tail: DMA sync for_device cover max len CPU touch */
> > + sync = xdp->data_end - xdp->data_hard_start -
> FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
> > + sync = max(sync, len);
> > +
> > + switch (act) {
> > + case XDP_PASS:
> > + rxq->stats.xdp_pass++;
> > + ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
> > + break;
> > +
> > + case XDP_TX:
> > + rxq->stats.xdp_tx++;
> > + bpf_warn_invalid_xdp_action(fep->netdev, prog, act);
> > + fallthrough;
>
> This fallthrough looks wrong. The next xdp_do_redirect() call will pickup left-
> overs in per CPU bpf_redirect_info.
>

So before the XDP_TX is implemented, this part of codes should reside below the XDP_REDIRECT case?

> > +
> > + case XDP_REDIRECT:
> > + err = xdp_do_redirect(fep->netdev, xdp, prog);
> > + rxq->stats.xdp_redirect++;
> > - dma_unmap_single(&fep->pdev->dev,
...

> > - fec32_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_bufaddr),
> > - FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE - fep->rx_align,
> > - DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
> > - }
> > -
> > - prefetch(skb->data - NET_IP_ALIGN);
> > + skb = build_skb(page_address(page), FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE);
>
> This looks wrong, I think FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE should be replaced by PAGE_SIZE.
> As build_skb() does:
>
> size -= SKB_DATA_ALIGN(sizeof(struct skb_shared_info));
>

Agree. As the current FRSIZE definition did not subtract the sizeof(struct skb_shared_info), I happened to not see the problem during the testing.

Thanks,
Shenwei

> > + skb_reserve(skb, FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM);
>
> The skb_reserve looks correct.
>
> > skb_put(skb, pkt_len - 4);
> > data = skb->data;
> > + page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page);
>
> Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might have looked at drivers
> that didn't utilize this yet), thus you don't need to release the page
> (page_pool_release_page) here. Instead you could simply mark the SKB for
> recycling, unless driver does some page refcnt tricks I didn't notice.
>
> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
>
>
> > - if (!is_copybreak && need_swap)
> > + if (need_swap)
> > swap_buffer(data, pkt_len);
> >
> > #if !defined(CONFIG_M5272)
> > @@ -1649,16 +1781,6 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int
> > budget, u16 queue_id)
> [...]

2022-09-29 14:02:18

by Andrew Lunn

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

> I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for
> normal traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in the
> current implementation. The performance for large packets improves a
> little, and the performance for small packets get a little worse.

What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all use
the FEC.

By small packets, do you mean those under the copybreak limit?

Please provide some benchmark numbers with your next patchset.

Andrew

2022-09-29 14:06:02

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 8:23 AM
> To: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>
> Cc: Joakim Zhang <[email protected]>; David S. Miller
> <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub
> Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>; Alexei
> Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>;
> Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John Fastabend
> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> [email protected]; [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>
> Caution: EXT Email
>
> > I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for normal
> > traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in the current
> > implementation. The performance for large packets improves a little,
> > and the performance for small packets get a little worse.
>
> What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all use the FEC.

I tested on imx8qxp platform. It is ARM64.

>
> By small packets, do you mean those under the copybreak limit?
>
> Please provide some benchmark numbers with your next patchset.

Yes, the packet size is 64 bytes and it is under the copybreak limit. As the impact is not significant, I would prefer to remove the copybreak logic.

Thanks,
Shenwei

>
> Andrew

2022-09-29 15:31:34

by Andrew Lunn

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

> > > I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for normal
> > > traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in the current
> > > implementation. The performance for large packets improves a little,
> > > and the performance for small packets get a little worse.
> >
> > What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all use the FEC.
>
> I tested on imx8qxp platform. It is ARM64.

Please also test the older platforms. imx8 is quite powerful, so some
performance loss does not matter too much. But for the older systems,
i know people has spent a lot of time and effort optimising network
performance, and they will be unhappy if you make it slower.

> > By small packets, do you mean those under the copybreak limit?
> >
> > Please provide some benchmark numbers with your next patchset.
>

> Yes, the packet size is 64 bytes and it is under the copybreak
> limit. As the impact is not significant, I would prefer to remove
> the copybreak logic.

Lets look at the benchmark numbers, what you actually mean by not
significant, and across a range of hardware.

Andrew

2022-09-29 15:37:02

by Jesper Dangaard Brouer

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



On 29/09/2022 15.26, Shenwei Wang wrote:
>
>> From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
>> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 8:23 AM
[...]
>>
>>> I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for normal
>>> traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in the current
>>> implementation. The performance for large packets improves a little,
>>> and the performance for small packets get a little worse.
>>
>> What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all use the FEC.
>
> I tested on imx8qxp platform. It is ARM64.

On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:

page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page);
with
skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);

As I mentioned: Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might have
looked at drivers that didn't utilize this yet), thus you don't need to
release the page (page_pool_release_page) here. Instead you could
simply mark the SKB for recycling, unless driver does some page refcnt
tricks I didn't notice.

On the mvneta driver/platform the DMA unmap (in page_pool_release_page)
was very expensive. This imx8qxp platform might have faster DMA unmap in
case is it cache-coherent.

I would be very interested in knowing if skb_mark_for_recycle() helps on
this platform, for normal network stack performance.

>> By small packets, do you mean those under the copybreak limit?
>>
>> Please provide some benchmark numbers with your next patchset.
>
> Yes, the packet size is 64 bytes and it is under the copybreak limit.
> As the impact is not significant, I would prefer to remove the
> copybreak logic.

+1 to removing this logic if possible, due to maintenance cost.

--Jesper

2022-09-29 16:00:12

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 10:29 AM
> To: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> Cc: [email protected]; Joakim Zhang <[email protected]>; David S.
> Miller <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub
> Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>; Alexei
> Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>;
> Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John Fastabend
> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> [email protected]; [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>
> Caution: EXT Email
>
> On 29/09/2022 15.26, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> >
> >> From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> >> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 8:23 AM
> [...]
> >>
> >>> I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for
> >>> normal traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in the
> >>> current implementation. The performance for large packets improves a
> >>> little, and the performance for small packets get a little worse.
> >>
> >> What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all use the
> FEC.
> >
> > I tested on imx8qxp platform. It is ARM64.
>
> On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:
>
> page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page); with
> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
>
> As I mentioned: Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might have
> looked at drivers that didn't utilize this yet), thus you don't need to release the
> page (page_pool_release_page) here. Instead you could simply mark the SKB
> for recycling, unless driver does some page refcnt tricks I didn't notice.
>
> On the mvneta driver/platform the DMA unmap (in page_pool_release_page)
> was very expensive. This imx8qxp platform might have faster DMA unmap in
> case is it cache-coherent.
>
> I would be very interested in knowing if skb_mark_for_recycle() helps on this
> platform, for normal network stack performance.
>

Did a quick compare testing for the following 3 scenarios:
1. original implementation

shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
------------------------------------------------------------
Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001
TCP window size: 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
------------------------------------------------------------
[ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 49154 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
[ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 104 MBytes 868 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 105 MBytes 881 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 105 MBytes 879 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 104 MBytes 873 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 0.0000-10.0073 sec 1.02 GBytes 875 Mbits/sec

2. Page pool with page_pool_release_page

shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
------------------------------------------------------------
Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001
TCP window size: 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
------------------------------------------------------------
[ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 35924 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
[ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 101 MBytes 849 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 102 MBytes 859 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 103 MBytes 864 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 103 MBytes 865 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 103 MBytes 862 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 102 MBytes 856 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 0.0000-10.0246 sec 1.00 GBytes 858 Mbits/sec


3. page pool with skb_mark_for_recycle

shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
------------------------------------------------------------
Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001
TCP window size: 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
------------------------------------------------------------
[ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 42724 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
[ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 111 MBytes 931 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 0.0000-10.0069 sec 1.09 GBytes 934 Mbits/sec

For small packet size (64 bytes), all three cases have almost the same result:

shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1 -l 64
------------------------------------------------------------
Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001
TCP window size: 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
------------------------------------------------------------
[ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 58204 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
[ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 36.9 MBytes 309 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 36.5 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
[ 1] 0.0000-10.0097 sec 369 MBytes 310 Mbits/sec

Regards,
Shenwei


> >> By small packets, do you mean those under the copybreak limit?
> >>
> >> Please provide some benchmark numbers with your next patchset.
> >
> > Yes, the packet size is 64 bytes and it is under the copybreak limit.
> > As the impact is not significant, I would prefer to remove the
> > copybreak logic.
>
> +1 to removing this logic if possible, due to maintenance cost.
>
> --Jesper

2022-09-29 16:11:18

by Andrew Lunn

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

On Thu, Sep 29, 2022 at 05:28:43PM +0200, Jesper Dangaard Brouer wrote:
>
>
> On 29/09/2022 15.26, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> >
> > > From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> > > Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 8:23 AM
> [...]
> > >
> > > > I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for normal
> > > > traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in the current
> > > > implementation. The performance for large packets improves a little,
> > > > and the performance for small packets get a little worse.
> > >
> > > What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all use the FEC.
> >
> > I tested on imx8qxp platform. It is ARM64.
>
> On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:
>
> page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page);
> with
> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
>
> As I mentioned: Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might have
> looked at drivers that didn't utilize this yet), thus you don't need to
> release the page (page_pool_release_page) here. Instead you could simply
> mark the SKB for recycling, unless driver does some page refcnt tricks I
> didn't notice.
>
> On the mvneta driver/platform the DMA unmap (in page_pool_release_page) was
> very expensive. This imx8qxp platform might have faster DMA unmap in case is
> it cache-coherent.

I don't know about imx8qxp, but i've played with imx6 and Vybrid, and
cache flush and invalidate are very expensive.

Andrew

2022-09-29 16:30:13

by Jesper Dangaard Brouer

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



On 29/09/2022 15.11, Shenwei Wang wrote:
>
>> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
>>
>>> diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
>>> b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
>>> index b0100fe3c9e4..f7531503aa95 100644
>>> --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
>>> +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec.h
>>> @@ -346,8 +346,10 @@ struct bufdesc_ex {
>>> * the skbuffer directly.
>>> */
>>>
>>> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM (512) /* XDP_PACKET_HEADROOM
>> + NET_IP_ALIGN) */
>>
>> Why the large headroom?
>>
>
> The accurate value here should be "XDP_PACKET_HEADROOM (256) +
> NET_IP_ALIGN" which then aligns with 64 bytes. So 256 + 64 should be
> enough here.
>

Most other XDP drivers have 256 bytes headroom.
I don't understand why you just don't keep this at 256, like other drivers ?

>>> +
>>> #define FEC_ENET_RX_PAGES 256
>>> -#define FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE 2048
>>> +#define FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE (PAGE_SIZE - FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM)
>>
>> This FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE is likely wrong, because you also need to reserve 320
>> bytes at the end for struct skb_shared_info.
>> (320 calculated as SKB_DATA_ALIGN(sizeof(struct skb_shared_info)))
>>
>>> #define FEC_ENET_RX_FRPPG (PAGE_SIZE / FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE)
>>> #define RX_RING_SIZE (FEC_ENET_RX_FRPPG *
>> FEC_ENET_RX_PAGES)
>>> #define FEC_ENET_TX_FRSIZE 2048
>>> @@ -517,6 +519,22 @@ struct bufdesc_prop {
>> [...]
>>
>>> diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
>>> b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
>>> index 59921218a8a4..2e30182ed770 100644
>>> --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
>>> +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c
>>> @@ -66,6 +66,8 @@
>>> #include <linux/mfd/syscon.h>
>>> #include <linux/regmap.h>
>>> #include <soc/imx/cpuidle.h>
>>> +#include <linux/filter.h>
>>> +#include <linux/bpf.h>
>>>
>>> #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
>>>
>>> @@ -87,6 +89,11 @@ static const u16 fec_enet_vlan_pri_to_queue[8] = {0, 0,
>> 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2};
>>> #define FEC_ENET_OPD_V 0xFFF0
>>> #define FEC_MDIO_PM_TIMEOUT 100 /* ms */
>>>
>>> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS 0
>>> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_CONSUMED BIT(0)
>>> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_TX BIT(1)
>>> +#define FEC_ENET_XDP_REDIR BIT(2)
>>> +
>>> struct fec_devinfo {
>>> u32 quirks;
>>> };
>>> @@ -422,6 +429,49 @@ fec_enet_clear_csum(struct sk_buff *skb, struct
>> net_device *ndev)
>>> return 0;
>>> }
>>>
>>> +static int
>>> +fec_enet_create_page_pool(struct fec_enet_private *fep,
>>> + struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq, int size) {
>>> + struct bpf_prog *xdp_prog = READ_ONCE(fep->xdp_prog);
>>> + struct page_pool_params pp_params = {
>>> + .order = 0,
>>> + .flags = PP_FLAG_DMA_MAP | PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV,
>>> + .pool_size = size,
>>> + .nid = dev_to_node(&fep->pdev->dev),
>>> + .dev = &fep->pdev->dev,
>>> + .dma_dir = xdp_prog ? DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL : DMA_FROM_DEVICE,
>>> + .offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM,
>>> + .max_len = FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE,
>>
>> XDP BPF-prog cannot access last 320 bytes, so FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE is wrong
>> here.
>>
>
> So the FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE should subtract the sizeof(struct
> skb_shared_info) in the definition, right?
>

Yes correct, but use:
SKB_DATA_ALIGN(sizeof(struct skb_shared_info))


>>> + };
>>> + int err;
>>> +
>>> + rxq->page_pool = page_pool_create(&pp_params);
>>> + if (IS_ERR(rxq->page_pool)) {
>>> + err = PTR_ERR(rxq->page_pool);
>>> + rxq->page_pool = NULL;
>>> + return err;
>>> + }
>>> +
>>> + err = xdp_rxq_info_reg(&rxq->xdp_rxq, fep->netdev, rxq->id, 0);
>>> + if (err < 0)
>>> + goto err_free_pp;
>>> +
>>> + err = xdp_rxq_info_reg_mem_model(&rxq->xdp_rxq, MEM_TYPE_PAGE_POOL,
>>> + rxq->page_pool);
>>> + if (err)
>>> + goto err_unregister_rxq;
>>> +
>>> + return 0;
>>> +
>>> +err_unregister_rxq:
>>> + xdp_rxq_info_unreg(&rxq->xdp_rxq);
>>> +err_free_pp:
>>> + page_pool_destroy(rxq->page_pool);
>>> + rxq->page_pool = NULL;
>>> + return err;
>>> +}
>>> +
>>> static struct bufdesc *
>>> fec_enet_txq_submit_frag_skb(struct fec_enet_priv_tx_q *txq,
>>> struct sk_buff *skb, @@ -1285,7 +1335,6 @@
>>> fec_stop(struct net_device *ndev)
>>> }
>>> }
>>>
>>> -
>>> static void
>>> fec_timeout(struct net_device *ndev, unsigned int txqueue)
>>> {
>>> @@ -1450,7 +1499,7 @@ static void fec_enet_tx(struct net_device *ndev)
>>> fec_enet_tx_queue(ndev, i);
>>> }
>>>
>>> -static int
>>> +static int __maybe_unused
>>> fec_enet_new_rxbdp(struct net_device *ndev, struct bufdesc *bdp, struct sk_buff *skb)
>>> {
>>> struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev); @@ -1470,8
>>> +1519,9 @@ fec_enet_new_rxbdp(struct net_device *ndev, struct bufdesc
>> *bdp, struct sk_buff
>>> return 0;
>>> }
>>>
>>> -static bool fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
>>> - struct bufdesc *bdp, u32 length, bool swap)
>>> +static bool __maybe_unused
>>> +fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
>>> + struct bufdesc *bdp, u32 length, bool swap)
>>> {
>>> struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(ndev);
>>> struct sk_buff *new_skb;
>>> @@ -1496,6 +1546,78 @@ static bool fec_enet_copybreak(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff **skb,
>>> return true;
>>> }
>>>
>>> +static void fec_enet_update_cbd(struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq,
>>> + struct bufdesc *bdp, int index) {
>>> + struct page *new_page;
>>> + dma_addr_t phys_addr;
>>> +
>>> + new_page = page_pool_dev_alloc_pages(rxq->page_pool);
>>> + WARN_ON(!new_page);
>>> + rxq->rx_skb_info[index].page = new_page;
>>> +
>>> + rxq->rx_skb_info[index].offset = FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
>>> + phys_addr = page_pool_get_dma_addr(new_page) + FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
>>> + bdp->cbd_bufaddr = cpu_to_fec32(phys_addr); }
>>> +
>>> +static u32
>>> +fec_enet_run_xdp(struct fec_enet_private *fep, struct bpf_prog *prog,
>>> + struct xdp_buff *xdp, struct fec_enet_priv_rx_q *rxq,
>>> +int index) {
>>> + unsigned int sync, len = xdp->data_end - xdp->data;
>>> + u32 ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
>>> + struct page *page;
>>> + int err;
>>> + u32 act;
>>> +
>>> + act = bpf_prog_run_xdp(prog, xdp);
>>> +
>>> + /* Due xdp_adjust_tail: DMA sync for_device cover max len CPU touch */
>>> + sync = xdp->data_end - xdp->data_hard_start - FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM;
>>> + sync = max(sync, len);
>>> +
>>> + switch (act) {
>>> + case XDP_PASS:
>>> + rxq->stats.xdp_pass++;
>>> + ret = FEC_ENET_XDP_PASS;
>>> + break;
>>> +
>>> + case XDP_TX:
>>> + rxq->stats.xdp_tx++;
>>> + bpf_warn_invalid_xdp_action(fep->netdev, prog, act);
>>> + fallthrough;
>>
>> This fallthrough looks wrong. The next xdp_do_redirect() call will pickup left-
>> overs in per CPU bpf_redirect_info.
>>
>
> So before the XDP_TX is implemented, this part of codes should reside below the XDP_REDIRECT case?
>

If that fallthrough goes to dropping packet, then yes.

>>> +
>>> + case XDP_REDIRECT:
>>> + err = xdp_do_redirect(fep->netdev, xdp, prog);
>>> + rxq->stats.xdp_redirect++;
>>> - dma_unmap_single(&fep->pdev->dev,
> ...
>
>>> - fec32_to_cpu(bdp->cbd_bufaddr),
>>> - FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE - fep->rx_align,
>>> - DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
>>> - }
>>> -
>>> - prefetch(skb->data - NET_IP_ALIGN);
>>> + skb = build_skb(page_address(page), FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE);
>>
>> This looks wrong, I think FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE should be replaced by PAGE_SIZE.
>> As build_skb() does:
>>
>> size -= SKB_DATA_ALIGN(sizeof(struct skb_shared_info));
>>
>
> Agree. As the current FRSIZE definition did not subtract the sizeof(struct skb_shared_info), I happened to not see the problem during the testing.
>

As I wrote use PAGE_SIZE here.


>>> + skb_reserve(skb, FEC_ENET_XDP_HEADROOM);
>>
>> The skb_reserve looks correct.
>>
>>> skb_put(skb, pkt_len - 4);
>>> data = skb->data;
>>> + page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page);
>>
>> Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might have looked at drivers
>> that didn't utilize this yet), thus you don't need to release the page
>> (page_pool_release_page) here. Instead you could simply mark the SKB for
>> recycling, unless driver does some page refcnt tricks I didn't notice.
>>
>> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);

I hope you try out the above proposed change.

>>
>>> - if (!is_copybreak && need_swap)
>>> + if (need_swap)
>>> swap_buffer(data, pkt_len);
>>>
>>> #if !defined(CONFIG_M5272)
>>> @@ -1649,16 +1781,6 @@ fec_enet_rx_queue(struct net_device *ndev, int
>>> budget, u16 queue_id)
>> [...]
>

2022-09-29 19:02:03

by Jesper Dangaard Brouer

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



On 29/09/2022 17.52, Shenwei Wang wrote:
>
>> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
>>
>> On 29/09/2022 15.26, Shenwei Wang wrote:
>>>
>>>> From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
>>>> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 8:23 AM
>> [...]
>>>>
>>>>> I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for
>>>>> normal traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in the
>>>>> current implementation. The performance for large packets improves a
>>>>> little, and the performance for small packets get a little worse.
>>>>
>>>> What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all use the FEC.
>>>
>>> I tested on imx8qxp platform. It is ARM64.
>>
>> On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:
>>
>> page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page); with
>> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
>>
>> As I mentioned: Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might have
>> looked at drivers that didn't utilize this yet), thus you don't need to release the
>> page (page_pool_release_page) here. Instead you could simply mark the SKB
>> for recycling, unless driver does some page refcnt tricks I didn't notice.
>>
>> On the mvneta driver/platform the DMA unmap (in page_pool_release_page)
>> was very expensive. This imx8qxp platform might have faster DMA unmap in
>> case is it cache-coherent.
>>
>> I would be very interested in knowing if skb_mark_for_recycle() helps on this
>> platform, for normal network stack performance.
>>
>
> Did a quick compare testing for the following 3 scenarios:

Thanks for doing this! :-)

> 1. original implementation
>
> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001
> TCP window size: 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 49154 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 104 MBytes 868 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 105 MBytes 881 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 105 MBytes 879 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 104 MBytes 873 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0073 sec 1.02 GBytes 875 Mbits/sec
>
> 2. Page pool with page_pool_release_page
>
> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001
> TCP window size: 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 35924 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 101 MBytes 849 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 102 MBytes 859 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 103 MBytes 864 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 103 MBytes 865 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 103 MBytes 862 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 102 MBytes 856 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0246 sec 1.00 GBytes 858 Mbits/sec
>
>
> 3. page pool with skb_mark_for_recycle
>
> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001
> TCP window size: 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 42724 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 111 MBytes 931 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0069 sec 1.09 GBytes 934 Mbits/sec

This is a very significant performance improvement (page pool with
skb_mark_for_recycle). This is very close to the max goodput for a
1Gbit/s link.


> For small packet size (64 bytes), all three cases have almost the same result:
>

To me this indicate, that the DMA map/unmap operations on this platform
are indeed more expensive on larger packets. Given this is what
page_pool does, keeping the DMA mapping intact when recycling.

Driver still need DMA-sync, although I notice you set page_pool feature
flag PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV, this is good as page_pool will try to reduce
sync size where possible. E.g. in this SKB case will reduce the DMA-sync
to the max_len=FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE which should also help on performance.


> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1 -l 64
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001
> TCP window size: 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 58204 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 36.9 MBytes 309 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 36.5 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0097 sec 369 MBytes 310 Mbits/sec
>
> Regards,
> Shenwei
>
>
>>>> By small packets, do you mean those under the copybreak limit?
>>>>
>>>> Please provide some benchmark numbers with your next patchset.
>>>
>>> Yes, the packet size is 64 bytes and it is under the copybreak limit.
>>> As the impact is not significant, I would prefer to remove the
>>> copybreak logic.
>>
>> +1 to removing this logic if possible, due to maintenance cost.
>>
>> --Jesper
>

2022-09-30 05:41:36

by kernel test robot

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

Hi Shenwei,

Thank you for the patch! Perhaps something to improve:

[auto build test WARNING on net-next/master]
[also build test WARNING on next-20220927]
[cannot apply to net/master linus/master v6.0-rc7]
[If your patch is applied to the wrong git tree, kindly drop us a note.
And when submitting patch, we suggest to use '--base' as documented in
https://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch#_base_tree_information]

url: https://github.com/intel-lab-lkp/linux/commits/Shenwei-Wang/net-fec-add-initial-XDP-support/20220928-232917
base: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/davem/net-next.git b9a5cbf8ba24e88071a97a51a09ef5cdf0d1f6a1
config: arm-imx_v4_v5_defconfig
compiler: clang version 16.0.0 (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project 791a7ae1ba3efd6bca96338e10ffde557ba83920)
reproduce (this is a W=1 build):
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intel/lkp-tests/master/sbin/make.cross -O ~/bin/make.cross
chmod +x ~/bin/make.cross
# install arm cross compiling tool for clang build
# apt-get install binutils-arm-linux-gnueabi
# https://github.com/intel-lab-lkp/linux/commit/0ef976d16b5d6993db5c83926eaa836fc91a6450
git remote add linux-review https://github.com/intel-lab-lkp/linux
git fetch --no-tags linux-review Shenwei-Wang/net-fec-add-initial-XDP-support/20220928-232917
git checkout 0ef976d16b5d6993db5c83926eaa836fc91a6450
# save the config file
mkdir build_dir && cp config build_dir/.config
COMPILER_INSTALL_PATH=$HOME/0day COMPILER=clang make.cross W=1 O=build_dir ARCH=arm SHELL=/bin/bash drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/ net/core/ net/ethtool/

If you fix the issue, kindly add following tag where applicable
| Reported-by: kernel test robot <[email protected]>

All warnings (new ones prefixed by >>):

>> drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c:3775:9: warning: variable 'nxmit' set but not used [-Wunused-but-set-variable]
int i, nxmit = 0;
^
1 warning generated.


vim +/nxmit +3775 drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.c

3764
3765 static int fec_enet_xdp_xmit(struct net_device *dev,
3766 int num_frames,
3767 struct xdp_frame **frames,
3768 u32 flags)
3769 {
3770 struct fec_enet_private *fep = netdev_priv(dev);
3771 struct fec_enet_priv_tx_q *txq;
3772 int cpu = smp_processor_id();
3773 struct netdev_queue *nq;
3774 unsigned int queue;
> 3775 int i, nxmit = 0;
3776
3777 queue = fec_enet_xdp_get_tx_queue(fep, cpu);
3778 txq = fep->tx_queue[queue];
3779 nq = netdev_get_tx_queue(fep->netdev, queue);
3780
3781 __netif_tx_lock(nq, cpu);
3782
3783 for (i = 0; i < num_frames; i++) {
3784 fec_enet_txq_xmit_frame(fep, txq, frames[i]);
3785 nxmit++;
3786 }
3787
3788 /* Make sure the update to bdp and tx_skbuff are performed. */
3789 wmb();
3790
3791 /* Trigger transmission start */
3792 writel(0, txq->bd.reg_desc_active);
3793
3794 __netif_tx_unlock(nq);
3795
3796 return num_frames;
3797 }
3798

--
0-DAY CI Kernel Test Service
https://01.org/lkp


Attachments:
(No filename) (3.14 kB)
config (106.44 kB)
Download all attachments

2022-10-03 05:45:15

by kernel test robot

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

Hi Shenwei,

Thank you for the patch! Yet something to improve:

[auto build test ERROR on net-next/master]
[also build test ERROR on next-20220930]
[cannot apply to net/master linus/master v6.0]
[If your patch is applied to the wrong git tree, kindly drop us a note.
And when submitting patch, we suggest to use '--base' as documented in
https://git-scm.com/docs/git-format-patch#_base_tree_information]

url: https://github.com/intel-lab-lkp/linux/commits/Shenwei-Wang/net-fec-add-initial-XDP-support/20220928-232917
base: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/davem/net-next.git b9a5cbf8ba24e88071a97a51a09ef5cdf0d1f6a1
config: m68k-m5272c3_defconfig
compiler: m68k-linux-gcc (GCC) 12.1.0
reproduce (this is a W=1 build):
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intel/lkp-tests/master/sbin/make.cross -O ~/bin/make.cross
chmod +x ~/bin/make.cross
# https://github.com/intel-lab-lkp/linux/commit/0ef976d16b5d6993db5c83926eaa836fc91a6450
git remote add linux-review https://github.com/intel-lab-lkp/linux
git fetch --no-tags linux-review Shenwei-Wang/net-fec-add-initial-XDP-support/20220928-232917
git checkout 0ef976d16b5d6993db5c83926eaa836fc91a6450
# save the config file
mkdir build_dir && cp config build_dir/.config
COMPILER_INSTALL_PATH=$HOME/0day COMPILER=gcc-12.1.0 make.cross W=1 O=build_dir ARCH=m68k SHELL=/bin/bash

If you fix the issue, kindly add following tag where applicable
| Reported-by: kernel test robot <[email protected]>

All errors (new ones prefixed by >>):

m68k-linux-ld: drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.o: in function `fec_enet_alloc_buffers':
>> fec_main.c:(.text+0x1c06): undefined reference to `page_pool_alloc_pages'
>> m68k-linux-ld: fec_main.c:(.text+0x1c6a): undefined reference to `page_pool_create'
m68k-linux-ld: drivers/net/ethernet/freescale/fec_main.o: in function `fec_enet_rx_queue':
fec_main.c:(.text+0x3e76): undefined reference to `page_pool_alloc_pages'

--
0-DAY CI Kernel Test Service
https://01.org/lkp


Attachments:
(No filename) (2.05 kB)
config (38.44 kB)
Download all attachments

2022-10-03 13:02:52

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

Hi Jesper,

> >> On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:
> >>
> >> page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page); with
> >> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
> >>

After replacing the page_pool_release_page with the skb_mark_for_recycle, I found something confused me a little in the testing result.
I tested with the sample app of "xdpsock" under two modes: 1. Native (xdpsock -i eth0). 2. Skb-mode (xdpsock -S -i eth0).
The following are the testing result:
With page_pool_release_page (pps) With skb_mark_for_recycle (pps)

SKB-Mode 90K 200K
Native 190K 190K

The skb_mark_for_recycle solution boosted the performance of SKB-Mode to 200K+ PPS. That is even higher than the
performance of Native solution. Is this result reasonable? Do you have any clue why the SKB-Mode performance can
go higher than that of Native one?

Thanks,
Shenwei



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 1:55 PM
> To: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>; Jesper Dangaard Brouer
> <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> Cc: [email protected]; Joakim Zhang <[email protected]>; David S.
> Miller <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub
> Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>; Alexei
> Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>;
> Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John Fastabend
> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> [email protected]; [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>
> Caution: EXT Email
>
> On 29/09/2022 17.52, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> >
> >> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
> >>
> >> On 29/09/2022 15.26, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> >>>> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 8:23 AM
> >> [...]
> >>>>
> >>>>> I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for
> >>>>> normal traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in the
> >>>>> current implementation. The performance for large packets improves
> >>>>> a little, and the performance for small packets get a little worse.
> >>>>
> >>>> What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all use the
> FEC.
> >>>
> >>> I tested on imx8qxp platform. It is ARM64.
> >>
> >> On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:
> >>
> >> page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page); with
> >> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
> >>
> >> As I mentioned: Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might
> >> have looked at drivers that didn't utilize this yet), thus you don't
> >> need to release the page (page_pool_release_page) here. Instead you
> >> could simply mark the SKB for recycling, unless driver does some page refcnt
> tricks I didn't notice.
> >>
> >> On the mvneta driver/platform the DMA unmap (in
> >> page_pool_release_page) was very expensive. This imx8qxp platform
> >> might have faster DMA unmap in case is it cache-coherent.
> >>
> >> I would be very interested in knowing if skb_mark_for_recycle() helps
> >> on this platform, for normal network stack performance.
> >>
> >
> > Did a quick compare testing for the following 3 scenarios:
>
> Thanks for doing this! :-)
>
> > 1. original implementation
> >
> > shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size: 416
> > KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 49154 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> > [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> > [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 104 MBytes 868 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 105 MBytes 881 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 105 MBytes 879 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 104 MBytes 873 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 0.0000-10.0073 sec 1.02 GBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> >
> > 2. Page pool with page_pool_release_page
> >
> > shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size: 416
> > KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 35924 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> > [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> > [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 101 MBytes 849 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 102 MBytes 859 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 103 MBytes 864 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 103 MBytes 865 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 103 MBytes 862 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 102 MBytes 856 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 0.0000-10.0246 sec 1.00 GBytes 858 Mbits/sec
> >
> >
> > 3. page pool with skb_mark_for_recycle
> >
> > shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size: 416
> > KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 42724 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> > [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> > [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 111 MBytes 931 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 0.0000-10.0069 sec 1.09 GBytes 934 Mbits/sec
>
> This is a very significant performance improvement (page pool with
> skb_mark_for_recycle). This is very close to the max goodput for a 1Gbit/s link.
>
>
> > For small packet size (64 bytes), all three cases have almost the same result:
> >
>
> To me this indicate, that the DMA map/unmap operations on this platform are
> indeed more expensive on larger packets. Given this is what page_pool does,
> keeping the DMA mapping intact when recycling.
>
> Driver still need DMA-sync, although I notice you set page_pool feature flag
> PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV, this is good as page_pool will try to reduce sync size
> where possible. E.g. in this SKB case will reduce the DMA-sync to the
> max_len=FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE which should also help on performance.
>
>
> > shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1 -l 64
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size: 416
> > KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 58204 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> > [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> > [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 36.9 MBytes 309 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 36.5 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
> > [ 1] 0.0000-10.0097 sec 369 MBytes 310 Mbits/sec
> >
> > Regards,
> > Shenwei
> >
> >
> >>>> By small packets, do you mean those under the copybreak limit?
> >>>>
> >>>> Please provide some benchmark numbers with your next patchset.
> >>>
> >>> Yes, the packet size is 64 bytes and it is under the copybreak limit.
> >>> As the impact is not significant, I would prefer to remove the
> >>> copybreak logic.
> >>
> >> +1 to removing this logic if possible, due to maintenance cost.
> >>
> >> --Jesper
> >

2022-10-04 11:45:10

by Jesper Dangaard Brouer

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support


On 03/10/2022 14.49, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> Hi Jesper,
>
>>>> On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:
>>>>
>>>> page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page); with
>>>> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
>>>>
>
> After replacing the page_pool_release_page with the
> skb_mark_for_recycle, I found something confused me a little in the
> testing result. >
> I tested with the sample app of "xdpsock" under two modes:
> 1. Native (xdpsock -i eth0).
> 2. Skb-mode (xdpsock -S -i eth0).
Great that you are also testing AF_XDP, but do you have a particular
use-case that needs AF_XDP on this board?

What packet size are used in below results?

> The following are the testing result:
>
> With page_pool_release_page (pps) With skb_mark_for_recycle (pps)
>
> SKB-Mode 90K 200K
> Native 190K 190K
>

The default AF_XDP test with xdpsock is rxdrop IIRC.

Can you test the normal XDP code path and do a XDP_DROP test via the
samples tool 'xdp_rxq_info' and cmdline:

sudo ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth42 --act XDP_DROP --read

And then same with --skb-mode

> The skb_mark_for_recycle solution boosted the performance of SKB-Mode
> to 200K+ PPS. That is even higher than the performance of Native
> solution. Is this result reasonable? Do you have any clue why the
> SKB-Mode performance can go higher than that of Native one?
I might be able to explain this (Cc. AF_XDP maintainers to keep me honest).

When you say "native" *AF_XDP* that isn't Zero-Copy AF_XDP.

Sure, XDP runs in native driver mode and redirects the raw frames into
the AF_XDP socket, but as this isn't zero-copy AF_XDP. Thus, the packets
needs to be copied into the AF_XDP buffers.

As soon as the frame or SKB (for generic XDP) have been copied it is
released/freed by AF_XDP/xsk code (either via xdp_return_buff() or
consume_skb()). Thus, it looks like it really pays off to recycle the
frame via page_pool, also for the SKB consume_skb() case.

I am still a little surprised that to can be faster than native AF_XDP,
as the SKB-mode ("XDP-generic") needs to call through lot more software
layers and convert the SKB to look like an xdp_buff.

--Jesper



>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
>> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 1:55 PM
>> To: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>; Jesper Dangaard Brouer
>> <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
>> Cc: [email protected]; Joakim Zhang <[email protected]>; David S.
>> Miller <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub
>> Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>; Alexei
>> Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>;
>> Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John Fastabend
>> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
>> [email protected]; [email protected]
>> Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>>
>> Caution: EXT Email
>>
>> On 29/09/2022 17.52, Shenwei Wang wrote:
>>>
>>>> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
>>>>
>>>> On 29/09/2022 15.26, Shenwei Wang wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
>>>>>> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 8:23 AM
>>>> [...]
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for
>>>>>>> normal traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in the
>>>>>>> current implementation. The performance for large packets improves
>>>>>>> a little, and the performance for small packets get a little worse.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all use the
>> FEC.
>>>>>
>>>>> I tested on imx8qxp platform. It is ARM64.
>>>>
>>>> On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:
>>>>
>>>> page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page); with
>>>> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
>>>>
>>>> As I mentioned: Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might
>>>> have looked at drivers that didn't utilize this yet), thus you don't
>>>> need to release the page (page_pool_release_page) here. Instead you
>>>> could simply mark the SKB for recycling, unless driver does some page refcnt
>> tricks I didn't notice.
>>>>
>>>> On the mvneta driver/platform the DMA unmap (in
>>>> page_pool_release_page) was very expensive. This imx8qxp platform
>>>> might have faster DMA unmap in case is it cache-coherent.
>>>>
>>>> I would be very interested in knowing if skb_mark_for_recycle() helps
>>>> on this platform, for normal network stack performance.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Did a quick compare testing for the following 3 scenarios:
>>
>> Thanks for doing this! :-)
>>
>>> 1. original implementation
>>>
>>> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size: 416
>>> KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 49154 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
>>> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
>>> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 104 MBytes 868 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 105 MBytes 881 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 105 MBytes 879 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 104 MBytes 873 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0073 sec 1.02 GBytes 875 Mbits/sec
>>>
>>> 2. Page pool with page_pool_release_page
>>>
>>> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size: 416
>>> KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 35924 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
>>> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
>>> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 101 MBytes 849 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 102 MBytes 859 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 103 MBytes 864 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 103 MBytes 865 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 103 MBytes 862 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 102 MBytes 856 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0246 sec 1.00 GBytes 858 Mbits/sec
>>>
>>>
>>> 3. page pool with skb_mark_for_recycle
>>>
>>> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size: 416
>>> KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 42724 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
>>> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
>>> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 111 MBytes 931 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0069 sec 1.09 GBytes 934 Mbits/sec
>>
>> This is a very significant performance improvement (page pool with
>> skb_mark_for_recycle). This is very close to the max goodput for a 1Gbit/s link.
>>
>>
>>> For small packet size (64 bytes), all three cases have almost the same result:
>>>
>>
>> To me this indicate, that the DMA map/unmap operations on this platform are
>> indeed more expensive on larger packets. Given this is what page_pool does,
>> keeping the DMA mapping intact when recycling.
>>
>> Driver still need DMA-sync, although I notice you set page_pool feature flag
>> PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV, this is good as page_pool will try to reduce sync size
>> where possible. E.g. in this SKB case will reduce the DMA-sync to the
>> max_len=FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE which should also help on performance.
>>
>>
>>> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1 -l 64
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size: 416
>>> KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 58204 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
>>> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
>>> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 36.9 MBytes 309 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 36.5 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
>>> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0097 sec 369 MBytes 310 Mbits/sec
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>> Shenwei
>>>
>>>
>>>>>> By small packets, do you mean those under the copybreak limit?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Please provide some benchmark numbers with your next patchset.
>>>>>
>>>>> Yes, the packet size is 64 bytes and it is under the copybreak limit.
>>>>> As the impact is not significant, I would prefer to remove the
>>>>> copybreak logic.
>>>>
>>>> +1 to removing this logic if possible, due to maintenance cost.
>>>>
>>>> --Jesper
>>>
>

2022-10-04 13:20:44

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 6:22 AM
> To: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>; Jesper Dangaard Brouer
> <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> Cc: [email protected]; Joakim Zhang <[email protected]>; David S.
> Miller <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub
> Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>; Alexei
> Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>;
> Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John Fastabend
> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> [email protected]; [email protected]; Magnus Karlsson
> <[email protected]>; Björn Töpel <[email protected]>; Ilias
> Apalodimas <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>
> Caution: EXT Email
>
> On 03/10/2022 14.49, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> > Hi Jesper,
> >
> >>>> On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:
> >>>>
> >>>> page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page); with
> >>>> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
> >>>>
> >
> > After replacing the page_pool_release_page with the
> > skb_mark_for_recycle, I found something confused me a little in the
> > testing result. > I tested with the sample app of "xdpsock" under two
> > modes:
> > 1. Native (xdpsock -i eth0).
> > 2. Skb-mode (xdpsock -S -i eth0).
> Great that you are also testing AF_XDP, but do you have a particular use-case
> that needs AF_XDP on this board?

The purpose is to provide our customers an alternative solution to the current DPDK implementation.

>
> What packet size are used in below results?

The packets were generated by pktgen_sample03_burst_single_flow.sh, and its size is 60 bytes 0 frags.

>
> > The following are the testing result:
> >
> > With page_pool_release_page (pps) With skb_mark_for_recycle
> > (pps)
> >
> > SKB-Mode 90K 200K
> > Native 190K 190K
> >
>
> The default AF_XDP test with xdpsock is rxdrop IIRC.
>
> Can you test the normal XDP code path and do a XDP_DROP test via the samples
> tool 'xdp_rxq_info' and cmdline:
>
> sudo ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth42 --act XDP_DROP --read
>
> And then same with --skb-mode

I haven't tested xdp_rxq_info yet, and will have a try sometime later today. However, for the XDP_DROP test, I
did try xdp2 test case, and the testing result looks reasonable. The performance of Native mode is much higher than skb-mode.

# xdp2 eth0
proto 0: 475362 pkt/s

# xdp2 -S eth0 (page_pool_release_page solution)
proto 17: 71999 pkt/s

# xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
proto 17: 72228 pkt/s

>
> > The skb_mark_for_recycle solution boosted the performance of SKB-Mode
> > to 200K+ PPS. That is even higher than the performance of Native
> > solution. Is this result reasonable? Do you have any clue why the
> > SKB-Mode performance can go higher than that of Native one?
> I might be able to explain this (Cc. AF_XDP maintainers to keep me honest).
>
> When you say "native" *AF_XDP* that isn't Zero-Copy AF_XDP.
>

Right. Zero-copy hasn't been implemented yet.

> Sure, XDP runs in native driver mode and redirects the raw frames into the
> AF_XDP socket, but as this isn't zero-copy AF_XDP. Thus, the packets needs to be
> copied into the AF_XDP buffers.
>
> As soon as the frame or SKB (for generic XDP) have been copied it is
> released/freed by AF_XDP/xsk code (either via xdp_return_buff() or
> consume_skb()). Thus, it looks like it really pays off to recycle the frame via
> page_pool, also for the SKB consume_skb() case.
>
> I am still a little surprised that to can be faster than native AF_XDP, as the SKB-
> mode ("XDP-generic") needs to call through lot more software layers and
> convert the SKB to look like an xdp_buff.

That's what I can't understand right now too.

Thanks very much for the explanations!
Shenwei

>
> --Jesper
>
>
>
> >> -----Original Message-----
> >> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
> >> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 1:55 PM
> >> To: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>; Jesper Dangaard Brouer
> >> <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> >> Cc: [email protected]; Joakim Zhang <[email protected]>; David
> S.
> >> Miller <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>;
> >> Jakub Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>;
> >> Alexei Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann
> >> <[email protected]>; Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>;
> >> John Fastabend <[email protected]>; [email protected];
> >> linux- [email protected]; [email protected]
> >> Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
> >>
> >> Caution: EXT Email
> >>
> >> On 29/09/2022 17.52, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
> >>>>
> >>>> On 29/09/2022 15.26, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>> From: Andrew Lunn <[email protected]>
> >>>>>> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 8:23 AM
> >>>> [...]
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>> I actually did some compare testing regarding the page pool for
> >>>>>>> normal traffic. So far I don't see significant improvement in
> >>>>>>> the current implementation. The performance for large packets
> >>>>>>> improves a little, and the performance for small packets get a little
> worse.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> What hardware was this for? imx51? imx6? imx7 Vybrid? These all
> >>>>>> use the
> >> FEC.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> I tested on imx8qxp platform. It is ARM64.
> >>>>
> >>>> On mvneta driver/platform we saw huge speedup replacing:
> >>>>
> >>>> page_pool_release_page(rxq->page_pool, page); with
> >>>> skb_mark_for_recycle(skb);
> >>>>
> >>>> As I mentioned: Today page_pool have SKB recycle support (you might
> >>>> have looked at drivers that didn't utilize this yet), thus you
> >>>> don't need to release the page (page_pool_release_page) here.
> >>>> Instead you could simply mark the SKB for recycling, unless driver
> >>>> does some page refcnt
> >> tricks I didn't notice.
> >>>>
> >>>> On the mvneta driver/platform the DMA unmap (in
> >>>> page_pool_release_page) was very expensive. This imx8qxp platform
> >>>> might have faster DMA unmap in case is it cache-coherent.
> >>>>
> >>>> I would be very interested in knowing if skb_mark_for_recycle()
> >>>> helps on this platform, for normal network stack performance.
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> Did a quick compare testing for the following 3 scenarios:
> >>
> >> Thanks for doing this! :-)
> >>
> >>> 1. original implementation
> >>>
> >>> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size:
> >>> 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 49154 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> >>> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> >>> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 104 MBytes 868 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 105 MBytes 881 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 105 MBytes 879 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 105 MBytes 878 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 104 MBytes 873 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 104 MBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0073 sec 1.02 GBytes 875 Mbits/sec
> >>>
> >>> 2. Page pool with page_pool_release_page
> >>>
> >>> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size:
> >>> 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 35924 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> >>> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> >>> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 101 MBytes 849 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 102 MBytes 860 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 102 MBytes 859 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 103 MBytes 864 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 103 MBytes 863 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 103 MBytes 865 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 103 MBytes 862 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 102 MBytes 856 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0246 sec 1.00 GBytes 858 Mbits/sec
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> 3. page pool with skb_mark_for_recycle
> >>>
> >>> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1
> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size:
> >>> 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 42724 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> >>> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> >>> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 111 MBytes 931 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 111 MBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 112 MBytes 935 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 111 MBytes 933 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0069 sec 1.09 GBytes 934 Mbits/sec
> >>
> >> This is a very significant performance improvement (page pool with
> >> skb_mark_for_recycle). This is very close to the max goodput for a 1Gbit/s
> link.
> >>
> >>
> >>> For small packet size (64 bytes), all three cases have almost the same result:
> >>>
> >>
> >> To me this indicate, that the DMA map/unmap operations on this
> >> platform are indeed more expensive on larger packets. Given this is
> >> what page_pool does, keeping the DMA mapping intact when recycling.
> >>
> >> Driver still need DMA-sync, although I notice you set page_pool
> >> feature flag PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV, this is good as page_pool will try
> >> to reduce sync size where possible. E.g. in this SKB case will reduce
> >> the DMA-sync to the max_len=FEC_ENET_RX_FRSIZE which should also help
> on performance.
> >>
> >>
> >>> shenwei@5810:~$ iperf -c 10.81.16.245 -w 2m -i 1 -l 64
> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> Client connecting to 10.81.16.245, TCP port 5001 TCP window size:
> >>> 416 KByte (WARNING: requested 1.91 MByte)
> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------
> >>> [ 1] local 10.81.17.20 port 58204 connected with 10.81.16.245 port 5001
> >>> [ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth
> >>> [ 1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec 36.9 MBytes 309 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec 36.6 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec 36.5 MBytes 307 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 311 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec 37.1 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec 37.2 MBytes 312 Mbits/sec
> >>> [ 1] 0.0000-10.0097 sec 369 MBytes 310 Mbits/sec
> >>>
> >>> Regards,
> >>> Shenwei
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>>> By small packets, do you mean those under the copybreak limit?
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Please provide some benchmark numbers with your next patchset.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Yes, the packet size is 64 bytes and it is under the copybreak limit.
> >>>>> As the impact is not significant, I would prefer to remove the
> >>>>> copybreak logic.
> >>>>
> >>>> +1 to removing this logic if possible, due to maintenance cost.
> >>>>
> >>>> --Jesper
> >>>
> >

2022-10-04 13:45:23

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Shenwei Wang
> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 8:13 AM
> To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
...
> I haven't tested xdp_rxq_info yet, and will have a try sometime later today.
> However, for the XDP_DROP test, I did try xdp2 test case, and the testing result
> looks reasonable. The performance of Native mode is much higher than skb-
> mode.
>
> # xdp2 eth0
> proto 0: 475362 pkt/s
>
> # xdp2 -S eth0 (page_pool_release_page solution)
> proto 17: 71999 pkt/s
>
> # xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
> proto 17: 72228 pkt/s
>

Correction for xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
proto 0: 0 pkt/s
proto 17: 122473 pkt/s

Thanks,
Shenwei

2022-10-05 13:04:58

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

Hi Jesper,

Here is the summary of "xdp_rxq_info" testing.

skb_mark_for_recycle page_pool_release_page

Native SKB-Mode Native SKB-Mode
XDP_DROP 460K 220K 460K 102K
XDP_PASS 80K 113K 60K 62K


The following are the testing log.

Thanks,
Shenwei

### skb_mark_for_recycle solution ###

./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read

Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
XDP-RX CPU 0 466,553 0
XDP-RX CPU total 466,553

./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read

Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
XDP-RX CPU 0 226,272 0
XDP-RX CPU total 226,272

./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read

Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
XDP-RX CPU 0 80,518 0
XDP-RX CPU total 80,518

./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read

Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
XDP-RX CPU 0 113,681 0
XDP-RX CPU total 113,681


### page_pool_release_page solution ###

./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read

Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
XDP-RX CPU 0 463,145 0
XDP-RX CPU total 463,145

./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read

Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
XDP-RX CPU 0 104,443 0
XDP-RX CPU total 104,443

./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read

Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
XDP-RX CPU 0 60,539 0
XDP-RX CPU total 60,539

./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read

Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
XDP-RX CPU 0 62,566 0
XDP-RX CPU total 62,566

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Shenwei Wang
> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 8:34 AM
> To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
> <[email protected]>
> Cc: [email protected]; David S. Miller <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet
> <[email protected]>; Jakub Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni
> <[email protected]>; Alexei Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann
> <[email protected]>; Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John
> Fastabend <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> [email protected]; [email protected]; Magnus Karlsson
> <[email protected]>; Björn Töpel <[email protected]>; Ilias
> Apalodimas <[email protected]>
> Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>
>
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Shenwei Wang
> > Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 8:13 AM
> > To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
> ...
> > I haven't tested xdp_rxq_info yet, and will have a try sometime later today.
> > However, for the XDP_DROP test, I did try xdp2 test case, and the
> > testing result looks reasonable. The performance of Native mode is
> > much higher than skb- mode.
> >
> > # xdp2 eth0
> > proto 0: 475362 pkt/s
> >
> > # xdp2 -S eth0 (page_pool_release_page solution)
> > proto 17: 71999 pkt/s
> >
> > # xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
> > proto 17: 72228 pkt/s
> >
>
> Correction for xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
> proto 0: 0 pkt/s
> proto 17: 122473 pkt/s
>
> Thanks,
> Shenwei

2022-10-06 08:57:41

by Jesper Dangaard Brouer

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support



On 05/10/2022 14.40, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> Hi Jesper,
>
> Here is the summary of "xdp_rxq_info" testing.
>
> skb_mark_for_recycle page_pool_release_page
>
> Native SKB-Mode Native SKB-Mode
> XDP_DROP 460K 220K 460K 102K
> XDP_PASS 80K 113K 60K 62K
>

It is very pleasing to see the *huge* performance benefit that page_pool
provide when recycling pages for SKBs (via skb_mark_for_recycle).
I did expect a performance boost, but not around a x2 performance boost.

I guess this platform have a larger overhead for DMA-mapping and
page-allocation.

IMHO it would be valuable to include this result as part of the patch
description when you post the XDP patch again.

Only strange result is XDP_PASS 'Native' is slower that 'SKB-mode'. I
cannot explain why, as XDP_PASS essentially does nothing and just follow
normal driver code to netstack.

Thanks a lot for doing these tests.
--Jesper

> The following are the testing log.
>
> Thanks,
> Shenwei
>
> ### skb_mark_for_recycle solution ###
>
> ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
>
> Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> XDP-RX CPU 0 466,553 0
> XDP-RX CPU total 466,553
>
> ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
>
> Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> XDP-RX CPU 0 226,272 0
> XDP-RX CPU total 226,272
>
> ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
>
> Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> XDP-RX CPU 0 80,518 0
> XDP-RX CPU total 80,518
>
> ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
>
> Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> XDP-RX CPU 0 113,681 0
> XDP-RX CPU total 113,681
>
>
> ### page_pool_release_page solution ###
>
> ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
>
> Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> XDP-RX CPU 0 463,145 0
> XDP-RX CPU total 463,145
>
> ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
>
> Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> XDP-RX CPU 0 104,443 0
> XDP-RX CPU total 104,443
>
> ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
>
> Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> XDP-RX CPU 0 60,539 0
> XDP-RX CPU total 60,539
>
> ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
>
> Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> XDP-RX CPU 0 62,566 0
> XDP-RX CPU total 62,566
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Shenwei Wang
>> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 8:34 AM
>> To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
>> <[email protected]>
>> Cc: [email protected]; David S. Miller <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet
>> <[email protected]>; Jakub Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni
>> <[email protected]>; Alexei Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann
>> <[email protected]>; Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John
>> Fastabend <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
>> [email protected]; [email protected]; Magnus Karlsson
>> <[email protected]>; Björn Töpel <[email protected]>; Ilias
>> Apalodimas <[email protected]>
>> Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>>
>>
>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Shenwei Wang
>>> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 8:13 AM
>>> To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
>> ...
>>> I haven't tested xdp_rxq_info yet, and will have a try sometime later today.
>>> However, for the XDP_DROP test, I did try xdp2 test case, and the
>>> testing result looks reasonable. The performance of Native mode is
>>> much higher than skb- mode.
>>>
>>> # xdp2 eth0
>>> proto 0: 475362 pkt/s
>>>
>>> # xdp2 -S eth0 (page_pool_release_page solution)
>>> proto 17: 71999 pkt/s
>>>
>>> # xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
>>> proto 17: 72228 pkt/s
>>>
>>
>> Correction for xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
>> proto 0: 0 pkt/s
>> proto 17: 122473 pkt/s
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Shenwei
>

2022-10-07 08:22:26

by Ilias Apalodimas

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

Hi Jesper,

On Thu, 6 Oct 2022 at 11:37, Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 05/10/2022 14.40, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> > Hi Jesper,
> >
> > Here is the summary of "xdp_rxq_info" testing.
> >
> > skb_mark_for_recycle page_pool_release_page
> >
> > Native SKB-Mode Native SKB-Mode
> > XDP_DROP 460K 220K 460K 102K
> > XDP_PASS 80K 113K 60K 62K
> >
>
> It is very pleasing to see the *huge* performance benefit that page_pool
> provide when recycling pages for SKBs (via skb_mark_for_recycle).
> I did expect a performance boost, but not around a x2 performance boost.

Indeed that's a pleasant surprise. Keep in mind that if we convert
more driver we
can also get rid of copy_break code sprinkled around in drivers.

Thanks
/Ilias
>
> I guess this platform have a larger overhead for DMA-mapping and
> page-allocation.
>
> IMHO it would be valuable to include this result as part of the patch
> description when you post the XDP patch again.
>
> Only strange result is XDP_PASS 'Native' is slower that 'SKB-mode'. I
> cannot explain why, as XDP_PASS essentially does nothing and just follow
> normal driver code to netstack.
>
> Thanks a lot for doing these tests.
> --Jesper
>
> > The following are the testing log.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Shenwei
> >
> > ### skb_mark_for_recycle solution ###
> >
> > ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
> >
> > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > XDP-RX CPU 0 466,553 0
> > XDP-RX CPU total 466,553
> >
> > ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
> >
> > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > XDP-RX CPU 0 226,272 0
> > XDP-RX CPU total 226,272
> >
> > ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
> >
> > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > XDP-RX CPU 0 80,518 0
> > XDP-RX CPU total 80,518
> >
> > ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
> >
> > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > XDP-RX CPU 0 113,681 0
> > XDP-RX CPU total 113,681
> >
> >
> > ### page_pool_release_page solution ###
> >
> > ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
> >
> > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > XDP-RX CPU 0 463,145 0
> > XDP-RX CPU total 463,145
> >
> > ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
> >
> > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > XDP-RX CPU 0 104,443 0
> > XDP-RX CPU total 104,443
> >
> > ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
> >
> > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > XDP-RX CPU 0 60,539 0
> > XDP-RX CPU total 60,539
> >
> > ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
> >
> > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > XDP-RX CPU 0 62,566 0
> > XDP-RX CPU total 62,566
> >
> >> -----Original Message-----
> >> From: Shenwei Wang
> >> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 8:34 AM
> >> To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
> >> <[email protected]>
> >> Cc: [email protected]; David S. Miller <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet
> >> <[email protected]>; Jakub Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni
> >> <[email protected]>; Alexei Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann
> >> <[email protected]>; Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John
> >> Fastabend <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> >> [email protected]; [email protected]; Magnus Karlsson
> >> <[email protected]>; Björn Töpel <[email protected]>; Ilias
> >> Apalodimas <[email protected]>
> >> Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>> -----Original Message-----
> >>> From: Shenwei Wang
> >>> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 8:13 AM
> >>> To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
> >> ...
> >>> I haven't tested xdp_rxq_info yet, and will have a try sometime later today.
> >>> However, for the XDP_DROP test, I did try xdp2 test case, and the
> >>> testing result looks reasonable. The performance of Native mode is
> >>> much higher than skb- mode.
> >>>
> >>> # xdp2 eth0
> >>> proto 0: 475362 pkt/s
> >>>
> >>> # xdp2 -S eth0 (page_pool_release_page solution)
> >>> proto 17: 71999 pkt/s
> >>>
> >>> # xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
> >>> proto 17: 72228 pkt/s
> >>>
> >>
> >> Correction for xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
> >> proto 0: 0 pkt/s
> >> proto 17: 122473 pkt/s
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >> Shenwei
> >
>

2022-10-07 19:22:05

by Shenwei Wang

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support

Hi Jesper and Ilias,

The driver has a macro to configure the RX ring size. After testing
with the RX ring size, I found the strange result may has something
to do with this ring size.

I just tested with the application of xdpsock.
-- Native here means running command of "xdpsock -i eth0"
-- SKB-Mode means running command of "xdpsock -S -i eth0"

RX Ring Size 16 32 64 128
Native 230K 227K 196K 160K
SKB-Mode 207K 208K 203K 204K

It seems the smaller the ring size, the better the performance. This
is also a strange result to me.

The following is the iperf testing result.

RX Ring Size 16 64 128
iperf 300Mbps 830Mbps 933Mbps

Thanks,
Shenwei

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ilias Apalodimas <[email protected]>
> Sent: Friday, October 7, 2022 3:08 AM
> To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
> Cc: Shenwei Wang <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; David S. Miller
> <[email protected]>; Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub
> Kicinski <[email protected]>; Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>; Alexei
> Starovoitov <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>;
> Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John Fastabend
> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> [email protected]; [email protected]; Magnus Karlsson
> <[email protected]>; Björn Töpel <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP support
>
> Caution: EXT Email
>
> Hi Jesper,
>
> On Thu, 6 Oct 2022 at 11:37, Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > On 05/10/2022 14.40, Shenwei Wang wrote:
> > > Hi Jesper,
> > >
> > > Here is the summary of "xdp_rxq_info" testing.
> > >
> > > skb_mark_for_recycle page_pool_release_page
> > >
> > > Native SKB-Mode Native SKB-Mode
> > > XDP_DROP 460K 220K 460K 102K
> > > XDP_PASS 80K 113K 60K 62K
> > >
> >
> > It is very pleasing to see the *huge* performance benefit that
> > page_pool provide when recycling pages for SKBs (via skb_mark_for_recycle).
> > I did expect a performance boost, but not around a x2 performance boost.
>
> Indeed that's a pleasant surprise. Keep in mind that if we convert more driver
> we can also get rid of copy_break code sprinkled around in drivers.
>
> Thanks
> /Ilias
> >
> > I guess this platform have a larger overhead for DMA-mapping and
> > page-allocation.
> >
> > IMHO it would be valuable to include this result as part of the patch
> > description when you post the XDP patch again.
> >
> > Only strange result is XDP_PASS 'Native' is slower that 'SKB-mode'. I
> > cannot explain why, as XDP_PASS essentially does nothing and just
> > follow normal driver code to netstack.
> >
> > Thanks a lot for doing these tests.
> > --Jesper
> >
> > > The following are the testing log.
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Shenwei
> > >
> > > ### skb_mark_for_recycle solution ###
> > >
> > > ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
> > >
> > > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> > > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > > XDP-RX CPU 0 466,553 0
> > > XDP-RX CPU total 466,553
> > >
> > > ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
> > >
> > > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> > > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > > XDP-RX CPU 0 226,272 0
> > > XDP-RX CPU total 226,272
> > >
> > > ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
> > >
> > > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> > > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > > XDP-RX CPU 0 80,518 0
> > > XDP-RX CPU total 80,518
> > >
> > > ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
> > >
> > > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> > > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > > XDP-RX CPU 0 113,681 0
> > > XDP-RX CPU total 113,681
> > >
> > >
> > > ### page_pool_release_page solution ###
> > >
> > > ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
> > >
> > > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> > > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > > XDP-RX CPU 0 463,145 0
> > > XDP-RX CPU total 463,145
> > >
> > > ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_DROP --read
> > >
> > > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_DROP options:read
> > > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > > XDP-RX CPU 0 104,443 0
> > > XDP-RX CPU total 104,443
> > >
> > > ./xdp_rxq_info --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
> > >
> > > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> > > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > > XDP-RX CPU 0 60,539 0
> > > XDP-RX CPU total 60,539
> > >
> > > ./xdp_rxq_info -S --dev eth0 --act XDP_PASS --read
> > >
> > > Running XDP on dev:eth0 (ifindex:2) action:XDP_PASS options:read
> > > XDP stats CPU pps issue-pps
> > > XDP-RX CPU 0 62,566 0
> > > XDP-RX CPU total 62,566
> > >
> > >> -----Original Message-----
> > >> From: Shenwei Wang
> > >> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 8:34 AM
> > >> To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
> > >> <[email protected]>
> > >> Cc: [email protected]; David S. Miller <[email protected]>; Eric
> > >> Dumazet <[email protected]>; Jakub Kicinski <[email protected]>;
> > >> Paolo Abeni <[email protected]>; Alexei Starovoitov
> > >> <[email protected]>; Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>; Jesper
> > >> Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; John Fastabend
> > >> <[email protected]>; [email protected]; linux-
> > >> [email protected]; [email protected]; Magnus Karlsson
> > >> <[email protected]>; Björn Töpel <[email protected]>; Ilias
> > >> Apalodimas <[email protected]>
> > >> Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: [PATCH 1/1] net: fec: add initial XDP
> > >> support
> > >>
> > >>
> > >>
> > >>> -----Original Message-----
> > >>> From: Shenwei Wang
> > >>> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2022 8:13 AM
> > >>> To: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <[email protected]>; Andrew Lunn
> > >> ...
> > >>> I haven't tested xdp_rxq_info yet, and will have a try sometime later today.
> > >>> However, for the XDP_DROP test, I did try xdp2 test case, and the
> > >>> testing result looks reasonable. The performance of Native mode is
> > >>> much higher than skb- mode.
> > >>>
> > >>> # xdp2 eth0
> > >>> proto 0: 475362 pkt/s
> > >>>
> > >>> # xdp2 -S eth0 (page_pool_release_page solution)
> > >>> proto 17: 71999 pkt/s
> > >>>
> > >>> # xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
> > >>> proto 17: 72228 pkt/s
> > >>>
> > >>
> > >> Correction for xdp2 -S eth0 (skb_mark_for_recycle solution)
> > >> proto 0: 0 pkt/s
> > >> proto 17: 122473 pkt/s
> > >>
> > >> Thanks,
> > >> Shenwei
> > >
> >