David S. Miller bdaba8959e Merge branch 'tcp-rx-tx-cache'
Eric Dumazet says:

====================
tcp: add rx/tx cache to reduce lock contention

On hosts with many cpus we can observe a very serious contention
on spinlocks used in mm slab layer.

The following can happen quite often :

1) TX path
  sendmsg() allocates one (fclone) skb on CPU A, sends a clone.
  ACK is received on CPU B, and consumes the skb that was in the retransmit
  queue.

2) RX path
  network driver allocates skb on CPU C
  recvmsg() happens on CPU D, freeing the skb after it has been delivered
  to user space.

In both cases, we are hitting the asymetric alloc/free pattern
for which slab has to drain alien caches. At 8 Mpps per second,
this represents 16 Mpps alloc/free per second and has a huge penalty.

In an interesting experiment, I tried to use a single kmem_cache for all the skbs
(in skb_init() : skbuff_fclone_cache = skbuff_head_cache =
                  kmem_cache_create("skbuff_fclone_cache", sizeof(struct sk_buff_fclones),);
qnd most of the contention disappeared, since cpus could better use
their local slab per-cpu cache.

But we can do actually better, in the following patches.

TX : at ACK time, no longer free the skb but put it back in a tcp socket cache,
     so that next sendmsg() can reuse it immediately.

RX : at recvmsg() time, do not free the skb but put it in a tcp socket cache
   so that it can be freed by the cpu feeding the incoming packets in BH.

This increased the performance of small RPC benchmark by about 10 % on a host
with 112 hyperthreads.

v2 : - Solved a race condition : sk_stream_alloc_skb() to make sure the prior
       clone has been freed.
     - Really test rps_needed in sk_eat_skb() as claimed.
     - Fixed rps_needed use in drivers/net/tun.c

v3: Added a #ifdef CONFIG_RPS, to avoid compile error (kbuild robot)
====================

Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2019-03-23 21:57:38 -04:00
2019-03-07 18:32:03 -08:00
2019-03-13 09:37:09 -07:00
2019-03-23 21:57:38 -04:00
2019-03-23 21:57:38 -04:00
2019-03-13 10:06:28 -07:00
2019-03-13 11:10:42 -07:00
2019-03-06 13:33:11 -08:00
2019-02-21 11:41:19 +00:00
2019-03-06 14:18:59 -08:00
2019-03-10 17:48:21 -07:00
2019-03-10 17:48:21 -07:00

Linux kernel
============

There are several guides for kernel developers and users. These guides can
be rendered in a number of formats, like HTML and PDF. Please read
Documentation/admin-guide/README.rst first.

In order to build the documentation, use ``make htmldocs`` or
``make pdfdocs``.  The formatted documentation can also be read online at:

    https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/

There are various text files in the Documentation/ subdirectory,
several of them using the Restructured Text markup notation.

Please read the Documentation/process/changes.rst file, as it contains the
requirements for building and running the kernel, and information about
the problems which may result by upgrading your kernel.
Description
No description provided
Readme 5.7 GiB
Languages
C 97.6%
Assembly 1%
Shell 0.5%
Python 0.3%
Makefile 0.3%