Hey,
Here's a bunch of patches attempting to improve the performance
of virtio_net. This is more an RFC rather than a patch submission
since, as can be seen below, not all patches actually improve the
perfomance measurably.
I've tried hard to test each of these patches with as stable and
informative a benchmark as I could find. The first benchmark is a
netperf[1] based throughput benchmark and the second uses a flood
ping[2] to measure latency differences.
Each set of figures is min/average/max/standard deviation. The
first set is Gb/s and the second is milliseconds.
The network configuration used was very simple - the guest with
a virtio_net interface and the host with a tap interface and static
IP addresses assigned to both - e.g. there was no bridge in the host
involved and iptables was disable in both the host and guest.
I used:
1) kvm-71-26-g6152996 with the patches that follow
2) Linus's v2.6.26-5752-g93ded9b with Rusty's virtio patches from
219:bbd2611289c5 applied; these are the patches have just been
submitted to Linus
The conclusions I draw are:
1) The length of the tx mitigation timer makes quite a difference to
throughput achieved; we probably need a good heuristic for
adjusting this on the fly.
2) Using the recently merged GSO support in the tun/tap driver gives
a huge boost, but much more so on the host->guest side.
3) Adjusting the virtio_net ring sizes makes a small difference, but
not as much as one might expect
4) Dropping the global mutex while reading GSO packets from the tap
interface gives a nice speedup. This highlights the global mutex
as a general perfomance issue.
5) Eliminating an extra copy on the host->guest path only makes a
barely measurable difference.
Anyway, the figures:
netperf, 10x20s runs (Gb/s) | guest->host | host->guest
-----------------------------+----------------------------+---------------------------
baseline | 1.520/ 1.573/ 1.610/ 0.034 | 1.160/ 1.357/
1.630/ 0.165
50us tx timer + rearm | 1.050/ 1.086/ 1.110/ 0.017 | 1.710/ 1.832/
1.960/ 0.092
250us tx timer + rearm | 1.700/ 1.764/ 1.880/ 0.064 | 0.900/ 1.203/
1.580/ 0.205
150us tx timer + rearm | 1.520/ 1.602/ 1.690/ 0.044 | 1.670/ 1.928/
2.150/ 0.141
no ring-full heuristic | 1.480/ 1.569/ 1.710/ 0.066 | 1.610/ 1.857/
2.140/ 0.153
VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY | 1.470/ 1.554/ 1.650/ 0.054 | 1.770/ 1.960/
2.170/ 0.119
recv NO_NOTIFY | 1.530/ 1.604/ 1.680/ 0.047 | 1.780/ 1.944/
2.190/ 0.129
GSO | 4.120/ 4.323/ 4.420/ 0.099 | 6.540/ 7.033/
7.340/ 0.244
ring size == 256 | 4.050/ 4.406/ 4.560/ 0.143 | 6.280/ 7.236/
8.280/ 0.613
ring size == 512 | 4.420/ 4.600/ 4.960/ 0.140 | 6.470/ 7.205/
7.510/ 0.314
drop mutex during tapfd read | 4.320/ 4.578/ 4.790/ 0.161 | 8.370/ 8.589/
8.730/ 0.120
aligouri zero-copy | 4.510/ 4.694/ 4.960/ 0.148 | 8.430/ 8.614/
8.840/ 0.142
ping -f -c 100000 (ms) | guest->host | host->guest
-----------------------------+----------------------------+---------------------------
baseline | 0.060/ 0.459/ 7.602/ 0.846 | 0.067/ 0.331/
2.517/ 0.057
50us tx timer + rearm | 0.081/ 0.143/ 7.436/ 0.374 | 0.093/ 0.133/
1.883/ 0.026
250us tx timer + rearm | 0.302/ 0.463/ 7.580/ 0.849 | 0.297/ 0.344/
2.128/ 0.028
150us tx timer + rearm | 0.197/ 0.323/ 7.671/ 0.740 | 0.199/ 0.245/
7.836/ 0.037
no ring-full heuristic | 0.182/ 0.324/ 7.688/ 0.753 | 0.199/ 0.243/
2.197/ 0.030
VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY | 0.197/ 0.321/ 7.447/ 0.730 | 0.196/ 0.242/
2.218/ 0.032
recv NO_NOTIFY | 0.186/ 0.321/ 7.520/ 0.732 | 0.200/ 0.233/
2.216/ 0.028
GSO | 0.178/ 0.324/ 7.667/ 0.736 | 0.147/ 0.246/
1.361/ 0.024
ring size == 256 | 0.184/ 0.323/ 7.674/ 0.728 | 0.199/ 0.243/
2.181/ 0.028
ring size == 512 | (not measured) | (not
measured)
drop mutex during tapfd read | 0.183/ 0.323/ 7.820/ 0.733 | 0.202/ 0.242/
2.219/ 0.027
aligouri zero-copy | 0.185/ 0.325/ 7.863/ 0.736 | 0.202/ 0.245/
7.844/ 0.036
Cheers,
Mark.
[1] - I used netperf trunk from:
http://www.netperf.org/svn/netperf2/trunk
and simply ran:
$> i=0; while [ $i -lt 10 ]; do ./netperf -H <host> -f g -l 20 -P 0 |
netperf-collect.py; i=$((i+1)); done
where netperf-collect.py is just a script to calculate the
average across the runs:
http://markmc.fedorapeople.org/netperf-collect.py
[2] - ping -c 100000 -f <host>
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