On Mon, 1 Oct 2018 12:56:58 +0300
Ilias Apalodimas <ilias.apalodi...@linaro.org> wrote:

> > > #2: You have allocations on the XDP fast-path.
> > > 
> > > The REAL secret behind the XDP performance is to avoid allocations on
> > > the fast-path.  While I just told you to use the page-allocator and
> > > order-0 pages, this will actually kill performance.  Thus, to make this
> > > fast, you need a driver local recycle scheme that avoids going through
> > > the page allocator, which makes XDP_DROP and XDP_TX extremely fast.
> > > For the XDP_REDIRECT action (which you seems to be interested in, as
> > > this is needed for AF_XDP), there is a xdp_return_frame() API that can
> > > make this fast.  
> >
> > I had an initial implementation that did exactly that (that's why you the
> > dma_sync_single_for_cpu() -> dma_unmap_single_attrs() is there). In the 
> > case 
> > of AF_XDP isn't that introducing a 'bottleneck' though? I mean you'll feed 
> > fresh
> > buffers back to the hardware only when your packets have been processed from
> > your userspace application 
>
> Just a clarification here. This is the case if ZC is implemented. In my case
> the buffers will be 'ok' to be passed back to the hardware once the use
> userspace payload has been copied by xdp_do_redirect()

Thanks for clarifying.  But no, this is not introducing a 'bottleneck'
for AF_XDP.

For (1) the copy-mode-AF_XDP the frame (as you noticed) is "freed" or
"returned" very quickly after it is copied.  The code is a bit hard to
follow, but in __xsk_rcv() it calls xdp_return_buff() after the memcpy.
Thus, the frame can be kept DMA mapped and reused in RX-ring quickly.

For (2) the zero-copy-AF_XDP, then you need to implement a new
allocator of type MEM_TYPE_ZERO_COPY.  The performance trick here is
that all DMA-map/unmap and allocations go away, given everything is
preallocated by userspace.  Through the 4 rings (SPSC) are used for
recycling the ZC-umem frames (read Documentation/networking/af_xdp.rst).

-- 
Best regards,
  Jesper Dangaard Brouer
  MSc.CS, Principal Kernel Engineer at Red Hat
  LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/brouer

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