[<prev] [next>] [<thread-prev] [thread-next>] [day] [month] [year] [list]
Message-ID: <b21853ab-e3b4-889a-07bd-742db8aa2e4b@redhat.com>
Date: Thu, 8 Apr 2021 14:49:22 -0400
From: Nitesh Narayan Lal <nitesh@...hat.com>
To: Jesse Brandeburg <jesse.brandeburg@...el.com>,
Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@...hat.com>,
Thomas Gleixner <tglx@...utronix.de>,
"frederic@...nel.org" <frederic@...nel.org>
Cc: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@....com>, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
linux-api@...r.kernel.org, juri.lelli@...hat.com,
abelits@...vell.com, bhelgaas@...gle.com,
linux-pci@...r.kernel.org, rostedt@...dmis.org, mingo@...nel.org,
peterz@...radead.org, davem@...emloft.net,
akpm@...ux-foundation.org, sfr@...b.auug.org.au,
stephen@...workplumber.org, rppt@...ux.vnet.ibm.com,
jinyuqi@...wei.com, zhangshaokun@...ilicon.com,
Network Development <netdev@...r.kernel.org>,
"sassmann@...hat.com" <sassmann@...hat.com>,
"Yang, Lihong" <lihong.yang@...el.com>
Subject: Re: [Patch v4 1/3] lib: Restrict cpumask_local_spread to houskeeping
CPUs
On 4/7/21 11:18 AM, Nitesh Narayan Lal wrote:
> On 4/6/21 1:22 PM, Jesse Brandeburg wrote:
>> Continuing a thread from a bit ago...
>>
>> Nitesh Narayan Lal wrote:
>>
>>>> After a little more digging, I found out why cpumask_local_spread change
>>>> affects the general/initial smp_affinity for certain device IRQs.
>>>>
>>>> After the introduction of the commit:
>>>>
>>>> e2e64a932 genirq: Set initial affinity in irq_set_affinity_hint()
>>>>
>>> Continuing the conversation about the above commit and adding Jesse.
>>> I was trying to understand the problem that the commit message explains
>>> "The default behavior of the kernel is somewhat undesirable as all
>>> requested interrupts end up on CPU0 after registration.", I have also been
>>> trying to reproduce this behavior without the patch but I failed in doing
>>> so, maybe because I am missing something here.
>>>
>>> @Jesse Can you please explain? FWIU IRQ affinity should be decided based on
>>> the default affinity mask.
> Thanks, Jesse for responding.
>
>> The original issue as seen, was that if you rmmod/insmod a driver
>> *without* irqbalance running, the default irq mask is -1, which means
>> any CPU. The older kernels (this issue was patched in 2014) used to use
>> that affinity mask, but the value programmed into all the interrupt
>> registers "actual affinity" would end up delivering all interrupts to
>> CPU0,
> So does that mean the affinity mask for the IRQs was different wrt where
> the IRQs were actually delivered?
> Or, the affinity mask itself for the IRQs after rmmod, insmod was changed
> to 0 instead of -1?
>
> I did a quick test on top of 5.12.0-rc6 by comparing the i40e IRQ affinity
> mask before removing the kernel module and after doing rmmod+insmod
> and didn't find any difference.
>
>> and if the machine was under traffic load incoming when the
>> driver loaded, CPU0 would start to poll among all the different netdev
>> queues, all on CPU0.
>>
>> The above then leads to the condition that the device is stuck polling
>> even if the affinity gets updated from user space, and the polling will
>> continue until traffic stops.
>>
>>> The problem with the commit is that when we overwrite the affinity mask
>>> based on the hinting mask we completely ignore the default SMP affinity
>>> mask. If we do want to overwrite the affinity based on the hint mask we
>>> should atleast consider the default SMP affinity.
> For the issue where the IRQs don't follow the default_smp_affinity mask
> because of this patch, the following are the steps by which it can be easily
> reproduced with the latest linux kernel:
>
> # Kernel
> 5.12.0-rc6+
>
> # Other pramaeters in the cmdline
> isolcpus=2-39,44-79 nohz=on nohz_full=2-39,44-79
> rcu_nocbs=2-39,44-79
>
> # cat /proc/irq/default_smp_affinity
> 0000,00000f00,00000003 [Corresponds to HK CPUs - 0, 1, 40, 41, 42 and 43]
>
> # Create VFs and check IRQ affinity mask
>
> /proc/irq/1423/iavf-ens1f1v3-TxRx-3
> 3
> /proc/irq/1424/iavf-0000:3b:0b.0:mbx
> 0
> 40
> 42
> /proc/irq/1425/iavf-ens1f1v8-TxRx-0
> 0
> /proc/irq/1426/iavf-ens1f1v8-TxRx-1
> 1
> /proc/irq/1427/iavf-ens1f1v8-TxRx-2
> 2
> /proc/irq/1428/iavf-ens1f1v8-TxRx-3
> 3
> ...
> /proc/irq/1475/iavf-ens1f1v15-TxRx-0
> 0
> /proc/irq/1476/iavf-ens1f1v15-TxRx-1
> 1
> /proc/irq/1477/iavf-ens1f1v15-TxRx-2
> 2
> /proc/irq/1478/iavf-ens1f1v15-TxRx-3
> 3
> /proc/irq/1479/iavf-0000:3b:0a.0:mbx
> 0
> 40
> 42
> ...
> /proc/irq/240/iavf-ens1f1v3-TxRx-0
> 0
> /proc/irq/248/iavf-ens1f1v3-TxRx-1
> 1
> /proc/irq/249/iavf-ens1f1v3-TxRx-2
> 2
>
>
> Trace dump:
> ----------
> ..
> 11551082: NetworkManager-1734 [040] 8167.465719: vector_activate:
> irq=1478 is_managed=0 can_reserve=1 reserve=0
> 11551090: NetworkManager-1734 [040] 8167.465720: vector_alloc:
> irq=1478 vector=65 reserved=1 ret=0
> 11551093: NetworkManager-1734 [040] 8167.465721: vector_update:
> irq=1478 vector=65 cpu=42 prev_vector=0 prev_cpu=0
> 11551097: NetworkManager-1734 [040] 8167.465721: vector_config:
> irq=1478 vector=65 cpu=42 apicdest=0x00000200
> 11551357: NetworkManager-1734 [040] 8167.465768: vector_alloc:
> irq=1478 vector=46 reserved=0 ret=0
>
> 11551360: NetworkManager-1734 [040] 8167.465769: vector_update:
> irq=1478 vector=46 cpu=3 prev_vector=65 prev_cpu=42
>
> 11551364: NetworkManager-1734 [040] 8167.465770: vector_config:
> irq=1478 vector=46 cpu=3 apicdest=0x00040100
> ..
>
> As we can see in the above trace the initial affinity for the IRQ 1478 was
> correctly set as per the default_smp_affinity mask which includes CPU 42,
> however, later on, it is updated with CPU3 which is returned from
> cpumask_local_spread().
>
>> Maybe the right thing is to fix which CPUs are passed in as the valid
>> mask, or make sure the kernel cross checks that what the driver asks
>> for is a "valid CPU"?
>>
> Sure, if we can still reproduce the problem that your patch was fixing then
> maybe we can consider adding a new API like cpumask_local_spread_irq in
> which we should consider deafult_smp_affinity mask as well before returning
> the CPU.
>
Didn't realize that netdev ml was not included, so adding that.
--
Nitesh
Powered by blists - more mailing lists