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Message-ID: <CAGXJAmz+j0y00XLc2YCyfK5aVPD12aDcrNzc58N1fExT6ceoVw@mail.gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 8 Nov 2023 08:50:03 -0800
From: John Ousterhout <ouster@...stanford.edu>
To: David Ahern <dsahern@...nel.org>
Cc: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@...workplumber.org>, Andrew Lunn <andrew@...n.ch>, netdev@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Bypass qdiscs?
Hi David,
Thanks for the suggestion, but if I understand this correctly, this
will disable qdiscs for TCP as well as Homa; I suspect I shouldn't do
that?
-John-
On Sun, Nov 5, 2023 at 8:27 PM David Ahern <dsahern@...nel.org> wrote:
>
> On 11/5/23 8:23 PM, Stephen Hemminger wrote:
> > On Sat, 4 Nov 2023 19:47:30 -0700
> > John Ousterhout <ouster@...stanford.edu> wrote:
> >
> >> I haven't tried creating a "pass through" qdisc, but that seems like a
> >> reasonable approach if (as it seems) there isn't something already
> >> built-in that provides equivalent functionality.
> >>
> >> -John-
> >>
> >> P.S. If hardware starts supporting Homa, I hope that it will be
> >> possible to move the entire transport to the NIC, so that applications
> >> can bypass the kernel entirely, as with RDMA.
> >
> > One old trick was setting netdev queue length to 0 to avoid qdisc.
> >
>
> tc qdisc replace dev <name> root noqueue
>
> should work
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