[dpdk-dev] rte_mempool_create fails with ENOMEM

Ananyev, Konstantin konstantin.ananyev at intel.com
Thu Dec 18 21:03:33 CET 2014



> -----Original Message-----
> From: dev [mailto:dev-bounces at dpdk.org] On Behalf Of Ananyev, Konstantin
> Sent: Thursday, December 18, 2014 5:43 PM
> To: Newman Poborsky; dev at dpdk.org
> Subject: Re: [dpdk-dev] rte_mempool_create fails with ENOMEM
> 
> Hi
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: dev [mailto:dev-bounces at dpdk.org] On Behalf Of Newman Poborsky
> > Sent: Thursday, December 18, 2014 1:26 PM
> > To: dev at dpdk.org
> > Subject: [dpdk-dev] rte_mempool_create fails with ENOMEM
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > could someone please provide any explanation why sometimes mempool creation
> > fails with ENOMEM?
> >
> > I run my test app several times without any problems and then I start
> > getting ENOMEM error when creating mempool that are used for packets. I try
> > to delete everything from /mnt/huge, I increase the number of huge pages,
> > remount /mnt/huge but nothing helps.
> >
> > There is more than enough memory on server. I tried to debug
> > rte_mempool_create() call and it seems that after server is restarted free
> > mem segments are bigger than 2MB, but after running test app for several
> > times, it seems that all free mem segments have a size of 2MB, and since I
> > am requesting 8MB for my packet mempool, this fails.  I'm not really sure
> > that this conclusion is correct.
> 
> Yes,rte_mempool_create uses  rte_memzone_reserve() to allocate
> single physically continuous chunk of memory.
> If no such chunk exist, then it would fail.
> Why physically continuous?
> Main reason - to make things easier for us, as in that case we don't have to worry
> about situation when mbuf crosses page boundary.
> So you can overcome that problem like that:
> Allocate max amount of memory you would need to hold all mbufs in worst case (all pages physically disjoint)
> using rte_malloc().

Actually my wrong: rte_malloc()s wouldn't help you here.
You probably need to allocate some external (not managed by EAL) memory in that case,
may be mmap() with MAP_HUGETLB, or something similar.

> Figure out it's physical mappings.
> Call  rte_mempool_xmem_create().
> You can look at: app/test-pmd/mempool_anon.c as a reference.
> It uses same approach to create mempool over 4K pages.
> 
> We probably add similar function into mempool API (create_scatter_mempool or something)
> or just add a new flag (USE_SCATTER_MEM) into rte_mempool_create().
> Though right now it is not there.
> 
> Another quick alternative - use 1G pages.
> 
> Konstantin
> 
> >
> > Does anybody have any idea what to check and how running my test app
> > several times affects hugepages?
> >
> > For me, this doesn't make any since because after test app exits, resources
> > should be freed, right?
> >
> > This has been driving me crazy for days now. I tried reading a bit more
> > theory about hugepages, but didn't find out anything that could help me.
> > Maybe it's something else and completely trivial, but I can't figure it
> > out, so any help is appreciated.
> >
> > Thank you!
> >
> > BR,
> > Newman P.


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