[dpdk-dev] [PATCH v4 1/4] ethdev: add the API for getting burst mode information

Thomas Monjalon thomas at monjalon.net
Sun Nov 3 23:41:05 CET 2019


03/11/2019 21:35, Ray Kinsella:
> On 29/10/2019 14:27, Ferruh Yigit wrote:
> > On 10/26/2019 5:23 PM, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> >> 26/10/2019 11:23, Wang, Haiyue:
> >>> From: Thomas Monjalon [mailto:thomas at monjalon.net]
> >>>> 26/10/2019 06:40, Wang, Haiyue:
> >>>>> From: Thomas Monjalon [mailto:thomas at monjalon.net]
> >>>>>> 25/10/2019 18:02, Jerin Jacob:
> >>>>>>> On Fri, Oct 25, 2019 at 9:15 PM Thomas Monjalon <thomas at monjalon.net> wrote:
> >>>>>>>> 25/10/2019 16:08, Ferruh Yigit:
> >>>>>>>>> On 10/25/2019 10:36 AM, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>> 15/10/2019 09:51, Haiyue Wang:
> >>>>>>>>>>> Some PMDs have more than one RX/TX burst paths, add the ethdev API
> >>>>>>>>>>> that allows an application to retrieve the mode information about
> >>>>>>>>>>> Rx/Tx packet burst such as Scalar or Vector, and Vector technology
> >>>>>>>>>>> like AVX2.
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> I missed this patch. I and Andrew, maintainers of ethdev, were not CC'ed.
> >>>>>>>>>> Ferruh, I would expect to be Cc'ed and/or get a notification before merging.
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>> It has been discussed in the mail list and went through multiple discussions,
> >>>>>>>>> patch is out since the August, +1 to cc all maintainers I missed that part,
> >>>>>>>>> but when the patch is reviewed and there is no objection, why block the merge?
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> I'm not saying blocking the merge.
> >>>>>>>> My bad is that I missed the patch and I am asking for help with a notification
> >>>>>>>> in this case. Same for Andrew I guess.
> >>>>>>>> Note: it is merged in master and I am looking to improve this feature.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> +/**
> >>>>>>>>>>> + * Ethernet device RX/TX queue packet burst mode information structure.
> >>>>>>>>>>> + * Used to retrieve information about packet burst mode setting.
> >>>>>>>>>>> + */
> >>>>>>>>>>> +struct rte_eth_burst_mode {
> >>>>>>>>>>> +  uint64_t options;
> >>>>>>>>>>> +};
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> Why a struct for an integer?
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>> Again by a request from me, to not need to break the API if we need to add more
> >>>>>>>>> thing in the future.
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> I would replace it with a string. This is the most flexible API.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> IMO, Probably, best of both worlds make a good option here,
> >>>>>>> as Haiyue suggested if we have an additional dev_specific[1] in structure.
> >>>>>>> and when a pass to the application, let common code make final string as
> >>>>>>> (options flags to string + dev_specific)
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> options flag can be zero if PMD does not have any generic flags nor
> >>>>>>> interested in such a scheme.
> >>>>>>> Generic flags will help at least to have some common code.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> [1]
> >>>>>>> struct rte_eth_burst_mode {
> >>>>>>>         uint64_t options;
> >>>>>>>         char dev_specific[128]; /* PMD has specific burst mode information */
> >>>>>>> };
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I really don't see how we can have generic flags.
> >>>>>> The flags which are proposed are just matching
> >>>>>> the functions implemented in Intel PMDs.
> >>>>>> And this is a complicate solution.
> >>>>>> Why not just returning a name for the selected Rx/Tx mode?
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Intel PMDs use the *generic* methods like x86 SSE, AVX2, ARM NEON, PPC ALTIVEC,
> >>>>> 'dev->data->scattered_rx' etc for the target : "DPDK is the Data Plane Development Kit
> >>>>> that consists of libraries to accelerate packet processing workloads running on a wide
> >>>>> variety of CPU architectures."
> >>>>
> >>>> How RTE_ETH_BURST_SCATTERED and RTE_ETH_BURST_BULK_ALLOC are generic?
> >>>> They just match some features of the Intel PMDs.
> >>>> Why not exposing other optimizations of the Rx/Tx implementations?
> >>>> You totally missed the point of generic burst mode description.
> >>>>
> >>>>> If understand these new experimental APIs from above, then bit options is the best,
> >>>>> and we didn't invent new words to describe them, just from the CPU & other *generic*
> >>>>> technology. And the application can loop to check which kind of burst is running by
> >>>>> just simple bit test.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> If PMDs missed these, they can update them in future roadmaps to enhance their PMDs,
> >>>>> like MLX5 supports ARM NEON, x86 SSE.
> >>>>
> >>>> I have no word!
> >>>> You really think other PMDs should learn from Intel how to "enhance" their PMD?
> >>>> You talk about mlx5, did you look at its code? Did you see the burst modes
> >>>> depending on which specific hardware path is used (MPRQ, EMPW, inline)?
> >>>> Or depending on which offloads are handled?
> >>>>
> >>>> Again, the instruction set used by the function is a small part
> >>>> of the burst mode optimization.
> >>>>
> >>>> So you did not reply to my question:
> >>>> Why not just returning a name for the selected Rx/Tx mode?
> >>>
> >>> In fact, RFC v1/v2 returns the *name*, but the *name* is hard for
> >>> application to do further processing, strcmp, strstr ? Not so nice
> >>> for C code, and it is not so standard, So switch it to bit definition.
> >>
> >> Again, please answer my question: why do you need it?
> >> I think it is just informative, that's why a string should be enough.
> >> I am clearly against the bitmap because it is way too much restrictive.
> >> I disagree that knowing it is using AVX2 or AVX512 is so interesting.
> >> What you would like to know is whether it is processing packets 4 by 4,
> >> for instance, or to know which offload is supported, or what hardware trick
> >> is used in the datapath design.
> >> There are so many options in a datapath design that it cannot be
> >> represented with a bitmap. And it makes no sense to have some design
> >> criterias more important than others.
> >> I Cc an Intel architect (Edwin) who could explain you how much
> >> a datapath design is more complicate than just using AVX instructions.
> > 
> > As I understand this is to let applications to give informed decision based on
> > what vectorization is used in the driver, currently this is not know by the
> > application.
> > 
> > And as previously replied, the main target of the API is to define the vector
> > path, not all optimizations, so the number is limited.

No!
The name of this API is "burst mode information",
not "vector instructions used".
I think the main error is that in Intel PMDs,
each Rx/Tx function use different vector instructions.
So you generalize that knowing the vectors instructions
will give you a good information about the performance.
But this is generally wrong!
The right level of infos is much more complex.

> > There are many optimization in the data path, I agree we may not represent all
> > of them, and agreed existing enum having "RTE_ETH_BURST_BULK_ALLOC" and similar
> > causing this confusion, perhaps we can remove them.
> > 
> > And if the requirement from the application is just informative, I would agree
> > that free text string will be better, right now 'rte_eth_rx/tx_burst_mode_get()'
> > is the main API to provide the information and
> > 'rte_eth_burst_mode_option_name()' is a helper for application/driver to log
> > this information.
> > 
> 
> Well look we have a general deficit of information about what is happening under 
> the covers in DPDK. The end user may get wildly different performance characteristics 
> based on the DPDK configuration. Simple example is using flow director causes the i40e 
> PMD to switch to using a scalar code path, and performance may as much as half.
> 
> This can cause no end of head-scratching in consuming products, I have done some 
> of that head scratching myself, it is a usability nightmare. 
> 
> FD.io VPP tries to work around this by mining the call stack, to give the user _some_
> kind of information about what is happening. These kind of heroics should not be necessary.
> 
> For exactly the same reasons as telemetry, we should be trying to give the users as much 
> information as possible, in as standard as format as possible. Otherwise DPDK 
> becomes arcane leaving the user running gdb to understand what is going on, as I 
> frequently do.

I agree we must provide a clue to understand the performance result.
As Stephen commented at the very beginning, a log is enough for such debug.
But his comment was ignored. You wanted an API, fine.
I am OK to have an API to request infos which are also in logs.

> Finally, again for the same reasons as telemetry, I would say that machine readable is the 
> ideal here.

I disagree here. There is no need to make this info machine readable.
We want a clue about the optimizations which are all about creativity.
And we cannot make creativity of developers "machine readable".





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