Re: [PATCH v2 0/2] net: ethernet: ti: cpsw: delete rx_descs property
From: Mugunthan V N <hidden>
Date: 2016-06-13 08:22:57
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linux-omap, lkml, netdev
On Saturday 11 June 2016 04:34 AM, Schuyler Patton wrote:
On 06/08/2016 07:03 PM, Ivan Khoronzhuk wrote:quoted
On 09.06.16 02:11, Schuyler Patton wrote:quoted
On 06/08/2016 09:06 AM, Ivan Khoronzhuk wrote:quoted
On 08.06.16 17:01, Ivan Khoronzhuk wrote:quoted
Hi Schuyer, On 07.06.16 18:26, Schuyler Patton wrote:quoted
Hi, On 06/07/2016 08:59 AM, Ivan Khoronzhuk wrote:quoted
There is no reason in rx_descs property because davinici_cpdma driver splits pool of descriptors equally between tx and rx channels. So, this patch series makes driver to use available number of descriptors for rx channels.I agree with the idea of consolidating how the descriptors are defined because of the two variable components, number and size of the pool can be confusing to end users. I would like to request to change how it is being proposed here. I think the number of descriptors should be left in the device tree source file as is and remove the BD size variable and have the driver calculate the size of the pool necessary to support the descriptor request. From an user perspective it is easier I think to be able to list the number of descriptors necessary vs. the size of the pool. Since the patch series points out how it is used so in the driver so to make that consistent is perhaps change rx_descs to total_descs. Regards, SchuylerThe DT entry for cpsw doesn't have property for size of the pool. It contains only BD ram size, if you mean this. The size of the pool is software decision. Current version of DT entry contain only rx desc number. That is not correct, as it depends on the size of the descriptor, which is also h/w parameter. The DT entry has to describe only h/w part and shouldn't contain driver implementation details, and I'm looking on it from this perspective. Besides, rx_descs describes only rx number of descriptors, that are taken from the same pool as tx descriptors, and setting rx desc to some new value doesn't mean that rest of them are freed for tx. Also, I'm going to send series that adds multi channel support to the driver, and in this case, splitting of the pool will be more sophisticated than now, after what setting those parameters for user (he should do this via device tree) can be even more confusing. But,should -> shouldn'tquoted
as it's supposed, it's software decision that shouldn't leak to the DT.If this rx-desc field is removed how will the number of descriptors be set? This field has been used to increase the number of descriptors so high volume short packets are not dropped due to descriptor exhaustion. The current default number of 64 rx descriptors is too low for gigabit networks. Some users have a strong requirement for zero loss of UDP packets setting this field to a larger number and setting the descriptors off-chip was a means to solve the problem.The current implementation of cpdma driver splits descs num on 2 parts equally. Total number = 256, then 128 reserved for rx and 128 for tx, but setting this to 64, simply limits usage of reserved rx descriptors to 64, so that: 64 rx descs, 128 tx descs and 64 are always present in the pool but cannot be used, (as new rx descriptor is allocated only after previous was freed). That means, 64 rx descs are unused. In case of rx descriptor exhaustion, an user can set rx_descs to 128, for instance, in this case all descriptors will be in use, but then question, why intentionally limit number of rx descs, anyway rest 64 descs cannot be used for other purposes. In case of this patch, all rx descs are in use, and no need to correct number of rx descs anymore, use all of them....and it doesn't have impact on performance, as anyway, bunch of rx descs were simply limited by DT and unused. So, probably, there is no reason to worry about that.When we see this issue we set the descriptors to DDR and put a large number in the desc count. unfortunately I wish I could provide a number, usually the issue is a volume burst of short UDP packets.quoted
PS: It doesn't concern this patch, but, which PPS makes rx descs to be exhausted?... (In this case "desc_alloc_fail" counter contains some value for rx channel, and can be read with "ethtool -S eth0". Also, the user will be WARNed ON by the driver) it's interesting to test it, I'm worrying about, because in case of multichannel, the pool is split between all channels... they are throughput limited, but anyway, it's good to correlate the number of descs with throughput assigned to a channel, if possible. That has to be possible, if setting to 128 helps, then has to be value between 64 and 128 to make handling of rx packets fast enough. After what, can be calculated correlation between number of rx descs and throughput split between channels....With gigabit networks 64 or 128 rx descriptors is not going to enough to fix the DMA overrun problem. Usually we set this number to an arbitrarily large 2000 descriptors in external DDR to demonstrate it is possible to not drop packets. All this does is move the problem higher up so that the drops occur in network stack if the ARM is overloaded. With the high speed networks I would like to propose that the descriptor pool or pools are moved to DDR by default. It would be nice to have some reconfigurability or set a pool size that reduces or eliminates the DMA issue that is seen in these types of applications. This test gets used a lot, which is to send very short UDP packets. If I have the math right, a 52 byte (64 byte with the inter-frame gap) UDP packet the default 64 descriptors gets consumed in roughly 33uS. There are the switch fifos which will also allow some headroom, but a user was dropping packets at the switch when they were bursting 360 packets at the processor on a gigabit link
I too agree that rx-descs can be derived from the pool size and descriptor size in driver itself. The current driver uses bd_ram_size to set the pool size when the descriptors are placed in DDR which is wrong. Here I propose an idea to solve Schuyler's concern to keep the descriptors in DDR when a system need more rx descriptors for lossless UDB performance. The DT property rx-descs can be removed and add a new DT property *pool_size* to add support for descriptors memory size in DDR and define a pool size which the system needs for a network to have lossless UDP transfers. So based on no_bd_ram DT entry, the driver can decide whether it can use internal BD-ram or DDR to initialize the cpdma driver. Regards Mugunthan V N -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA@public.gmane.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html