Thread (45 messages) 45 messages, 6 authors, 2023-06-11

Re: [PATCH v5 net 6/6] net/sched: qdisc_destroy() old ingress and clsact Qdiscs before grafting

From: Peilin Ye <hidden>
Date: 2023-06-08 00:39:54

On Thu, Jun 01, 2023 at 09:20:39AM +0300, Vlad Buslov wrote:
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If livelock with concurrent filters insertion is an issue, then it can
be remedied by setting a new Qdisc->flags bit
"DELETED-REJECT-NEW-FILTERS" and checking for it together with
QDISC_CLASS_OPS_DOIT_UNLOCKED in order to force any concurrent filter
insertion coming after the flag is set to synchronize on rtnl lock.
Thanks for the suggestion!  I'll try this approach.

Currently QDISC_CLASS_OPS_DOIT_UNLOCKED is checked after taking a refcnt of
the "being-deleted" Qdisc.  I'll try forcing "late" requests (that arrive
later than Qdisc is flagged as being-deleted) sync on RTNL lock without
(before) taking the Qdisc refcnt (otherwise I think Task 1 will replay for
even longer?).
Yeah, I see what you mean. Looking at the code __tcf_qdisc_find()
already returns -EINVAL when q->refcnt is zero, so maybe returning
-EINVAL from that function when "DELETED-REJECT-NEW-FILTERS" flags is
set is also fine? Would be much easier to implement as opposed to moving
rtnl_lock there.
I implemented [1] this suggestion and tested the livelock issue in QEMU (-m
16G, CONFIG_NR_CPUS=8).  I tried deleting the ingress Qdisc (let's call it
"request A") while it has a lot of ongoing filter requests, and here's the
result:

                        #1         #2         #3         #4
  ----------------------------------------------------------
   a. refcnt            89         93        230        571
   b. replayed     167,568    196,450    336,291    878,027
   c. time real   0m2.478s   0m2.746s   0m3.693s   0m9.461s
           user   0m0.000s   0m0.000s   0m0.000s   0m0.000s
            sys   0m0.623s   0m0.681s   0m1.119s   0m2.770s

   a. is the Qdisc refcnt when A calls qdisc_graft() for the first time;
   b. is the number of times A has been replayed;
   c. is the time(1) output for A.

a. and b. are collected from printk() output.  This is better than before,
but A could still be replayed for hundreds of thousands of times and hang
for a few seconds.
I don't get where does few seconds waiting time come from. I'm probably
missing something obvious here, but the waiting time should be the
maximum filter op latency of new/get/del filter request that is already
in-flight (i.e. already passed qdisc_is_destroying() check) and it
should take several orders of magnitude less time.
Yeah I agree, here's what I did:

In Terminal 1 I keep adding filters to eth1 in a naive and unrealistic
loop:

  $ echo "1 1 32" > /sys/bus/netdevsim/new_device
  $ tc qdisc add dev eth1 ingress
  $ for (( i=1; i<=3000; i++ ))
  > do
  > tc filter add dev eth1 ingress proto all flower src_mac 00:11:22:33:44:55 action pass > /dev/null 2>&1 &
  > done

When the loop is running, I delete the Qdisc in Terminal 2:

  $ time tc qdisc delete dev eth1 ingress

Which took seconds on average.  However, if I specify a unique "prio" when
adding filters in that loop, e.g.:

  $ for (( i=1; i<=3000; i++ ))
  > do
  > tc filter add dev eth1 ingress proto all prio $i flower src_mac 00:11:22:33:44:55 action pass > /dev/null 2>&1 &
  > done				     ^^^^^^^

Then deleting the Qdisc in Terminal 2 becomes a lot faster:

  real  0m0.712s
  user  0m0.000s
  sys   0m0.152s 

In fact it's so fast that I couldn't even make qdisc->refcnt > 1, so I did
yet another test [1], which looks a lot better.

When I didn't specify "prio", sometimes that
rhashtable_lookup_insert_fast() call in fl_ht_insert_unique() returns
-EEXIST.  Is it because that concurrent add-filter requests auto-allocated
the same "prio" number, so they collided with each other?  Do you think
this is related to why it's slow?

Thanks,
Peilin Ye

[1] In a beefier QEMU setup (64 cores, -m 128G), I started 64 tc instances
in -batch mode that keeps adding a unique filter (with "prio" and "handle"
specified) then deletes it.  Again, when they are running I delete the
ingress Qdisc, and here's the result:

                         #1         #2         #3         #4
   ----------------------------------------------------------
    a. refcnt            64         63         64         64
    b. replayed         169      5,630        887      3,442
    c. time real   0m0.171s   0m0.147s   0m0.186s   0m0.111s
            user   0m0.000s   0m0.009s   0m0.001s   0m0.000s
             sys   0m0.112s   0m0.108s   0m0.115s   0m0.104s
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