From: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
To: Maxim Mikityanskiy <maximmi@nvidia.com>
Cc: dsahern@gmail.com, netdev@vger.kernel.org,
stephen@networkplumber.org, tariqt@nvidia.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH iproute2-next v2] ss: Shorter display format for TLS zerocopy sendfile
Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2022 09:44:28 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20220602094428.4464c58a@kernel.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <bf8c357e-6a1d-4c42-e6f8-f259879b67c6@nvidia.com>
On Thu, 2 Jun 2022 12:13:53 +0300 Maxim Mikityanskiy wrote:
> I would expect to get a comment on my patch, instead of submitting your
> own v2
I replied to v1 that the name is not okay. And you didn't go with my
suggestion. This is a trivial matter, faster for me to send my own
patch.
> and dropping my author and signed-off-by.
Sorry, you can add it now tho.
> On 2022-06-02 02:42, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
> > Commit 21c07b45688f ("ss: Show zerocopy sendfile status of TLS
> > sockets") used "key: value" format for the sendfile read-only
> > optimization. Move to a more appropriate "flag" display format.
> > Rename the flag to something based on the assumption it allows
> > the kernel to make.
>
> The kernel feature is exposed to the userspace as "zerocopy sendfile",
> see the constants for setsockopt and sock_diag.
> ss should just print whatever is exposed via sock_diag as is. IMO,
> inventing new names for it would cause confusion. Calling the feature
> by the same name everywhere looks clearer to me.
Sure, there discrepancy is a little annoying. Do you want to send
the kernel rename patch, or should I?
> > the term "zero-copy"
> > is particularly confusing in TLS where we call decrypt/encrypt
> > directly from user space a zero-copy as well.
>
> I don't think "zerocopy_sendfile" is confusing. There is no second
> zerocopy sendfile, and the zero-copy you are talking about is neither
> related to sendfile nor exposed to the userspace, as far as I see.
What is your thinking based on? I spent the last 8 months in meetings
about TLS and I had to explain over and over that TLS zero-copy is not
zero-copy. Granted that's the SW path that's to blame as it moves data
from one place to another and still calls that zero-copy. But the term
zero-copy is tainted for all of kernel TLS at this point.
Unless we report a matrix with the number of copies per syscall I'd
prefer to avoid calling random ones zero-copy again.
> What is confusing is calling a feature not by its name, but by one of
> its implications, and picking a name that doesn't have any references
> elsewhere.
The sockopt is a promise from the user space to the kernel that it will
not modify the data in the file. So I'd prefer to call it sendfile_ro.
I have a similar (in spirit) optimization I'll send out for the Rx path
which saves the SW path from making a copy when the user knows that
there will be no TLS 1.3 padding. I want to call it expect_nopad or
such, not tls13_zc or tls13_onefewercopy or IDK what.
> I believe, we are going to have more and more zerocopy features in
> the kernel, and it's OK to distinguish them by "zerocopy TLS
> sendfile", "zerocopy AF_XDP", etc. This is why my feature isn't
> called just "zerocopy".
>
> > > I suggest mentioning the purpose of this optimization: a huge
> > > performance boost of up to 2.4 times compared to non-zerocopy
> > > device offload. See the performance numbers from my commit
> > > message:
>
> > That reads like and ad to me.
>
> My intention was to emphasize some positive points and give the
> readers understanding why they may want to enable this feature.
> "Zero-copy behavior" sounds neutral to me, and the following
> paragraphs describe the limitations only, so I wanted to add some
> positive phrasing like "improved performance" or "reduced CPU cycles
> spent on extra copies". "Transmitting data directly to the NIC
> without making an in-kernel copy" implies these points, but it's not
> explicit. If you think it's obvious enough for the target audience,
> I'm fine with the current version.
Everyone wants zero-copy, if that's what was being declared here
we should just default it to enabled and not bother.
Developers need to read the fine print first.
> > Avoid "salesman speak", the term "zero-copy"
>
> In the documentation you wrote, "true zero-copy behavior" was an
> acceptable term, and the "ad" was the performance numbers.
I don't understand why you care about the numbers. They will be
meaningless for other platforms (AMD), other versions of your NICs, and
under real application loads. It seems like a declaration of a
performance boost which can't be accurately delivered on. Do you really
want the users to call you and say "your numbers show 40% improvement
but we only see 20%"? I'm not dead-set on excluding the numbers, I just
can't recall ever seeing numbers for a particular NIC included in the
documentation for a feature or an API.
> However, in the context of this patch, you call "zerocopy" a
> "salesman speak". What is different in this context that "zerocopy"
> became an unwanted term?
I put that sentence in there because I thought you'd appreciate it.
I can remove it if it makes my opinion look inconsistent.
Trying to be nice always backfires for me, eh.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2022-06-02 16:44 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 13+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2022-06-01 12:23 [PATCH iproute2-next] ss: Shorter display format for TLS zerocopy sendfile Maxim Mikityanskiy
2022-06-01 23:42 ` [PATCH iproute2-next v2] " Jakub Kicinski
2022-06-02 9:13 ` Maxim Mikityanskiy
2022-06-02 16:44 ` Jakub Kicinski [this message]
2022-06-03 13:47 ` Maxim Mikityanskiy
2022-06-03 15:51 ` Jakub Kicinski
2022-06-06 11:29 ` Maxim Mikityanskiy
2022-06-06 15:45 ` Stephen Hemminger
2022-06-06 17:59 ` Jakub Kicinski
2022-06-07 10:35 ` Maxim Mikityanskiy
2022-06-07 17:30 ` Jakub Kicinski
2022-06-07 21:08 ` Stephen Hemminger
2022-06-08 10:04 ` Maxim Mikityanskiy
Reply instructions:
You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:
* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
and reply-to-all from there: mbox
Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style
* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
switches of git-send-email(1):
git send-email \
--in-reply-to=20220602094428.4464c58a@kernel.org \
--to=kuba@kernel.org \
--cc=dsahern@gmail.com \
--cc=maximmi@nvidia.com \
--cc=netdev@vger.kernel.org \
--cc=stephen@networkplumber.org \
--cc=tariqt@nvidia.com \
/path/to/YOUR_REPLY
https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html
* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line
before the message body.
This is an external index of several public inboxes,
see mirroring instructions on how to clone and mirror
all data and code used by this external index.