From: jiangyiwen <jiangyiwen@huawei.com>
To: Jason Wang <jasowang@redhat.com>, <stefanha@redhat.com>
Cc: <netdev@vger.kernel.org>, <kvm@vger.kernel.org>,
<virtualization@lists.linux-foundation.org>
Subject: Re: [RFC] VSOCK: The performance problem of vhost_vsock.
Date: Wed, 17 Oct 2018 19:32:40 +0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <5BC71DD8.8090908@huawei.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <d16d2052-bfb1-7861-e210-b53b4ea3260c@redhat.com>
On 2018/10/17 17:39, Jason Wang wrote:
>
> On 2018/10/17 下午5:27, jiangyiwen wrote:
>> On 2018/10/15 14:12, jiangyiwen wrote:
>>> On 2018/10/15 10:33, Jason Wang wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 2018年10月15日 09:43, jiangyiwen wrote:
>>>>> Hi Stefan & All:
>>>>>
>>>>> Now I find vhost-vsock has two performance problems even if it
>>>>> is not designed for performance.
>>>>>
>>>>> First, I think vhost-vsock should faster than vhost-net because it
>>>>> is no TCP/IP stack, but the real test result vhost-net is 5~10
>>>>> times than vhost-vsock, currently I am looking for the reason.
>>>> TCP/IP is not a must for vhost-net.
>>>>
>>>> How do you test and compare the performance?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks
>>>>
>>> I test the performance used my test tool, like follows:
>>>
>>> Server Client
>>> socket()
>>> bind()
>>> listen()
>>>
>>> socket(AF_VSOCK) or socket(AF_INET)
>>> Accept() <-------------->connect()
>>> *======Start Record Time======*
>>> Call syscall sendfile()
>>> Recv()
>>> Send end
>>> Receive end
>>> Send(file_size)
>>> Recv(file_size)
>>> *======End Record Time======*
>>>
>>> The test result, vhost-vsock is about 500MB/s, and vhost-net is about 2500MB/s.
>>>
>>> By the way, vhost-net use single queue.
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>>>
>>>>> Second, vhost-vsock only supports two vqs(tx and rx), that means
>>>>> if multiple sockets in the guest will use the same vq to transmit
>>>>> the message and get the response. So if there are multiple applications
>>>>> in the guest, we should support "Multiqueue" feature for Virtio-vsock.
>>>>>
>>>>> Stefan, have you encountered these problems?
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>> Yiwen.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> .
>>>>
>>>
>> Hi Jason and Stefan,
>>
>> Maybe I find the reason of bad performance.
>>
>> I found pkt_len is limited to VIRTIO_VSOCK_DEFAULT_RX_BUF_SIZE(4K),
>> it will cause the bandwidth is limited to 500~600MB/s. And once I
>> increase to 64k, it can improve about 3 times(~1500MB/s).
>
>
> Looks like the value was chosen for a balance between rx buffer size and performance. Allocating 64K always even for small packet is kind of waste and stress for guest memory. Virito-net try to avoid this by inventing the merge able rx buffer which allows big packet to be scattered in into different buffers. We can reuse this idea or revisit the idea of using virtio-net/vhost-net as a transport of vsock.
>
> What interesting is the performance is still behind vhost-net.
>
> Thanks
>
Actually I don't understand why pkt_len is limited to
VIRTIO_VSOCK_DEFAULT_RX_BUF_SIZE in virtio_transport_send_pkt_info(),
while I think it should used VIRTIO_VSOCK_MAX_PKT_BUF_SIZE instead.
Thanks.
>>
>> By the way, I send to 64K in application once, and I don't use
>> sg_init_one and rewrite function to packet sg list because pkt_len
>> include multiple pages.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Yiwen.
>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Virtualization mailing list
>>> Virtualization@lists.linux-foundation.org
>>> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/virtualization
>>>
>>
>
> .
>
prev parent reply other threads:[~2018-10-17 19:28 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2018-10-15 1:43 [RFC] VSOCK: The performance problem of vhost_vsock jiangyiwen
2018-10-15 2:33 ` Jason Wang
2018-10-15 6:12 ` jiangyiwen
2018-10-17 9:27 ` jiangyiwen
2018-10-17 9:39 ` Jason Wang
2018-10-17 9:51 ` Jason Wang
2018-10-17 11:41 ` jiangyiwen
2018-10-17 12:31 ` Jason Wang
2018-10-18 1:22 ` jiangyiwen
2018-10-18 2:45 ` Jason Wang
2018-10-17 11:32 ` jiangyiwen [this message]
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