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xen-devel
Re: [Xen-devel] Slow guest network I/O when CPU is pegged - Looking for
On Sat, Apr 08, 2006 at 08:56:19AM +0100, Keir Fraser wrote:
>
> On 7 Apr 2006, at 19:25, Matt Ayres wrote:
>
> >Ok, so we all know that guest network I/O is slow when the system
> >CPU's are being utilized extensively whether it be from dom0 or from
> >other guests. Lots of people have written about this and I can post
> >concrete tests if required.
> >
> >I'm just looking for one of the Xen developers to acknowledge that
> >they have been able to replicate the problem and it is indeed being
> >worked on or will be sometime in the near future. No one has
> >acknowledged any of the previous threads on either list so I want to
> >make sure it is an outstanding issue that is not being overlooked.
>
> It depends on the setup but poor scheduling is the main reason for poor
> network performance, usually. SEDF seems to have some problems with
> real-time domains (like domain0 with its default scheduling parameters)
> and gives them all the CPU they want -- this is obviously going to be
> bad if a client domain is scheduled on the same CPU. Since UDP has no
> flow control, dom0 can keep itself busy generating or forwarding UDP
> packets to the domU that get dropped continually in netback driver.
> DomU will hardly ever get scheduled. Even in the case of TCP, any drops
> will be interpreted as congestion and transmit rate will be cut.
>
> Basically I think the SEDF scheduler needs cleaning up: probably by
> removing the mass of confusing conditionally compiled options and then
> focusing on the remaining code that is actually compiled in. Another
> option is to try specifying the BVT scheduler and see if that works
> better. Or try setting dom0 to have non-real-time guarantees. Or give
> dom0 its own hyperthread on an Intel system (strongly recommended if
> it's possible).
>
Has anyone already tried this? I'd like to know if dedicating own
hyperthread for dom0 helps to fix these network performance problems..
> Apart from that, if you really are genuinely loading up CPUs with
> CPU-intensive workloads, and expecting them also to be able to process
> a significant amount of network traffic then something has to give. You
> can only run CPUs at 100%.
>
> -- Keir
>
>
-- Pasi
^
. .
Linux
/ - \
Choice.of.the
.Next.Generation.
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