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Date:      Sat, 18 Jan 2014 13:06:29 -0800
From:      Adrian Chadd <adrian.chadd@gmail.com>
To:        Eric Dombroski <eric@edombroski.com>
Cc:        FreeBSD Stable Mailing List <freebsd-stable@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Major performance/stability regression in virtio network drivers between 9.2-RELEASE and 10.0-RC5
Message-ID:  <CAJ-Vmo=ga-H5usiahWEXS8tu-RZJR0OXXcXiA-zEtJTNt99p5w@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <CA%2B=CMd3jeNevdzMQTCG5hEE91Tnmy=9VKfSOdsJaiqo7jYTvJg@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <CA%2B=CMd3jeNevdzMQTCG5hEE91Tnmy=9VKfSOdsJaiqo7jYTvJg@mail.gmail.com>

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Hi,

Have you tried disabling tso?

Adrian
On Jan 18, 2014 1:52 PM, "Eric Dombroski" <eric@edombroski.com> wrote:

> Hello:
>
> I believe there is a major performance regression between FreeBSD
> 9.2-RELEASE and 10.0-RC5 involving the virtio network drivers (vtnet) and
> handling incoming traffic.  Below are the results of some iperf tests and
> large dd operations over NFS.  Write throughput goes from ~40Gbps to
> ~2.4Gbps from 9.2 to 10.0RC5, and over time the connection becomes unstable
> ("no buffer space available"), requiring the interface to be taken down/up.
>
>
> These results are on fresh installs of 9.2 and 10.0RC5, no sysctl tweaks on
> either system.
>
> I can't reproduce this using an Intel 1Gbps ethernet through PCIe
> passthrough, although I suspect the problem manifests itself over 1Gbps
> speeds anyway.
>
> Tests:
>
> Client (host):
>   root@gogo:~# uname -a
>   Linux gogo 3.2.0-4-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 3.2.51-1 x86_64 GNU/Linux
>   root@gogo:~# kvm -version
>   QEMU emulator version 1.1.2 (qemu-kvm-1.1.2+dfsg-6, Debian), Copyright
> (c) 2003-2008 Fabrice Bellard
>   root@gogo:~# lsmod | grep vhost
>   vhost_net              27436  3
>   tun                    18337  8 vhost_net
>   macvtap                17633  1 vhost_net
>
>
>   Command: iperf -c 192.168.100.x -t 60
>
>
> Server (FreeBSD 9.2 VM):
>
>       root@umarotest:~ # uname -a
>       FreeBSD umarotest 9.2-RELEASE-p3 FreeBSD 9.2-RELEASE-p3 #0: Sat Jan
> 11 03:25:02 UTC 2014
> root@amd64-builder.daemonology.net:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC
>  amd64
>       root@umarotest:~ # iperf -s
>       ------------------------------------------------------------
>       Server listening on TCP port 5001
>       TCP window size: 64.0 KByte (default)
>       ------------------------------------------------------------
>       [  4] local 192.168.100.44 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1
> port 58996
>       [ ID] Interval       Transfer     Bandwidth
>       [  4]  0.0-60.0 sec   293 GBytes  41.9 Gbits/sec
>       [  5] local 192.168.100.44 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1
> port 58997
>       [  5]  0.0-60.0 sec   297 GBytes  42.5 Gbits/sec
>       [  4] local 192.168.100.44 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1
> port 58998
>       [  4]  0.0-60.0 sec   291 GBytes  41.6 Gbits/sec
>       [  5] local 192.168.100.44 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1
> port 58999
>       [  5]  0.0-60.0 sec   297 GBytes  42.6 Gbits/sec
>       [  4] local 192.168.100.44 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1
> port 59000
>       [  4]  0.0-60.0 sec   297 GBytes  42.5 Gbits/sec
>
>       While pinging out from the server to the client, I do not get any
> errors.
>
>
>       root@umaro:~ # uname -a FreeBSD umaro 10.0-RC5 FreeBSD 10.0-RC5 #0
> r260430: Wed Jan  8 05:10:04 UTC 2014
> root@snap.freebsd.org:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC
>  amd64
>       root@umaro:~ # iperf -s
>       ------------------------------------------------------------
>       Server listening on TCP port 5001
>       TCP window size: 64.0 KByte (default)
>       ------------------------------------------------------------
>       [  4] local 192.168.100.5 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1 port
> 50264
>       [ ID] Interval       Transfer     Bandwidth
>       [  4]  0.0-60.0 sec  16.7 GBytes  2.39 Gbits/sec
>       [  5] local 192.168.100.5 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1 port
> 50265
>       [  5]  0.0-60.0 sec  18.3 GBytes  2.62 Gbits/sec
>       [  4] local 192.168.100.5 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1 port
> 50266
>       [  4]  0.0-60.0 sec  16.8 GBytes  2.40 Gbits/sec
>       [  5] local 192.168.100.5 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1 port
> 50267
>       [  5]  0.0-60.0 sec  16.8 GBytes  2.40 Gbits/sec
>       [  4] local 192.168.100.5 port 5001 connected with 192.168.100.1 port
> 50268
>       [  4]  0.0-60.0 sec  16.8 GBytes  2.41 Gbits/sec
>
>       *** While pinging out from the server to client, frequent "ping:
> sendto: No space left on device" errors ***
>
>
>       After a while, I can also reliably re-produce more egregious "ping:
> sendto: No buffer space available" errors after doing a large sequential
> write over NFS:
>
>       mount -t nfs -o rsize=65536,wsize=65536 192.168.100.5:
> /storage/shared
> /mnt/nfs
>       dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/nfs/testfile bs=1M count=30000
>
> I am going to file a freebsd bug report as well.
>
> Thanks,
> Eric
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