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author | Ilpo Järvinen <ilpo.jarvinen@helsinki.fi> | 2008-11-25 08:20:15 +0300 |
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committer | David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> | 2008-11-25 08:20:15 +0300 |
commit | 832d11c5cd076abc0aa1eaf7be96c81d1a59ce41 (patch) | |
tree | 95b22ad16d1ff414cab39578ed8c927c2ce08723 /include | |
parent | f58b22fd3c16444edc393a217a74208f1894b601 (diff) | |
download | linux-832d11c5cd076abc0aa1eaf7be96c81d1a59ce41.tar.xz |
tcp: Try to restore large SKBs while SACK processing
During SACK processing, most of the benefits of TSO are eaten by
the SACK blocks that one-by-one fragment SKBs to MSS sized chunks.
Then we're in problems when cleanup work for them has to be done
when a large cumulative ACK comes. Try to return back to pre-split
state already while more and more SACK info gets discovered by
combining newly discovered SACK areas with the previous skb if
that's SACKed as well.
This approach has a number of benefits:
1) The processing overhead is spread more equally over the RTT
2) Write queue has less skbs to process (affect everything
which has to walk in the queue past the sacked areas)
3) Write queue is consistent whole the time, so no other parts
of TCP has to be aware of this (this was not the case with
some other approach that was, well, quite intrusive all
around).
4) Clean_rtx_queue can release most of the pages using single
put_page instead of previous PAGE_SIZE/mss+1 calls
In case a hole is fully filled by the new SACK block, we attempt
to combine the next skb too which allows construction of skbs
that are even larger than what tso split them to and it handles
hole per on every nth patterns that often occur during slow start
overshoot pretty nicely. Though this to be really useful also
a retransmission would have to get lost since cumulative ACKs
advance one hole at a time in the most typical case.
TODO: handle upwards only merging. That should be rather easy
when segment is fully sacked but I'm leaving that as future
work item (it won't make very large difference anyway since
this current approach already covers quite a lot of normal
cases).
I was earlier thinking of some sophisticated way of tracking
timestamps of the first and the last segment but later on
realized that it won't be that necessary at all to store the
timestamp of the last segment. The cases that can occur are
basically either:
1) ambiguous => no sensible measurement can be taken anyway
2) non-ambiguous is due to reordering => having the timestamp
of the last segment there is just skewing things more off
than does some good since the ack got triggered by one of
the holes (besides some substle issues that would make
determining right hole/skb even harder problem). Anyway,
it has nothing to do with this change then.
I choose to route some abnormal looking cases with goto noop,
some could be handled differently (eg., by stopping the
walking at that skb but again). In general, they either
shouldn't happen at all or are rare enough to make no difference
in practice.
In theory this change (as whole) could cause some macroscale
regression (global) because of cache misses that are taken over
the round-trip time but it gets very likely better because of much
less (local) cache misses per other write queue walkers and the
big recovery clearing cumulative ack.
Worth to note that these benefits would be very easy to get also
without TSO/GSO being on as long as the data is in pages so that
we can merge them. Currently I won't let that happen because
DSACK splitting at fragment that would mess up pcounts due to
sk_can_gso in tcp_set_skb_tso_segs. Once DSACKs fragments gets
avoided, we have some conditions that can be made less strict.
TODO: I will probably have to convert the excessive pointer
passing to struct sacktag_state... :-)
My testing revealed that considerable amount of skbs couldn't
be shifted because they were cloned (most likely still awaiting
tx reclaim)...
[The rest is considering future work instead since I got
repeatably EFAULT to tcpdump's recvfrom when I added
pskb_expand_head to deal with clones, so I separated that
into another, later patch]
...To counter that, I gave up on the fifth advantage:
5) When growing previous SACK block, less allocs for new skbs
are done, basically a new alloc is needed only when new hole
is detected and when the previous skb runs out of frags space
...which now only happens of if reclaim is fast enough to dispose
the clone before the SACK block comes in (the window is RTT long),
otherwise we'll have to alloc some.
With clones being handled I got these numbers (will be somewhat
worse without that), taken with fine-grained mibs:
TCPSackShifted 398
TCPSackMerged 877
TCPSackShiftFallback 320
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEFALLBACKGSO 0
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEFALLBACKSKBBITS 0
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEFALLBACKSKBDATA 0
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEFALLBACKBELOW 0
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEFALLBACKFIRST 1
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEFALLBACKPREVBITS 318
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEFALLBACKMSS 1
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEFALLBACKNOHEAD 0
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEFALLBACKSHIFT 0
TCPSACKCOLLAPSENOOPSEQ 0
TCPSACKCOLLAPSENOOPSMALLPCOUNT 0
TCPSACKCOLLAPSENOOPSMALLLEN 0
TCPSACKCOLLAPSEHOLE 12
Signed-off-by: Ilpo Järvinen <ilpo.jarvinen@helsinki.fi>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'include')
-rw-r--r-- | include/linux/skbuff.h | 33 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | include/net/tcp.h | 5 |
2 files changed, 38 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/skbuff.h b/include/linux/skbuff.h index a01b6f84e3bc..acf17af45af9 100644 --- a/include/linux/skbuff.h +++ b/include/linux/skbuff.h @@ -493,6 +493,19 @@ static inline bool skb_queue_is_last(const struct sk_buff_head *list, } /** + * skb_queue_is_first - check if skb is the first entry in the queue + * @list: queue head + * @skb: buffer + * + * Returns true if @skb is the first buffer on the list. + */ +static inline bool skb_queue_is_first(const struct sk_buff_head *list, + const struct sk_buff *skb) +{ + return (skb->prev == (struct sk_buff *) list); +} + +/** * skb_queue_next - return the next packet in the queue * @list: queue head * @skb: current buffer @@ -511,6 +524,24 @@ static inline struct sk_buff *skb_queue_next(const struct sk_buff_head *list, } /** + * skb_queue_prev - return the prev packet in the queue + * @list: queue head + * @skb: current buffer + * + * Return the prev packet in @list before @skb. It is only valid to + * call this if skb_queue_is_first() evaluates to false. + */ +static inline struct sk_buff *skb_queue_prev(const struct sk_buff_head *list, + const struct sk_buff *skb) +{ + /* This BUG_ON may seem severe, but if we just return then we + * are going to dereference garbage. + */ + BUG_ON(skb_queue_is_first(list, skb)); + return skb->prev; +} + +/** * skb_get - reference buffer * @skb: buffer to reference * @@ -1652,6 +1683,8 @@ extern int skb_splice_bits(struct sk_buff *skb, extern void skb_copy_and_csum_dev(const struct sk_buff *skb, u8 *to); extern void skb_split(struct sk_buff *skb, struct sk_buff *skb1, const u32 len); +extern int skb_shift(struct sk_buff *tgt, struct sk_buff *skb, + int shiftlen); extern struct sk_buff *skb_segment(struct sk_buff *skb, int features); diff --git a/include/net/tcp.h b/include/net/tcp.h index 90b4c3b4c336..265392470b26 100644 --- a/include/net/tcp.h +++ b/include/net/tcp.h @@ -1192,6 +1192,11 @@ static inline struct sk_buff *tcp_write_queue_next(struct sock *sk, struct sk_bu return skb_queue_next(&sk->sk_write_queue, skb); } +static inline struct sk_buff *tcp_write_queue_prev(struct sock *sk, struct sk_buff *skb) +{ + return skb_queue_prev(&sk->sk_write_queue, skb); +} + #define tcp_for_write_queue(skb, sk) \ skb_queue_walk(&(sk)->sk_write_queue, skb) |