[OmniOS-discuss] The ixgbe driver, Lindsay Lohan, and the Greek economy
W Verb
wverb73 at gmail.com
Mon Feb 23 09:31:55 UTC 2015
Thank you Joerg,
I've downloaded the package and will try it tomorrow.
The only thing I can add at this point is that upon review of my testing, I
may have performed my "pkg -u" between the initial quad-gig performance
test and installing the 10G NIC. So this may be a new problem introduced in
the latest updates.
Those of you who are running 10G and have not upgraded to the latest
kernel, etc, might want to do some additional testing before running the
update.
-Warren V
On Mon, Feb 23, 2015 at 1:15 AM, Joerg Goltermann <jg at osn.de> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I remember there was a problem with the flow control settings in the ixgbe
> driver, so I updated it a long time ago for our internal servers to 2.5.8.
> Last weekend I integrated the latest changes from the FreeBSD driver to
> bring
> the illumos ixgbe to 2.5.25 but I had no time to test it, so it's
> completely
> untested!
>
>
> If you would like to give the latest driver a try you can fetch the
> kernel modules from https://cloud.osn.de/index.php/s/Fb4so9RsNnXA7r9
>
> Clone your boot environment, place the modules in the new environment
> and update the boot-archive of the new BE.
>
> - Joerg
>
>
>
>
>
> On 23.02.2015 02:54, W Verb wrote:
>
>> By the way, to those of you who have working setups: please send me
>> your pool/volume settings, interface linkprops, and any kernel tuning
>> parameters you may have set.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Warren V
>>
>> On Sat, Feb 21, 2015 at 7:59 AM, Schweiss, Chip <chip at innovates.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I can't say I totally agree with your performance assessment. I run
>>> Intel
>>> X520 in all my OmniOS boxes.
>>>
>>> Here is a capture of nfssvrtop I made while running many storage vMotions
>>> between two OmniOS boxes hosting NFS datastores. This is a 10 host
>>> VMware
>>> cluster. Both OmniOS boxes are dual 10G connected with copper twin-ax to
>>> the in rack Nexus 5010.
>>>
>>> VMware does 100% sync writes, I use ZeusRAM SSDs for log devices.
>>>
>>> -Chip
>>>
>>> 2014 Apr 24 08:05:51, load: 12.64, read: 17330243 KB, swrite: 15985
>>> KB,
>>> awrite: 1875455 KB
>>>
>>> Ver Client NFSOPS Reads SWrites AWrites Commits Rd_bw
>>> SWr_bw AWr_bw Rd_t SWr_t AWr_t Com_t Align%
>>>
>>> 4 10.28.17.105 0 0 0 0 0 0
>>> 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
>>>
>>> 4 10.28.17.215 0 0 0 0 0 0
>>> 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
>>>
>>> 4 10.28.17.213 0 0 0 0 0 0
>>> 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
>>>
>>> 4 10.28.16.151 0 0 0 0 0 0
>>> 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
>>>
>>> 4 all 1 0 0 0 0 0
>>> 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
>>>
>>> 3 10.28.16.175 3 0 3 0 0 1
>>> 11 0 4806 48 0 0 85
>>>
>>> 3 10.28.16.183 6 0 6 0 0 3
>>> 162 0 549 124 0 0 73
>>>
>>> 3 10.28.16.180 11 0 10 0 0 3
>>> 27 0 776 89 0 0 67
>>>
>>> 3 10.28.16.176 28 2 26 0 0 10
>>> 405 0 2572 198 0 0 100
>>>
>>> 3 10.28.16.178 4606 4602 4 0 0 294534
>>> 3 0 723 49 0 0 99
>>>
>>> 3 10.28.16.179 4905 4879 26 0 0 312208
>>> 311 0 735 271 0 0 99
>>>
>>> 3 10.28.16.181 5515 5502 13 0 0 352107
>>> 77 0 89 87 0 0 99
>>>
>>> 3 10.28.16.184 12095 12059 10 0 0 763014
>>> 39 0 249 147 0 0 99
>>>
>>> 3 10.28.58.1 15401 6040 116 6354 53 191605
>>> 474 202346 192 96 144 83 99
>>>
>>> 3 all 42574 33086 217 6354 53 1913488
>>> 1582 202300 348 138 153 105 99
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 11:46 PM, W Verb <wverb73 at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Hello All,
>>>>
>>>> Thank you for your replies.
>>>> I tried a few things, and found the following:
>>>>
>>>> 1: Disabling hyperthreading support in the BIOS drops performance
>>>> overall
>>>> by a factor of 4.
>>>> 2: Disabling VT support also seems to have some effect, although it
>>>> appears to be minor. But this has the amusing side effect of fixing the
>>>> hangs I've been experiencing with fast reboot. Probably by disabling
>>>> kvm.
>>>> 3: The performance tests are a bit tricky to quantify because of caching
>>>> effects. In fact, I'm not entirely sure what is happening here. It's
>>>> just
>>>> best to describe what I'm seeing:
>>>>
>>>> The commands I'm using to test are
>>>> dd if=/dev/zero of=./test.dd bs=2M count=5000
>>>> dd of=/dev/null if=./test.dd bs=2M count=5000
>>>> The host vm is running Centos 6.6, and has the latest vmtools installed.
>>>> There is a host cache on an SSD local to the host that is also in place.
>>>> Disabling the host cache didn't immediately have an effect as far as I
>>>> could
>>>> see.
>>>>
>>>> The host MTU set to 3000 on all iSCSI interfaces for all tests.
>>>>
>>>> Test 1: Right after reboot, with an ixgbe MTU of 9000, the write test
>>>> yields an average speed over three tests of 137MB/s. The read test
>>>> yields an
>>>> average over three tests of 5MB/s.
>>>>
>>>> Test 2: After setting "ifconfig ixgbe0 mtu 3000", the write tests yield
>>>> 140MB/s, and the read tests yield 53MB/s. It's important to note here
>>>> that
>>>> if I cut the read test short at only 2-3GB, I get results upwards of
>>>> 350MB/s, which I assume is local cache-related distortion.
>>>>
>>>> Test 3: MTU of 1500. Read tests are up to 156 MB/s. Write tests yield
>>>> about 142MB/s.
>>>> Test 4: MTU of 1000: Read test at 182MB/s.
>>>> Test 5: MTU of 900: Read test at 130 MB/s.
>>>> Test 6: MTU of 1000: Read test at 160MB/s. Write tests are now
>>>> consistently at about 300MB/s.
>>>> Test 7: MTU of 1200: Read test at 124MB/s.
>>>> Test 8: MTU of 1000: Read test at 161MB/s. Write at 261MB/s.
>>>>
>>>> A few final notes:
>>>> L1ARC grabs about 10GB of RAM during the tests, so there's definitely
>>>> some
>>>> read caching going on.
>>>> The write operations are easier to observe with iostat, and I'm seeing
>>>> io
>>>> rates that closely correlate with the network write speeds.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Chris, thanks for your specific details. I'd appreciate it if you could
>>>> tell me which copper NIC you tried, as well as to pass on the iSCSI
>>>> tuning
>>>> parameters.
>>>>
>>>> I've ordered an Intel EXPX9502AFXSR, which uses the 82598 chip instead
>>>> of
>>>> the 82599 in the X520. If I get similar results with my fiber
>>>> transcievers,
>>>> I'll see if I can get a hold of copper ones.
>>>>
>>>> But I should mention that I did indeed look at PHY/MAC error rates, and
>>>> they are nil.
>>>>
>>>> -Warren V
>>>>
>>>> On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 7:25 PM, Chris Siebenmann <cks at cs.toronto.edu>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> After installation and configuration, I observed all kinds of bad
>>>>>> behavior
>>>>>> in the network traffic between the hosts and the server. All of this
>>>>>> bad
>>>>>> behavior is traced to the ixgbe driver on the storage server. Without
>>>>>> going
>>>>>> into the full troubleshooting process, here are my takeaways:
>>>>>>
>>>>> [...]
>>>>>
>>>>> For what it's worth, we managed to achieve much better line rates on
>>>>> copper 10G ixgbe hardware of various descriptions between OmniOS
>>>>> and CentOS 7 (I don't think we ever tested OmniOS to OmniOS). I don't
>>>>> believe OmniOS could do TCP at full line rate but I think we managed
>>>>> 700+
>>>>> Mbytes/sec on both transmit and receive and we got basically
>>>>> disk-limited
>>>>> speeds with iSCSI (across multiple disks on multi-disk mirrored pools,
>>>>> OmniOS iSCSI initiator, Linux iSCSI targets).
>>>>>
>>>>> I don't believe we did any specific kernel tuning (and in fact some
>>>>> of
>>>>> our attempts to fiddle ixgbe driver parameters blew up in our face).
>>>>> We did tune iSCSI connection parameters to increase various buffer
>>>>> sizes so that ZFS could do even large single operations in single iSCSI
>>>>> transactions. (More details available if people are interested.)
>>>>>
>>>>> 10: At the wire level, the speed problems are clearly due to pauses in
>>>>>> response time by omnios. At 9000 byte frame sizes, I see a good number
>>>>>> of duplicate ACKs and fast retransmits during read operations (when
>>>>>> omnios is transmitting). But below about a 4100-byte MTU on omnios
>>>>>> (which seems to correlate to 4096-byte iSCSI block transfers), the
>>>>>> transmission errors fade away and we only see the transmission pause
>>>>>> problem.
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> This is what really attracted my attention. In our OmniOS setup, our
>>>>> specific Intel hardware had ixgbe driver issues that could cause
>>>>> activity stalls during once-a-second link heartbeat checks. This
>>>>> obviously had an effect at the TCP and iSCSI layers. My initial message
>>>>> to illumos-developer sparked a potentially interesting discussion:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> http://www.listbox.com/member/archive/182179/2014/10/sort/
>>>>> time_rev/page/16/entry/6:405/20141003125035:6357079A-4B1D-
>>>>> 11E4-A39C-D534381BA44D/
>>>>>
>>>>> If you think this is a possibility in your setup, I've put the DTrace
>>>>> script I used to hunt for this up on the web:
>>>>>
>>>>> http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~cks/src/omnios-ixgbe/ixgbe_delay.d
>>>>>
>>>>> This isn't the only potential source of driver stalls by any means,
>>>>> it's
>>>>> just the one I found. You may also want to look at lockstat in general,
>>>>> as information it reported is what led us to look specifically at the
>>>>> ixgbe code here.
>>>>>
>>>>> (If you suspect kernel/driver issues, lockstat combined with kernel
>>>>> source is a really excellent resource.)
>>>>>
>>>>> - cks
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>>
>>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>
>>
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