[dpdk-stable] [dpdk-dev] [PATCH v2] net/failsafe: fix source port ID in Rx packets

Adrien Mazarguil adrien.mazarguil at 6wind.com
Thu Apr 18 18:46:24 CEST 2019


On Thu, Apr 18, 2019 at 05:51:18PM +0200, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> 18/04/2019 17:39, Thomas Monjalon:
> > 18/04/2019 17:32, Adrien Mazarguil:
> > > When passed to the application, Rx packets retain the port ID value
> > > originally set by slave devices. Unfortunately these IDs have no meaning to
> > > applications, which are typically unaware of their existence.
> > > 
> > > This confuses those caring about the source port field in mbufs (m->port)
> > > which experience issues ranging from traffic drop to crashes.
> [...]
> > > +/*
> > > + * Override source port in Rx packets.
> > > + *
> > > + * Make Rx packets originate from this PMD instance instead of one of its
> > > + * slaves. This is mandatory to avoid breaking applications.
> > > + */
<snip>
> > "slave" is a wording from bonding.
> > In failsafe, it is sub-device, isn't it?

I don't mind, although grep shows a couple of comments talking about slaves
already. Either way I think it fits as those are failsafe's pets, as in
failsafe does whatever it wants to them and they don't have a say :)

Does it warrant a v3?

> > > +static void
> > > +failsafe_rx_set_port(struct rte_mbuf **rx_pkts, uint16_t nb_pkts, uint16_t port)
> > > +{
> > > +	unsigned int i;
> > > +
> > > +	for (i = 0; i != nb_pkts; ++i)
> > > +		rx_pkts[i]->port = port;
> > > +}
> > > +
> > >  uint16_t
> > >  failsafe_rx_burst(void *queue,
> > >  		  struct rte_mbuf **rx_pkts,
> > > @@ -87,6 +102,9 @@ failsafe_rx_burst(void *queue,
> > >  		sdev = sdev->next;
> > >  	} while (nb_rx == 0 && sdev != rxq->sdev);
> > >  	rxq->sdev = sdev;
> > > +	if (nb_rx)
> > > +		failsafe_rx_set_port(rx_pkts, nb_rx,
> > > +				     rxq->priv->data->port_id);
> > >  	return nb_rx;
> > >  }
> > 
> > I'm afraid the performance drop to be hard.

Mbufs are still hot from the oven at this stage, so it's not *that*
expensive. I don't see a more efficient approach.

> > How the port id in mbuf is used exactly?

Applications that dissociate Rx itself from packet processing, or whenever a
networking stack is involved. Basically every time some code wonders where a
packet comes from due to lack of context and looks at m->port for the
answer (e.g. checking that a packet arrives on the right port given its
destination address).

> > What crash are you seeing?

None, thankfully. In my specific use case, 6WINDGate's stack simply drops
traffic coming from unknown ports.

However nothing prevents applications from using m->port as an index of some
array they allocated to quickly retrieve port context without looking it
up. They wouldn't expect indices they do not know about in there; assuming
it will result in a crash is not far fetched.

> Another way to fix it without performance drop would be to add
> a new driver op to set the top-level port id.
> This top-level id would be stored in the private structure of the port,
> initialized with the port id of the port itself, and used to fill mbufs.
> 
> Thoughts?

Adding a new devop as a fix would be a problem for stable releases, so this
patch is definitely needed, at least as a first step.

I'm not against a new API, however would it be worth the trouble? Especially
considering it would only be used by failsafe-like drivers with something to
hide from applications which is not the main use case.

For some PMDs, this operation could only be done at init time before port ID
is stored in private Rx queue data for fast retrieval. Retrieving it through
a pointer so it can be updated anytime would make it more expensive than
necessary for them.

It's understood that having failsafe in the dataplane has a cost, but even
with the proposed fix, that cost is dwarfed by the amount of work done by a
true PMD (and the application) for Rx processing.

My suggestion is to wait for someone to complain about the performance
compared to what they had before that fix, only then see what we can do.

-- 
Adrien Mazarguil
6WIND


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