[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Direct I/O to domU seeing a 30% performance hit
Ian,I had screwed up and had a process running in dom0 chewing up CPU in dom0. I thought I had taken care of it. After fixing that, most of the numbers for dom0, domU, and the base SLES kernel are within a couple of tenths of percent of each other. However, there are some fairly large differences in some of the runs where the socket buffers are small. Recv Send Send Socket Socket Message Elapsed Size Size Size Time Throughput bytes bytes bytes secs. 10^6bits/sec 262142 262142 4096 60.00 941.03 base 262142 262142 4096 60.00 939.95 dom0 262142 262142 4096 60.00 937.22 domU 16384 16384 32768 60.00 379.68 base 16384 16384 32768 60.00 350.15 dom0 16384 16384 32768 60.00 367.89 domUIn the latter case, the divergence from the base performance is much larger. I assume that when the socket buffers are small, the extra overhead for the interrupts is showing up more because more interrupts are required. Overall, though, the numbers are now acceptable. Thanks for your help. It allowed me to spot my goof. (Sorry about wasting your time though.) One last question: is there an easy way to break out the amount of CPU time spent in the hypervisor? Thanks, John Byrne Ian Pratt wrote: Both dom0 and the domU are SLES 10, so I don't know why the "idle" performance of the two should be different. The obvious asymmetry isthedisk. Since the disk isn't direct, any disk I/O by the domU would certainly impact dom0, but I don't think there should be much, if any.Idid run a dom0 test with the domU started, but idle and there was no real change to dom0's numbers. What's the best way to gather information about what is going on with the domains without perturbing them? (Or, at least, perturbingeveryoneequally.) As to the test, I am running netperf 2.4.1 on an outside machine tothedom0 and the domU. (So the doms are running the netserver portion.) I was originally running it in the doms to the outside machine, but when the bad numbers showed up I moved it to the outside machine because I wondered if the bad numbers were due to something happening to the system time in domU. The numbers is the "outside" test to domU lookworse. It might be worth checking that there's no interrupt sharing happening. While running the test against the domU, see how much CPU dom0 burns in the same period using 'xm vcpu-list'. To keep things simple, have dom0 and domU as uniprocessor guests. IanIan Pratt wrote:There have been a couple of network receive throughput performance regressions to domUs over time that were subsequently fixed. I think one may have crept in to 3.0.3.The report was (I believe) with a NIC directly assigned to the domU,sonot using netfront/back at all. John: please can you give more details on your config. IanAre you seeing any dropped packets on the vif associated with your domU in your dom0? If so, propagating changeset 11861 from unstable may help: changeset: 11861:637eace6d5c6 user: kfraser@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx date: Mon Oct 23 11:20:37 2006 +0100 summary: [NET] back: Fix packet queuing so that packets are drained if the In the past, we also had receive throughput issues to domUs that were due to socket buffer size logic but those were fixed a while ago. Can you send netstat -i output from dom0? Emmanuel. On Mon, Nov 06, 2006 at 09:55:17PM -0800, John Byrne wrote:I was asked to test direct I/O to a PV domU. Since, I had a system with two NICs, I gave one to a domU and one dom0. (Each isrunning thesame kernel: xen 3.0.3 x86_64.) I'm running netperf from an outside system to the domU anddom0 and Iam seeing 30% less throughput for the domU vs dom0. Is this to be expected? If so, why? If not, does anyonehave a guessas to what I might be doing wrong or what the issue might be? Thanks, John Byrne_______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel_______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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