From: Simon Barber <simon@superduper.net>
To: Dave Taht <dave.taht@gmail.com>
Cc: Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net>,
Make-Wifi-fast <make-wifi-fast@lists.bufferbloat.net>,
linux-wireless <linux-wireless@vger.kernel.org>,
Netdev <netdev@vger.kernel.org>,
Neal Cardwell <ncardwell@google.com>
Subject: Re: [Make-wifi-fast] debugging TCP stalls on high-speed wifi
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 2019 16:59:30 -0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <22B5F072-630A-44BE-A0E5-BF814A6CB9B0@superduper.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAA93jw6b6n0jm_BC6DbccEU3uN9zXcfjqnZMNm=vFjLVqYKyNA@mail.gmail.com>
I’m currently adding ACK thinning to Linux’s GRO code. Quite a simple addition given the way that code works.
Simon
> On Dec 12, 2019, at 3:42 PM, Dave Taht <dave.taht@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Dec 12, 2019 at 1:12 PM Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Eric,
>>
>> Thanks for looking :)
>>
>>>> I'm not sure how to do headers-only, but I guess -s100 will work.
>>>>
>>>> https://johannes.sipsolutions.net/files/he-tcp.pcap.xz
>>>>
>>>
>>> Lack of GRO on receiver is probably what is killing performance,
>>> both for receiver (generating gazillions of acks) and sender
>>> (to process all these acks)
>> Yes, I'm aware of this, to some extent. And I'm not saying we should see
>> even close to 1800 Mbps like we have with UDP...
>>
>> Mind you, the biggest thing that kills performance with many ACKs isn't
>> the load on the system - the sender system is only moderately loaded at
>> ~20-25% of a single core with TSO, and around double that without TSO.
>> The thing that kills performance is eating up all the medium time with
>> small non-aggregated packets, due to the the half-duplex nature of WiFi.
>> I know you know, but in case somebody else is reading along :-)
>
> I'm paying attention but pay attention faster if you cc make-wifi-fast.
>
> If you captured the air you'd probably see the sender winning the
> election for airtime 2 or more times in a row,
> it's random and oft dependent on on a variety of factors.
>
> Most Wifi is *not* "half" duplex, which implies it ping pongs between
> send and receive.
>
>>
>> But unless somehow you think processing the (many) ACKs on the sender
>> will cause it to stop transmitting, or something like that, I don't
>> think I should be seeing what I described earlier: we sometimes (have
>> to?) reclaim the entire transmit queue before TCP starts pushing data
>> again. That's less than 2MB split across at least two TCP streams, I
>> don't see why we should have to get to 0 (which takes about 7ms) until
>> more packets come in from TCP?
>
> Perhaps having a budget for ack processing within a 1ms window?
>
>> Or put another way - if I free say 400kB worth of SKBs, what could be
>> the reason we don't see more packets be sent out of the TCP stack within
>> the few ms or so? I guess I have to correlate this somehow with the ACKs
>> so I know how much data is outstanding for ACKs. (*)
>
> yes.
>
> It would be interesting to repeat this test in ht20 mode, and/or using
>
> flent --socket-stats --step-size=.04 --te=upload_streams=2 -t
> whatever_variant_of_test tcp_nup
>
> That will capture some of the tcp stats for you.
>
>>
>> The sk_pacing_shift is set to 7, btw, which should give us 8ms of
>> outstanding data. For now in this setup that's enough(**), and indeed
>> bumping the limit up (setting sk_pacing_shift to say 5) doesn't change
>> anything. So I think this part we actually solved - I get basically the
>> same performance and behaviour with two streams (needed due to GBit LAN
>> on the other side) as with 20 streams.
>>
>>
>>> I had a plan about enabling compressing ACK as I did for SACK
>>> in commit
>>> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=5d9f4262b7ea41ca9981cc790e37cca6e37c789e
>>>
>>> But I have not done it yet.
>>> It is a pity because this would tremendously help wifi I am sure.
>>
>> Nice :-)
>>
>> But that is something the *receiver* would have to do.
>
> Well it is certainly feasible to thin acks on the driver as we did in
> cake. More general. More cpu intensive. I'm happily just awaiting
> eric's work instead.
>
> One thing comcast inadvertently does to most flows is remark them cs1,
> which tosses big data into the bk queue and acks into the be queue. It
> actually helps sometimes.
>
>>
>> The dirty secret here is that we're getting close to 1700 Mbps TCP with
>> Windows in place of Linux in the setup, with the same receiver on the
>> other end (which is actually a single Linux machine with two GBit
>> network connections to the AP). So if we had this I'm sure it'd increase
>> performance, but it still wouldn't explain why we're so much slower than
>> Windows :-)
>>
>> Now, I'm certainly not saying that TCP behaviour is the only reason for
>> the difference, we already found an issue for example where due to a
>> small Windows driver bug some packet extension was always used, and the
>> AP is also buggy in that it needs the extension but didn't request it
>> ... so the two bugs cancelled each other out and things worked well, but
>> our Linux driver believed the AP ... :) Certainly there can be more
>> things like that still, I just started on the TCP side and ran into the
>> queueing behaviour that I cannot explain.
>>
>>
>> In any case, I'll try to dig deeper into the TCP stack to understand the
>> reason for this transmit behaviour.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> johannes
>>
>>
>> (*) Hmm. Now I have another idea. Maybe we have some kind of problem
>> with the medium access configuration, and we transmit all this data
>> without the AP having a chance to send back all the ACKs? Too bad I
>> can't put an air sniffer into the setup - it's a conductive setup.
>
> see above
>>
>>
>> (**) As another aside to this, the next generation HW after this will
>> have 256 frames in a block-ack, so that means instead of up to 64 (we
>> only use 63 for internal reasons) frames aggregated together we'll be
>> able to aggregate 256 (or maybe we again only 255?).
>
> My fervent wish is to somehow be able to mark every frame we can as not
> needing a retransmit in future standards. I've lost track of what ax
> can do. ? And for block ack retries
> to give up far sooner.
>
> you can safely drop all but the last three acks in a flow, and the
> txop itself provides
> a suitable clock.
>
> And, ya know, releasing packets ooo doesn't hurt as much as it used
> to, with rack.
>> Each one of those
>> frames may be an A-MSDU with ~11k content though (only 8k in the setup I
>> have here right now), which means we can get a LOT of data into a single
>> PPDU ...
>
> Just wearing my usual hat, I would prefer to optimize for service
> time, not bandwidth, in the future,
> using smaller txops with this more data in them, than the biggest
> txops possible.
>
> If you constrain your max txop to 2ms in this test, you will see tcp
> in slow start ramp up faster,
> and the ap scale to way more devices, with way less jitter and
> retries. Most flows never get out of slowstart.
>
>> . we'll probably have to bump the sk_pacing_shift to be able to
>> fill that with a single TCP stream, though since we run all our
>> performance numbers with many streams, maybe we should just leave it :)
>
> Please. Optimizing for single flow performance is an academic's game.
>
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Make Music, Not War
>
> Dave Täht
> CTO, TekLibre, LLC
> http://www.teklibre.com
> Tel: 1-831-435-0729
> _______________________________________________
> Make-wifi-fast mailing list
> Make-wifi-fast@lists.bufferbloat.net
> https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/make-wifi-fast
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2019-12-13 0:59 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
[not found] <14cedbb9300f887fecc399ebcdb70c153955f876.camel@sipsolutions.net>
[not found] ` <CADVnQym_CNktZ917q0-9dVY9dhtiJVRRotGTrPNdZUpkjd3vyw@mail.gmail.com>
[not found] ` <f4670ce0f4399fe82e7168fb9c491d8eb718e8d8.camel@sipsolutions.net>
[not found] ` <99748db5-7898-534b-d407-ed819f07f939@gmail.com>
[not found] ` <ff6b35ad589d7cf0710cb9fca4c799538da2e653.camel@sipsolutions.net>
2019-12-12 23:42 ` Dave Taht
2019-12-13 0:59 ` Simon Barber [this message]
2019-12-13 1:46 ` Eric Dumazet
2019-12-13 1:57 ` Simon Barber
2019-12-13 4:42 ` Dave Taht
2019-12-13 8:08 ` Johannes Berg
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