[RFC PATCH v2 00/11] Device Memory TCP

David Ahern dsahern at kernel.org
Mon Aug 14 01:12:11 UTC 2023


On 8/9/23 7:57 PM, Mina Almasry wrote:
> Changes in RFC v2:
> ------------------
> 
> The sticking point in RFC v1[1] was the dma-buf pages approach we used to
> deliver the device memory to the TCP stack. RFC v2 is a proof-of-concept
> that attempts to resolve this by implementing scatterlist support in the
> networking stack, such that we can import the dma-buf scatterlist
> directly. This is the approach proposed at a high level here[2].
> 
> Detailed changes:
> 1. Replaced dma-buf pages approach with importing scatterlist into the
>    page pool.
> 2. Replace the dma-buf pages centric API with a netlink API.
> 3. Removed the TX path implementation - there is no issue with
>    implementing the TX path with scatterlist approach, but leaving
>    out the TX path makes it easier to review.
> 4. Functionality is tested with this proposal, but I have not conducted
>    perf testing yet. I'm not sure there are regressions, but I removed
>    perf claims from the cover letter until they can be re-confirmed.
> 5. Added Signed-off-by: contributors to the implementation.
> 6. Fixed some bugs with the RX path since RFC v1.
> 
> Any feedback welcome, but specifically the biggest pending questions
> needing feedback IMO are:
> 
> 1. Feedback on the scatterlist-based approach in general.
> 2. Netlink API (Patch 1 & 2).
> 3. Approach to handle all the drivers that expect to receive pages from
>    the page pool (Patch 6).
> 
> [1] https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/dfe4bae7-13a0-3c5d-d671-f61b375cb0b4@gmail.com/T/
> [2] https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/CAHS8izPm6XRS54LdCDZVd0C75tA1zHSu6jLVO8nzTLXCc=H7Nw@mail.gmail.com/
> 
> ----------------------
> 
> * TL;DR:
> 
> Device memory TCP (devmem TCP) is a proposal for transferring data to and/or
> from device memory efficiently, without bouncing the data to a host memory
> buffer.
> 
> * Problem:
> 
> A large amount of data transfers have device memory as the source and/or
> destination. Accelerators drastically increased the volume of such transfers.
> Some examples include:
> - ML accelerators transferring large amounts of training data from storage into
>   GPU/TPU memory. In some cases ML training setup time can be as long as 50% of
>   TPU compute time, improving data transfer throughput & efficiency can help
>   improving GPU/TPU utilization.
> 
> - Distributed training, where ML accelerators, such as GPUs on different hosts,
>   exchange data among them.
> 
> - Distributed raw block storage applications transfer large amounts of data with
>   remote SSDs, much of this data does not require host processing.
> 
> Today, the majority of the Device-to-Device data transfers the network are
> implemented as the following low level operations: Device-to-Host copy,
> Host-to-Host network transfer, and Host-to-Device copy.
> 
> The implementation is suboptimal, especially for bulk data transfers, and can
> put significant strains on system resources, such as host memory bandwidth,
> PCIe bandwidth, etc. One important reason behind the current state is the
> kernel’s lack of semantics to express device to network transfers.
> 
> * Proposal:
> 
> In this patch series we attempt to optimize this use case by implementing
> socket APIs that enable the user to:
> 
> 1. send device memory across the network directly, and
> 2. receive incoming network packets directly into device memory.
> 
> Packet _payloads_ go directly from the NIC to device memory for receive and from
> device memory to NIC for transmit.
> Packet _headers_ go to/from host memory and are processed by the TCP/IP stack
> normally. The NIC _must_ support header split to achieve this.
> 
> Advantages:
> 
> - Alleviate host memory bandwidth pressure, compared to existing
>  network-transfer + device-copy semantics.
> 
> - Alleviate PCIe BW pressure, by limiting data transfer to the lowest level
>   of the PCIe tree, compared to traditional path which sends data through the
>   root complex.
> 
> * Patch overview:
> 
> ** Part 1: netlink API
> 
> Gives user ability to bind dma-buf to an RX queue.
> 
> ** Part 2: scatterlist support
> 
> Currently the standard for device memory sharing is DMABUF, which doesn't
> generate struct pages. On the other hand, networking stack (skbs, drivers, and
> page pool) operate on pages. We have 2 options:
> 
> 1. Generate struct pages for dmabuf device memory, or,
> 2. Modify the networking stack to process scatterlist.
> 
> Approach #1 was attempted in RFC v1. RFC v2 implements approach #2.
> 
> ** part 3: page pool support
> 
> We piggy back on page pool memory providers proposal:
> https://github.com/kuba-moo/linux/tree/pp-providers
> 
> It allows the page pool to define a memory provider that provides the
> page allocation and freeing. It helps abstract most of the device memory
> TCP changes from the driver.
> 
> ** part 4: support for unreadable skb frags
> 
> Page pool iovs are not accessible by the host; we implement changes
> throughput the networking stack to correctly handle skbs with unreadable
> frags.
> 
> ** Part 5: recvmsg() APIs
> 
> We define user APIs for the user to send and receive device memory.
> 
> Not included with this RFC is the GVE devmem TCP support, just to
> simplify the review. Code available here if desired:
> https://github.com/mina/linux/tree/tcpdevmem
> 
> This RFC is built on top of net-next with Jakub's pp-providers changes
> cherry-picked.
> 
> * NIC dependencies:
> 
> 1. (strict) Devmem TCP require the NIC to support header split, i.e. the
>    capability to split incoming packets into a header + payload and to put
>    each into a separate buffer. Devmem TCP works by using device memory
>    for the packet payload, and host memory for the packet headers.
> 
> 2. (optional) Devmem TCP works better with flow steering support & RSS support,
>    i.e. the NIC's ability to steer flows into certain rx queues. This allows the
>    sysadmin to enable devmem TCP on a subset of the rx queues, and steer
>    devmem TCP traffic onto these queues and non devmem TCP elsewhere.
> 
> The NIC I have access to with these properties is the GVE with DQO support
> running in Google Cloud, but any NIC that supports these features would suffice.
> I may be able to help reviewers bring up devmem TCP on their NICs.
> 
> * Testing:
> 
> The series includes a udmabuf kselftest that show a simple use case of
> devmem TCP and validates the entire data path end to end without
> a dependency on a specific dmabuf provider.
> 
> ** Test Setup
> 
> Kernel: net-next with this RFC and memory provider API cherry-picked
> locally.
> 
> Hardware: Google Cloud A3 VMs.
> 
> NIC: GVE with header split & RSS & flow steering support.

This set seems to depend on Jakub's memory provider patches and a netdev
driver change which is not included. For the testing mentioned here, you
must have a tree + branch with all of the patches. Is it publicly available?

It would be interesting to see how well (easy) this integrates with
io_uring. Besides avoiding all of the syscalls for receiving the iov and
releasing the buffers back to the pool, io_uring also brings in the
ability to seed a page_pool with registered buffers which provides a
means to get simpler Rx ZC for host memory.

Overall I like the intent and possibilities for extensions, but a lot of
details are missing - perhaps some are answered by seeing an end-to-end
implementation.


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