On Tue, Jan 29, 2019 at 06:43:45PM +0300, Sergei Shtylyov wrote:
> On 01/29/2019 10:58 AM, Simon Horman wrote:
>
> >>>> Add support for the RX checksum offload. This is enabled by default and
> >>>> may be disabled and re-enabled using 'ethtool':
> >>>>
> >>>> # ethtool -K eth0 rx {on|off}
> >>>>
> >>>> Some Ether MACs provide a simple checksumming scheme which appears to be
> >>>> completely compatible with CHECKSUM_COMPLETE: sum of all packet data
> >>>> after
> >>>> the L2 header is appended to packet data; this may be trivially read by
> >>>> the driver and used to update the skb accordingly. The same checksumming
> >>>> scheme is implemented in the EtherAVB MACs and now supported by tha
> >>>> 'ravb'
> >>>> driver.
> >>>>
> >>>> In terms of performance, throughput is close to gigabit line rate with
> >>>> the
> >>>> RX checksum offload both enabled and disabled. The 'perf' output,
> >>>> however,
> >>>> appears to indicate that significantly less time is spent in do_csum() --
> >>>> this is as expected.
> >>>
> >>> Nice.
> >>>
> >>> FYI, this seems similar to what I observed for RAVB, perhaps on H3 I don't
> >>> exactly recall. On E3, which has less CPU power, I recently observed that
> >>> with rx-csum enabled I can achieve gigabit line rate, but with rx-csum
> >>> disabled throughput is significantly lower. I.e. on that system throughput
> >>> is CPU bound with 1500 byte packets unless rx-csum enabled.
> >>
> >> Unfortunately, we can't teset these patches on the other gen3 boards.
> >> ISTR
> >> you have RZ/A1H board... if it's still with you, I'd appreciate testing.
> >
> > Unfortunately, as of a few weeks ago, I no longer have that board.
> >
> >>> Next point:
> >>>
> >>> 2da64300fbc ("ravb: expand rx descriptor data to accommodate hw checksum")
> >>> is fresh in my mind and I wonder if mdp->rx_buf_sz needs to grow to ensure
> >>> that there is always enough space for the csum.
> >>
> >> Well, if you look at sh_eth_ring_init(), you'll see that the driver
> >> reserves
> >> plenty of space at the end the RX buffers.
> >
> > Yes, I see that. And I assume that was enough space before this patch.
> > But is it still enough space now that 2 bytes are needed for the hardware
> > csum?
>
> To quote the source:
>
> /* +26 gets the maximum ethernet encapsulation, +7 & ~7 because the
> * card needs room to do 8 byte alignment, +2 so we can reserve
> * the first 2 bytes, and +16 gets room for the status word from the
> * card.
> */
> mdp->rx_buf_sz = (ndev->mtu <= 1492 ? PKT_BUF_SZ :
> (((ndev->mtu + 26 + 7) & ~7) + 2 + 16));
>
> I have no idea what they mean by status word and why it takes 16 bytes
> (and I even
> have the R8A771x manual!) but I think these 16 bytes are where our checksum
> goes...
> that's why I said there's plenty of space. :-)
Ok. FWIIW, I don't know either.
> > 2 bytes that might have previously been used as packet data in some
> > circumstances.
> >
> >>> In particular, have you
> >>> tested this with MTU-size frames with VLANs. (My test is to run iperf3
> >>> over
> >>> a VLAN netdev, netperf over a VLAN netdev would likely work just as well.)
> >>
> >> Could you refresh me on how to bring up a VLAN on a given interface?
> >
> > You will need a kernel with CONFIG_VLAN_8021Q enabled.
> >
> > Then you can do something like this:
> >
> > ip link add link eth0 name eth0.1 type vlan id 1
> > ip addr add 10.1.1.100/24 dev eth0.1
> > ip link set dev eth0.1 up
>
> Thank you! I'm not familiar with 'ip' at all, thought 'ifconfig' could do
> the same
> thing easier but couldn't remember all the needed incantations... :-)
> Anyway, it worked!
>
> >> [...]
> >>>> The above results collected on the R-Car V3H Starter Kit board.
> >>>>
> >>>> Based on the commit 4d86d3818627 ("ravb: RX checksum offload")...
> >>>>
> >>>> Signed-off-by: Sergei Shtylyov <[email protected]>
> >> [...]
>
> MBR, Sergei
>