On Fri, Aug 24, 2007 at 03:59:16PM +0200, Jan-Bernd Themann wrote: > ....... > 3) On modern systems the incoming packets are processed very fast. Especially > on SMP systems when we use multiple queues we process only a few packets > per napi poll cycle. So NAPI does not work very well here and the > interrupt > rate is still high. What we need would be some sort of timer polling mode > which will schedule a device after a certain amount of time for high load > situations. With high precision timers this could work well. Current > usual timers are too slow. A finer granularity would be needed to keep the > latency down (and queue length moderate). >
We found the same on ia64-sn systems with tg3 a couple of years ago. Using simple interrupt coalescing ("don't interrupt until you've received N packets or M usecs have elapsed") worked reasonably well in practice. If your h/w supports that (and I'd guess it does, since it's such a simple thing), you might try it. -- Arthur - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html