PCBGROUP(9) BSD Kernel Developer's Manual PCBGROUP(9)
NAME
PCBGROUP -- Distributed Protocol Control Block Groups
SYNOPSIS
options PCBGROUP
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <netinet/in_pcb.h>
void
in_pcbgroup_init(struct inpcbinfo *pcbinfo, u_int hashfields, int hash_nelements);
void
in_pcbgroup_destroy(struct inpcbinfo *pcbinfo);
struct inpcbgroup *
in_pcbgroup_byhash(struct inpcbinfo *pcbinfo, u_int hashtype, uint32_t hash);
struct inpcbgroup *
in_pcbgroup_byinpcb(struct inpcb *inp);
void
in_pcbgroup_update(struct inpcb *inp);
void
in_pcbgroup_update_mbuf(struct inpcb *inp, struct mbuf *m);
void
in_pcbgroup_remove(struct inpcb *inp);
int
in_pcbgroup_enabled(struct inpcbinfo *pcbinfo);
#include <netinet6/in6_pcb.h>
struct inpcbgroup *
in6_pcbgroup_byhash(struct inpcbinfo *pcbinfo, u_int hashtype, uint32_t hash);
DESCRIPTION
This implementation introduces notions of affinity for connections and distribute work so as to reduce lock contention, with hardware work
distribution strategies such as RSS. In this construction, connection groups supplement, rather than replace, existing reservation tables
for protocol 4-tuples, offering CPU-affine lookup tables with minimal cache line migration and lock contention during steady state operation.
Internet protocols like UDP and TCP register to use connection groups by providing an ipi_hashfields value other than IPI_HASHFIELDS_NONE.
This indicates to the connection group code whether a 2-tuple or 4-tuple is used as an argument to hashes that assign a connection to a par-
ticular group. This must be aligned with any hardware-offloaded distribution model, such as RSS or similar approaches taken in embedded net-
work boards. Wildcard sockets require special handling, as in Willmann 2006, and are shared between connection groups while being protected
by group-local locks. Connection establishment and teardown can be signficantly more expensive than without connection groups, but that
steady-state processing can be significantly faster.
Enabling PCBGROUP in the kernel only provides the infrastructure required to create and manage multiple PCB groups. An implementation needs
to fill in a few functions to provide PCB group hash information in order for PCBs to be placed in a PCB group.
Operation
By default, each PCB info block (struct pcbinfo) has a single hash for all PCB entries for the given protocol with a single lock protecting
it. This can be a significant source of lock contention on SMP hardware. When a PCBGROUP is created, an array of separate hash tables are
created, each with its own lock. A separate table for wildcard PCBs is provided. By default, a PCBGROUP table is created for each available
CPU. The PCBGROUP code attempts to calculate a hash value from the given PCB or mbuf when looking up a PCBGROUP. While processing a
received frame, in_pcbgroup_byhash() can be used in conjunction with either a hardware-provided hash value (eg the RSS(9) calculated hash
value provided by some NICs) or a software-provided hash value in order to choose a PCBGROUP table to query. A single table lock is held
while performing a wildcard match. However, all of the table locks are acquired before modifying the wildcard table. The PCBGROUP tables
operate in conjunction with the normal single PCB list in a PCB info block. Thus, inserting and removing a PCB will still incur the same
costs as without PCBGROUP. A protocol which uses PCBGROUP should fall back to the normal PCB list lookup if a call to the PCBGROUP layer
does not yield a lookup hit.
Usage
Initialize a PCBGROUP in a PCB info block (struct pcbinfo) by calling in_pcbgroup_init().
Add a connection to a PCBGROUP with in_pcbgroup_update(). Connections are removed by with in_pcbgroup_remove(). These in turn will deter-
mine which PCBGROUP bucket the given PCB is placed into and calculate the hash value appropriately.
Wildcard PCBs are hashed differently and placed in a single wildcard PCB list. If RSS(9) is enabled and in use, RSS-aware wildcard PCBs are
placed in a single PCBGROUP based on RSS information. Protocols may look up the PCB entry in a PCBGROUP by using the lookup functions
in_pcbgroup_byhash() and in_pcbgroup_byinpcb().
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
The PCB code in sys/netinet and sys/netinet6 is aware of PCBGROUP and will call into the PCBGROUP code to do PCBGROUP assignment and lookup,
preferring a PCBGROUP lookup to the default global PCB info table.
An implementor wishing to experiment or modify the PCBGROUP assignment should modify this set of functions:
in_pcbgroup_getbucket() and in6_pcbgroup_getbucket()
Map a given 32 bit hash value to a PCBGROUP. By default this is hash % number_of_pcbgroups. However, this distribution may
not align with NIC receive queues or the netisr(9) configuration.
in_pcbgroup_byhash() and in6_pcbgroup_byhash()
Map a 32 bit hash value and a hash type identifier to a PCBGROUP. By default, this simply returns NULL. This function is
used by the mbuf(9) receive path in sys/netinet/in_pcb.c to map an mbuf to a PCBGROUP.
in_pcbgroup_bytuple() and in6_pcbgroup_bytuple()
Map the source and destination address and port details to a PCBGROUP. By default, this does a very simple XOR hash. This
function is used by both the PCB lookup code and as a fallback in the mbuf(9) receive path in sys/netinet/in_pcb.c.
SEE ALSO
mbuf(9), netisr(9), RSS(9)
Paul Willmann, Scott Rixner, and Alan L. Cox, "An Evaluation of Network Stack Parallelization Strategies in Modern Operating Systems", 2006
USENIX Annual Technical Conference, http://www.ece.rice.edu/~willmann/pubs/paranet_usenix.pdf, 2006.
HISTORY
PCBGROUP first appeared in FreeBSD 9.0.
AUTHORS
The PCBGROUP implementation was written by Robert N. M. Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org> under contract to Juniper Networks, Inc.
This manual page written by Adrian Chadd <adrian@FreeBSD.org>.
NOTES
The RSS(9) implementation currently uses #ifdef blocks to tie into PCBGROUP. This is a sign that a more abstract programming API is needed.
There is currently no support for re-balancing the PCBGROUP assignment, nor is there any support for overriding which PCBGROUP a socket/PCB
should be in.
No statistics are kept to indicate how often PCBGROUP lookups succeed or fail.
BSD
July 23, 2014 BSD