[PATCH] net: stmmac: protect statistics updates with a spinlock

Petr Tesařík petr at tesarici.cz
Mon Jan 8 07:12:41 PST 2024


On Mon, 8 Jan 2024 14:41:10 +0100
Andrew Lunn <andrew at lunn.ch> wrote:

> > > You might want to consider per CPU statistics. Since each CPU has its
> > > own structure of statistics, you don't need atomic.
> > > 
> > > The code actually using the statistics then needs to sum up the per
> > > CPU statistics, and using syncp should be sufficient for that.  
> > 
> > Doesn't that consume rather a lot of memory on systems with
> > 'silly numbers' of cpu?  
> 
> Systems with silly number of CPUS tend to also have silly amounts of
> memory. We are talking about maybe a dozen u64 here. So the memory
> usage goes from 144 bytes, to 144K for a 1024CPU system.  Is 144K
> excessive for such a system?

I'm not even sure it's worth converting _all_ statistic counters to
per-CPU variables. Most of them are already guarded by a lock (either
the queue lock, or NAPI scheduling). Only the hard interrupt counter is
not protected by anything, so it's more like 8k on a 1024-CPU system....

> > Updating an atomic_t is (pretty much) the same as taking a lock.
> > unlock() is also likely to also contain an atomic operation.
> > So if you update more than two atomic_t it is likely that a lock
> > will be faster.  
> 
> True, but all those 1024 CPUs in your silly system get affected by a
> lock or an atomic. They all need to do something with there L1 and L2
> cache when using atomics. Spending an extra 144K of RAM means the
> other 1023 CPUs don't notice anything at all during the increment
> phase, which could be happening 1M times a second. They only get
> involved when something in user space wants the statistics, so maybe
> once per second from the SNMP agent.
> 
> Also, stmmac is not used on silly CPU systems. It used in embedded
> systems. I doubt its integrated into anything with more than 8 CPUs.

I also doubt it as of today, but hey, it seems that more CPU cores is
the future of embedded. Ten years ago, who would have imagined putting
an 8-core CPU into a smartphone? OTOH who would have imagined a
smartphone with 24G of RAM...

Petr T



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