Date: Wed, 11 Apr 2012 13:00:36 +0200 From: Luigi Rizzo <rizzo@iet.unipi.it> To: Andre Oppermann <andre@freebsd.org> Cc: Barney Wolff <barney@databus.com>, current@freebsd.org, net@freebsd.org Subject: Re: strange ping response times... Message-ID: <20120411110036.GA60031@onelab2.iet.unipi.it> In-Reply-To: <4F855E5E.5000107@freebsd.org> References: <20120410225257.GB53350@onelab2.iet.unipi.it> <4F84B6DB.5040904@freebsd.org> <20120410230500.GA22829@pit.databus.com> <20120410233211.GA53829@onelab2.iet.unipi.it> <4F855E5E.5000107@freebsd.org>
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On Wed, Apr 11, 2012 at 12:35:10PM +0200, Andre Oppermann wrote: > On 11.04.2012 01:32, Luigi Rizzo wrote: > >On Tue, Apr 10, 2012 at 07:05:00PM -0400, Barney Wolff wrote: > >>CPU cache? > >>Cx states? > >>powerd? > > > >powerd is disabled, and i am going down to C1 at most > > > sysctl -a | grep cx > > hw.acpi.cpu.cx_lowest: C1 > > dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/80 C3/104 > > > >which shouldn't take so much. Sure, cache matters, but the > >fact is, icmp processing on loopback should occur inline. > > > >unless there is a forced descheduling on a select with timeout> 0 > >which would explain the extra few microseconds (and makes me worry > >on how expensive is a scheduling decision...) > > Things going through loopback go through a NETISR and may > end up queued to avoid LOR situations. In addition per-cpu > queues with hash-distribution for affinity may cause your > packet to be processed by a different core. Hence the additional > delay. so you suggest that the (de)scheduling is costing several microseconds ? Do we have something like yield() to measure how expensive is the scheduler ? I ran some tests in a distant past and i remember numbers of a few microseconds, but that was almost two gigahertz ago... cheers luigi
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