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From: Robert H. <han...@sh...> - 2008-06-19 17:27:15
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Srivatsa Vaddagiri wrote: > Hi, > I happened to look at a system which was exhibiting poor ping > performance with e1000 driver (in 2.6.25) and had some questions regarding that. > > Ping test was done between the system and a laptop, which were connected > using a straight ethernet cable. Ping reported round trip times running > into seconds (!) and also packet loss. > > Upon some investigation, I found that the interrupt count field in > /proc/interrupts (associated with eth1) is not incrementing as fast as > it should. Moreover eth1 interrupt line is shared with the hard disk > interrupt (ata_piix) as below: > > # cat /proc/interrupts > > . > > 10: 2296 XT-PIC-XT ata_piix, eth0, eth1 > > . > > IRQ10 is thus being shared by both the hard disk and eth0/eth1. > > Here's the strange observation I made: > > When I initiate some disk activity (ex: dd if=/dev/zero of=/tmp/file), ping > performance suddently shot up (round trip time in double digits ms, 0% packet > loss)! I presume this is because that e1000 intr handler is called > whenever there was a interrupt from hard disk on IRQ10, which polled > NIC and processed packets immediately. > > As soon as I kill the background disk-write intensive job, ping > performance again dropped. > > This meant that e1000 NIC is having trouble interrupting the OS. > > Before I could jump up and say this is a hardware issue, I was told > that Windows works just fine on the server (and as well as 2.4 kernel, > which I couldnt verify) :( > > > Some more observations: > > 1. I tried setting e1000 parameters (RxIntDelay=0, RxAbsIntDelay=0, > TxIntDelay=0, TxAbsIntDelay=0, InterruptThrottleRate=0). None of > them helped. > > 2. When ping performance was poor, readprofile showed that system > is mostly idle. This confirms that OS is not getting very > frequenty interrupts from eth1 and hence idling. > > 3. When ping performance was poor, ethtool -S eth1 showed that > rx_bytes was incrementing at a good pace, showing that the > NIC was receiving ping responses back, but not handing them over > to OS for further processing > > 4. e1000 chipset is 82546GB > > 5. e1000e driver didnt work at all (it doesnt recognize the cards). > > > Any advice on how to fix this problem? Can you post your dmesg output from bootup with no special options (noacpi, etc.) enabled? |