xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/polling.4 (revision 1e66f787c838b5af7de716e266caf4e5d190d54b)
1.\" Copyright (c) 2002 Luigi Rizzo
2.\" All rights reserved.
3.\"
4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
6.\" are met:
7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
8.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
10.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
11.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
12.\"
13.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
14.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
15.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
16.\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
17.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
18.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
19.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
20.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
21.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
22.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
23.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
24.\"
25.\" $FreeBSD$
26.\"
27.Dd April 6, 2007
28.Dt POLLING 4
29.Os
30.Sh NAME
31.Nm polling
32.Nd device polling support
33.Sh SYNOPSIS
34.Cd "options DEVICE_POLLING"
35.Sh DESCRIPTION
36Device polling
37.Nm (
38for brevity) refers to a technique that
39lets the operating system periodically poll devices, instead of
40relying on the devices to generate interrupts when they need attention.
41This might seem inefficient and counterintuitive, but when done
42properly,
43.Nm
44gives more control to the operating system on
45when and how to handle devices, with a number of advantages in terms
46of system responsiveness and performance.
47.Pp
48In particular,
49.Nm
50reduces the overhead for context
51switches which is incurred when servicing interrupts, and
52gives more control on the scheduling of the CPU between various
53tasks (user processes, software interrupts, device handling)
54which ultimately reduces the chances of livelock in the system.
55.Ss Principles of Operation
56In the normal, interrupt-based mode, devices generate an interrupt
57whenever they need attention.
58This in turn causes a
59context switch and the execution of an interrupt handler
60which performs whatever processing is needed by the device.
61The duration of the interrupt handler is potentially unbounded
62unless the device driver has been programmed with real-time
63concerns in mind (which is generally not the case for
64.Fx
65drivers).
66Furthermore, under heavy traffic load, the system might be
67persistently processing interrupts without being able to
68complete other work, either in the kernel or in userland.
69.Pp
70Device polling disables interrupts by polling devices at appropriate
71times, i.e., on clock interrupts and within the idle loop.
72This way, the context switch overhead is removed.
73Furthermore,
74the operating system can control accurately how much work to spend
75in handling device events, and thus prevent livelock by reserving
76some amount of CPU to other tasks.
77.Pp
78Enabling
79.Nm
80also changes the way software network interrupts
81are scheduled, so there is never the risk of livelock because
82packets are not processed to completion.
83.Ss Enabling polling
84Currently only network interface drivers support the
85.Nm
86feature.
87It is turned on and off with help of
88.Xr ifconfig 8
89command.
90.Pp
91The historic
92.Va kern.polling.enable ,
93which enabled polling for all interfaces, can be replaced with the following
94code:
95.Bd -literal
96for i in `ifconfig -l` ;
97  do ifconfig $i polling; # use -polling to disable
98done
99.Ed
100.Ss MIB Variables
101The operation of
102.Nm
103is controlled by the following
104.Xr sysctl 8
105MIB variables:
106.Pp
107.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
108.It Va kern.polling.user_frac
109When
110.Nm
111is enabled, and provided that there is some work to do,
112up to this percent of the CPU cycles is reserved to userland tasks,
113the remaining fraction being available for
114.Nm
115processing.
116Default is 50.
117.Pp
118.It Va kern.polling.burst
119Maximum number of packets grabbed from each network interface in
120each timer tick.
121This number is dynamically adjusted by the kernel,
122according to the programmed
123.Va user_frac , burst_max ,
124CPU speed, and system load.
125.Pp
126.It Va kern.polling.each_burst
127The burst above is split into smaller chunks of this number of
128packets, going round-robin among all interfaces registered for
129.Nm .
130This prevents the case that a large burst from a single interface
131can saturate the IP interrupt queue
132.Pq Va net.inet.ip.intr_queue_maxlen .
133Default is 5.
134.Pp
135.It Va kern.polling.burst_max
136Upper bound for
137.Va kern.polling.burst .
138Note that when
139.Nm
140is enabled, each interface can receive at most
141.Pq Va HZ No * Va burst_max
142packets per second unless there are spare CPU cycles available for
143.Nm
144in the idle loop.
145This number should be tuned to match the expected load
146(which can be quite high with GigE cards).
147Default is 150 which is adequate for 100Mbit network and HZ=1000.
148.Pp
149.It Va kern.polling.idle_poll
150Controls if
151.Nm
152is enabled in the idle loop.
153There are no reasons (other than power saving or bugs in the scheduler's
154handling of idle priority kernel threads) to disable this.
155.Pp
156.It Va kern.polling.reg_frac
157Controls how often (every
158.Va reg_frac No / Va HZ
159seconds) the status registers of the device are checked for error
160conditions and the like.
161Increasing this value reduces the load on the bus, but also delays
162the error detection.
163Default is 20.
164.Pp
165.It Va kern.polling.handlers
166How many active devices have registered for
167.Nm .
168.Pp
169.It Va kern.polling.short_ticks
170.It Va kern.polling.lost_polls
171.It Va kern.polling.pending_polls
172.It Va kern.polling.residual_burst
173.It Va kern.polling.phase
174.It Va kern.polling.suspect
175.It Va kern.polling.stalled
176Debugging variables.
177.El
178.Sh SUPPORTED DEVICES
179Device polling requires explicit modifications to the device drivers.
180As of this writing, the
181.Xr bge 4 ,
182.Xr dc 4 ,
183.Xr em 4 ,
184.Xr fwe 4 ,
185.Xr fwip 4 ,
186.Xr fxp 4 ,
187.Xr igb 4 ,
188.Xr ixgb 4 ,
189.Xr nfe 4 ,
190.Xr nge 4 ,
191.Xr re 4 ,
192.Xr rl 4 ,
193.Xr sf 4 ,
194.Xr sis 4 ,
195.Xr ste 4 ,
196.Xr stge 4 ,
197.Xr vge 4 ,
198.Xr vr 4 ,
199and
200.Xr xl 4
201devices are supported, with others in the works.
202The modifications are rather straightforward, consisting in
203the extraction of the inner part of the interrupt service routine
204and writing a callback function,
205.Fn *_poll ,
206which is invoked
207to probe the device for events and process them.
208(See the
209conditionally compiled sections of the devices mentioned above
210for more details.)
211.Pp
212As in the worst case the devices are only polled on clock interrupts,
213in order to reduce the latency in processing packets, it is not advisable
214to decrease the frequency of the clock below 1000 Hz.
215.Sh HISTORY
216Device polling first appeared in
217.Fx 4.6
218and
219.Fx 5.0 .
220.Sh AUTHORS
221Device polling was written by
222.An Luigi Rizzo Aq Mt luigi@iet.unipi.it .
223