With the increase of network I/O bandwidth, a single vCPU cannot meet the requirement of processing NIC interruptions. NIC multi-queue allows multiple vCPUs to process NIC interruptions, thereby improving network PPS and I/O performance.
NIC multi-queue can be enabled on an ECS only when the ECS specifications, virtualization type, and image meet the requirements described in this section.
If the number of NIC queues is greater than 1, NIC multi-queue is supported.
Run the uname -r command to check the kernel version. If the version is earlier than 2.6.35, contact technical support to upgrade it.
OS |
Image |
Supported By |
|---|---|---|
Windows |
Windows Server 2008 WEB R2 64bit |
Private images |
Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard/Datacenter/Enterprise 64bit |
Private images |
|
Windows Server 2012 R2 Standard/Datacenter 64bit |
Private images |
|
Windows Server 2016 Standard/Datacenter 64bit |
Private images |
|
Linux |
Ubuntu 14.04/16.04 Server 64bit |
Public images |
openSUSE 42.2 64bit |
Public images |
|
SUSE Enterprise 12 SP1/SP2 64bit |
Public images |
|
CentOS 6.8/6.9/7.0/7.1/7.2/7.3/7.4/7.5/7.6 64bit |
Public images |
|
Debian 8.0.0/8.8.0/8.9.0/9.0.0 64bit |
Public images |
|
Fedora 24/25 64bit |
Public images |
|
EulerOS 2.2 64bit |
Public images |
Assume that an ECS has the required specifications and virtualization type.
Register the external image file as a private image. For details, see Registering an External Image File as a Private Image.
Windows OSs have not commercially supported NIC multi-queue. If you enable NIC multi-queue in a Windows image, starting an ECS created using such an image may be slow.
Use either of the following methods to set NIC multi-queue.
The IMS console is displayed.
The IMS console is displayed.
Method 3: Add hw_vif_multiqueue_enabled to the image using an API.
The value of X-Auth-Token is the token obtained in step 1.
The value of Content-Type is application/openstack-images-v2.1-json-patch.
The request URI is in the following format:
PATCH /v2/images/{image_id}
[
{
"op":"add",
"path":"/hw_vif_multiqueue_enabled",
"value": "true"
}
]
Figure 1 shows an example request body for setting NIC multi-queue.
KVM ECSs running Windows use private images to support NIC multi-queue.
For Linux ECSs, which run CentOS 7.4 as an example, perform the following operations to enable NIC multi-queue:
Example:
[root@localhost ~]# ethtool -l eth0 #View the number of queues used by NIC eth0. Channel parameters for eth0: Pre-set maximums: RX: 0 TX: 0 Other: 0 Combined: 4 #Indicates that a maximum of four queues can be enabled for the NIC. Current hardware settings: RX: 0 TX: 0 Other: 0 Combined: 1 #Indicates that one queue has been enabled. [root@localhost ~]# ethtool -L eth0 combined 4 #Enable four queues on NIC eth0.
Enabling irqbalance allows the system to automatically allocate NIC interruptions, improving network performance. If the improved network performance fails to meet your expectations, manually configure interrupt affinity on the target ECS.
The detailed operations are as follows:
Run the following script so that each ECS vCPU responds the interrupt requests initialized by one queue. That is, one queue corresponds to one interrupt, and one interrupt binds to one vCPU.
#!/bin/bash
service irqbalance stop
eth_dirs=$(ls -d /sys/class/net/eth*)
if [ $? -ne 0 ];then
echo "Failed to find eth* , sleep 30" >> $ecs_network_log
sleep 30
eth_dirs=$(ls -d /sys/class/net/eth*)
fi
for eth in $eth_dirs
do
cur_eth=$(basename $eth)
cpu_count=`cat /proc/cpuinfo| grep "processor"| wc -l`
virtio_name=$(ls -l /sys/class/net/"$cur_eth"/device/driver/ | grep pci |awk {'print $9'})
affinity_cpu=0
virtio_input="$virtio_name""-input"
irqs_in=$(grep "$virtio_input" /proc/interrupts | awk -F ":" '{print $1}')
for irq in ${irqs_in[*]}
do
echo $((affinity_cpu%cpu_count)) > /proc/irq/"$irq"/smp_affinity_list
affinity_cpu=$[affinity_cpu+2]
done
affinity_cpu=1
virtio_output="$virtio_name""-output"
irqs_out=$(grep "$virtio_output" /proc/interrupts | awk -F ":" '{print $1}')
for irq in ${irqs_out[*]}
do
echo $((affinity_cpu%cpu_count)) > /proc/irq/"$irq"/smp_affinity_list
affinity_cpu=$[affinity_cpu+2]
done
done
XPS allows the system with NIC multi-queue enabled to select a queue by vCPU when sending a data packet.
#!/bin/bash
# enable XPS feature
cpu_count=$(grep -c processor /proc/cpuinfo)
dec2hex(){
echo $(printf "%x" $1)
}
eth_dirs=$(ls -d /sys/class/net/eth*)
if [ $? -ne 0 ];then
echo "Failed to find eth* , sleep 30" >> $ecs_network_log
sleep 30
eth_dirs=$(ls -d /sys/class/net/eth*)
fi
for eth in $eth_dirs
do
cpu_id=1
cur_eth=$(basename $eth)
cur_q_num=$(ethtool -l $cur_eth | grep -iA5 current | grep -i combined | awk {'print $2'})
for((i=0;i<cur_q_num;i++))
do
if [ $i -eq $ cpu_count ];then
cpu_id=1
fi
xps_file="/sys/class/net/${cur_eth}/queues/tx-$i/xps_cpus"
rps_file="/sys/class/net/${cur_eth}/queues/rx-$i/rps_cpus"
cpuset=$(dec2hex "$cpu_id")
echo $cpuset > $xps_file
echo $cpuset > $rps_file
let cpu_id=cpu_id*2
done
done