> -----Original Message-----
> From: users <users-boun...@dpdk.org> On Behalf Of Filip Janiszewski
> Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2021 2:10 PM
> To: users@dpdk.org
> Subject: [dpdk-users] Performance of rte_eth_stats_get
> 
> Hi,
> 
> Is it safe to call rte_eth_stats_get while capturing from the port?
> 
> I'm mostly concerned about performance, if rte_eth_stats_get will in any
> way impact the port performance, in the application I plan to call the
> function from a thread that is not directly involved in the capture,
> there's another worker responsible for rx bursting, but I wonder if the
> NIC might get upset if I call it too frequently (say 10 times per
> second) and potentially cause some performance issues.
> 
> The question is really Nic agnostic, but if the Nic vendor is actually
> relevant then I'm running Intel 700 series nic and Mellanox ConnectX-4/5.

To understand what really goes on when getting stats, it might help to list the
steps involved in getting statistics from the NIC HW.

1) CPU sends an MMIO read (Memory Mapped I/O, aka, sometimes referred
to as a "pci read") to the NIC.
2) The PCI bus has to handle extra TLPs (pci transactions) to satisfy read
3) NIC has to send a reply based on accessing its internal counters
4) CPU gets a result from the PCI read.

Notice how elegantly this whole process is abstracted from SW? In code, reading
a stat value is just dereferencing a pointer that is mapped to the NIC HW 
address.
In practice from a CPU performance point of view, doing an MMIO-read is one of
the slowest things you can do. You say the stats-reads are occurring from a 
thread
that is not handling rx/datapath, so perhaps the CPU cycle cost itself isn't a 
concern.

Do note however, that when reading a full set of extended stats from the NIC, 
there
could be many 10's to 100's of MMIO reads (depending on the statistics 
requested,
and how the PMD itself is implemented to handle stats updates).

The PCI bus does become more busy with reads to the NIC HW when doing lots of
statistic updates, so there is some more contention/activity to be expected 
there.
The PCM tool can be very useful to see MMIO traffic, you could measure how many
extra PCI transactions are occurring due to reading stats every X ms?
https://github.com/opcm/pcm

I can recommend measuring pkt latency/jitter as a histogram, as then outliers 
in performance
can be identified. If you specifically want to identify if these are due stats 
reads, compare
with a "no stats reads" latency/jitter histogram, and graphically see the 
impact.
In the end if it doesn't affect packet latency/jitter, then it has no impact 
right?

Ultimately, I can't give a generic answer - best steps are to measure carefully 
and find out!

> Thanks

Hope the above helps and doesn't add confusion :)  Regards, -Harry

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