[5.19,257/717] netfilter: conntrack: revisit the gc initial rescheduling bias

Message ID 20221022072500.214803000@linuxfoundation.org
State New
Headers
Series None |

Commit Message

Greg KH Oct. 22, 2022, 7:22 a.m. UTC
  From: Antoine Tenart <atenart@kernel.org>

[ Upstream commit 2aa192757005f130b2dd3547dda6e462e761199f ]

The previous commit changed the way the rescheduling delay is computed
which has a side effect: the bias is now represented as much as the
other entries in the rescheduling delay which makes the logic to kick in
only with very large sets, as the initial interval is very large
(INT_MAX).

Revisit the GC initial bias to allow more frequent GC for smaller sets
while still avoiding wakeups when a machine is mostly idle. We're moving
from a large initial value to pretending we have 100 entries expiring at
the upper bound. This way only a few entries having a small timeout
won't impact much the rescheduling delay and non-idle machines will have
enough entries to lower the delay when needed. This also improves
readability as the initial bias is now linked to what is computed
instead of being an arbitrary large value.

Fixes: 2cfadb761d3d ("netfilter: conntrack: revisit gc autotuning")
Suggested-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Antoine Tenart <atenart@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@kernel.org>
---
 net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_core.c | 10 ++++++----
 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
  

Patch

diff --git a/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_core.c b/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_core.c
index 6fdbffc85222..8ef19f033773 100644
--- a/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_core.c
+++ b/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_core.c
@@ -86,10 +86,12 @@  static DEFINE_MUTEX(nf_conntrack_mutex);
 /* clamp timeouts to this value (TCP unacked) */
 #define GC_SCAN_INTERVAL_CLAMP	(300ul * HZ)
 
-/* large initial bias so that we don't scan often just because we have
- * three entries with a 1s timeout.
+/* Initial bias pretending we have 100 entries at the upper bound so we don't
+ * wakeup often just because we have three entries with a 1s timeout while still
+ * allowing non-idle machines to wakeup more often when needed.
  */
-#define GC_SCAN_INTERVAL_INIT	INT_MAX
+#define GC_SCAN_INITIAL_COUNT	100
+#define GC_SCAN_INTERVAL_INIT	GC_SCAN_INTERVAL_MAX
 
 #define GC_SCAN_MAX_DURATION	msecs_to_jiffies(10)
 #define GC_SCAN_EXPIRED_MAX	(64000u / HZ)
@@ -1479,7 +1481,7 @@  static void gc_worker(struct work_struct *work)
 
 	if (i == 0) {
 		gc_work->avg_timeout = GC_SCAN_INTERVAL_INIT;
-		gc_work->count = 1;
+		gc_work->count = GC_SCAN_INITIAL_COUNT;
 		gc_work->start_time = start_time;
 	}