[Lxc-users] Containers slow to start after 1600
Benoit Lourdelet
blourdel at juniper.net
Wed Mar 20 20:09:29 UTC 2013
Hello,
The measurement has been done with kernel 3.8.2.
Linux ieng-serv06 3.7.9 #3 SMP Wed Feb 27 02:38:58 PST 2013 x86_64 x86_64
x86_64 GNU/Linux
What information would you like to see on the kernel ?
Regards
Benoit
On 20/03/2013 01:29, "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm at xmission.com> wrote:
>Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn at ubuntu.com> writes:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Benoit was kind enough to follow up on some scalability issues with
>> larger (but not huge imo) numbers of containers. Running a script
>> to simply time the creation of veth pairs on a rather large (iiuc)
>> machine, he got the following numbers (time is for creation of the
>> full number, not latest increment - so 1123 seconds to create 5000
>> veth pairs)
>
>A kernel version and a profile would be interesting.
>
>At first glance it looks like things are dramatically slowing down as
>things get longer which should not happen.
>
>There used to be quadratic issues in proc and sysfs that should have
>been reduced to O(NlogN) as of 3.4 or so. A comparison to the dummy
>device which is a touch simpler than veth and is more frequently
>benchmarked could also be revealing.
>
>>> >Quoting Benoit Lourdelet (blourdel at juniper.net):
>>> >> Hello Serge,
>>> >>
>>> >> I put together a small table, running your script for various
>>>values :
>>> >>
>>> >> Time are in seconds,
>>> >>
>>> >> Number of veth, time to create, time to delete:
>>> >>
>>> >> 500 18 26
>>> >>
>>> >> 1000 57 70
>>> >>
>>> >> 2000 193 250
>>> >>
>>> >> 3000 435 510
>>> >>
>>> >> 4000 752 824
>>> >>
>>> >> 5000 1123 1185
>>
>>>
>>> Benoit
>>
>> Ok. Ran some tests on a tiny cloud instance. When I simply run 2k
>>tasks in
>> unshared new network namespaces, it flies by.
>>
>> #!/bin/sh
>> rm -f /tmp/timings3
>> date | tee -a /tmp/timings3
>> for i in `seq 1 2000`; do
>> nsexec -n -- /bin/sleep 1000 &
>> if [ $((i % 100)) -eq 0 ]; then
>> echo $i | tee -a /tmp/timings3
>> date | tee -a /tmp/timings3
>> fi
>> done
>>
>> (all scripts run under sudo, and nsexec can be found at
>> https://code.launchpad.net/~serge-hallyn/+junk/nsexec))
>>
>> So that isn't an issue.
>>
>> When I run a script to just time veth pair creations like Benoit ran,
>> creating 2000 veth pairs and timing the results for each 100, the time
>> does degrade, from 1 second for the first 100 up to 8 seconds for the
>> last 100.
>>
>> (that script for me is:
>>
>> #!/bin/sh
>> rm -f /tmp/timings
>> for i in `seq 1 2000`; do
>> ip link add type veth
>> if [ $((i % 100)) -eq 0 ]; then
>> echo $i | tee -a /tmp/timings
>> date | tee -a /tmp/timings
>> ls /sys/class/net > /dev/null
>> fi
>> done
>> )
>>
>> But when I actually pass veth instances to those unshared network
>> namespaces:
>>
>> #!/bin/sh
>> rm -f /tmp/timings2
>> echo 0 | tee -a /tmp/timings2
>> date | tee -a /tmp/timings2
>> for i in `seq 1 2000`; do
>> nsexec -n -P /tmp/pid.$i -- /bin/sleep 1000 &
>> ip link add type veth
>> dev2=`ls -d /sys/class/net/veth* | tail -1`
>> dev=`basename $dev2`
>> pid=`cat /tmp/pid.$i`
>> ip link set $dev netns $pid
>> if [ $((i % 100)) -eq 0 ]; then
>> echo $i | tee -a /tmp/timings2
>> date | tee -a /tmp/timings2
>> fi
>> rm -f /tmp/pid.*
>> done
>>
>> it goes from 4 seconds for the first hundred to 16 seconds for
>> the last hundred - a worse regression than simply creating the
>> veths. Though I guess that could be accounted for simply by
>> sysfs actions when a veth is moved from the old netns to the
>> new?
>
>And network stack actions. Creating one end of the veth in the desired
>network namespace is likely desirable. "ip link add type veth peer netns
>..."
>
>rcu in the past has also played a critical role, as what the network
>configuration is when devices are torn down.
>
>For device movement and device teardown there is at least one
>synchronize_rcu, which at scale can slow things down. But if the
>syncrhonize_rcu dominates it should be mostly a constant factor cost not
>something that gets worse with each device creation.
>
>Oh and to start with I would specify the name of each network device to
>create. Last I looked coming up with a network device name is a O(N)
>operation in the number of device names.
>
>Just to see what I am seeing in 3.9-rc1 I did:
>
># time for i in $(seq 1 2000) ; do ip link add a$i type veth peer name
>b$i; done
>real 0m23.607s
>user 0m0.656s
>sys 0m18.132s
>
># time for i in $(seq 1 2000) ; do ip link del a$i ; done
>real 2m8.038s
>user 0m0.964s
>sys 0m18.688s
>
>Which is tremendously better than you are reporting below for device
>creation.
>Now the deletes are still slow because it is hard to back that kind of
>delete, having a bunch of network namespaces exit all at once would
>likely be much faster as they can be batched and the syncrhonize_rcu
>calls drastically reduced.
>
>What is making you say there is a regression? A regression compared to
>what?
>
>Hmm.
>
># time for i in $(seq 1 5000) ; do ip link add a$i type veth peer name
>b$i; done
>real 2m11.007s
>user 0m3.508s
>sys 1m55.452s
>
>Ok there is most definitely something non-linear about the cost of
>creating network devices.
>
>I am happy to comment from previous experience but I'm not volunteering
>to profile and fix this one.
>
>Eric
>
>
>> 0
>> Tue Mar 19 20:15:26 UTC 2013
>> 100
>> Tue Mar 19 20:15:30 UTC 2013
>> 200
>> Tue Mar 19 20:15:35 UTC 2013
>> 300
>> Tue Mar 19 20:15:41 UTC 2013
>> 400
>> Tue Mar 19 20:15:47 UTC 2013
>> 500
>> Tue Mar 19 20:15:54 UTC 2013
>> 600
>> Tue Mar 19 20:16:02 UTC 2013
>> 700
>> Tue Mar 19 20:16:09 UTC 2013
>> 800
>> Tue Mar 19 20:16:17 UTC 2013
>> 900
>> Tue Mar 19 20:16:26 UTC 2013
>> 1000
>> Tue Mar 19 20:16:35 UTC 2013
>> 1100
>> Tue Mar 19 20:16:46 UTC 2013
>> 1200
>> Tue Mar 19 20:16:57 UTC 2013
>> 1300
>> Tue Mar 19 20:17:08 UTC 2013
>> 1400
>> Tue Mar 19 20:17:21 UTC 2013
>> 1500
>> Tue Mar 19 20:17:33 UTC 2013
>> 1600
>> Tue Mar 19 20:17:46 UTC 2013
>> 1700
>> Tue Mar 19 20:17:59 UTC 2013
>> 1800
>> Tue Mar 19 20:18:13 UTC 2013
>> 1900
>> Tue Mar 19 20:18:29 UTC 2013
>> 2000
>> Tue Mar 19 20:18:48 UTC 2013
>>
>> -serge
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