This blog post is going to describe a C program that toggles some CPU and chipset registers directly to enable Direct Cache Access without needing a reboot or a switch in the BIOS. A very fun hack to write and investigate.

Special thanks…

Special thanks going out to Roman Nurik for helping me make the code CSS much, much prettier and easier to read.

Special thanks going out to Jake Douglas for convincing me that I shouldn’t use a stupid sensationalist title for this blog article :)

Intel I/OAT and Direct Cache Access (DCA)

From the Linux Foundation I/OAT project page :

I/OAT (I/O Acceleration Technology) is the name for a collection of techniques by Intel to improve network throughput. The most significant of these is the DMA engine. The DMA engine is meant to offload from the CPU the copying of [socket buffer] data to the user buffer. This is not a zero-copy receive, but does allow the CPU to do other work while the copy operations are performed by the DMA engine.

Cool! So by using I/OAT the network stack in the Linux kernel can offload copy operations to increase throughput. I/OAT also includes a feature called Direct Cache Access (DCA) which can deliver data directly into processor caches. This is particularly cool because when a network interrupt arrives and data is copied to system memory, the CPU which will access this data will not cause a cache-miss on the CPU because DCA has already put the data it needs in the cache. Sick.

Measurements from the Linux Foundation project indicate a 10% reduction in CPU usage, while the Myri-10G NIC website claims they’ve measured a 40% reduction in CPU usage . For more information describing the performance benefits of DCA see this incredibly detailed paper: Direct Cache Access for High Bandwidth Network I/O.

How to get I/OAT and DCA

To get I/OAT and DCA you need a few things:

Intel XEON CPU(s)

A NIC(s) which has DCA support

A chipset which supports DCA

The ioatdma and dca Linux kernel modules

and Linux kernel modules And last but not least, a switch in your BIOS to turn DCA on

That last item can actually be a bit more tricky than it sounds for several reasons:

some BIOSes don’t expose a way to turn DCA on even though it is supported by the CPU, chipset, and NIC!

Your hosting provider may not allow BIOS access

Your system might be up and running and you don’t want to reboot to enter the BIOS to enable DCA

Let’s see what you can do to coerce DCA into working on your system if one of the above applies to you.

Build ioatdma kernel module

This is pretty easy, just make menuconfig and toggle I/OAT as a module. You must build it as a module if you cannot or do not want to enable DCA in your BIOS.

The option can be found in Device Drivers -> DMA Engine Support -> Intel I/OAT DMA Support .

Toggling that option will build the ioatdma and dca modules. Build and install the new module.

Enabling DCA without a reboot or BIOS access: Hack overview

In order to enable DCA a few special registers need to be touched.

The DCA capability bit in the PCI Express Control Register 4 in the configuration space for the PCI bridge your NIC(s) are attached to.

The DCA Model Specific Register on your CPU(s)

Let’s take a closer look at each stage of the hack.

Enable DCA in PCI Configuration Space

PCI configuration space is a memory region where control registers for PCI devices live. By changing register values, you can enable/disable specific features of that PCI device. The configuration space is addressable if you know the PCI bus, device, and function bits for a specific PCI device and the feature you care about.

To find the DCA register for the Intel 5000, 5100, and 7300 chipsets, we need to consult the documentation :

Cool, so the register needed lives at offset 0x64. To enable DCA, bit 6 needs to be set to 1.

Toggling these register can be a bit cumbersome, but luckily there is libpci which provides some simple APIs to scan for PCI devices and accessing configuration space registers.

#define INTEL_BRIDGE_DCAEN_OFFSET 0x64 #define INTEL_BRIDGE_DCAEN_BIT 6 #define PCI_HEADER_TYPE_BRIDGE 1 #define PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL 0x8086 /* lol @ intel */ #define PCI_HEADER_TYPE 0x0e #define MSR_P6_DCA_CAP 0x000001f8 void check_dca(struct pci_dev *dev) { /* read DCA status */ u32 dca = pci_read_long(dev, INTEL_BRIDGE_DCAEN_OFFSET); /* if it's not enabled */ if (!(dca & (1 << INTEL_BRIDGE_DCAEN_BIT))) { printf("DCA disabled, enabling now.

"); /* enable it */ dca |= 1 << INTEL_BRIDGE_DCAEN_BIT; /* write it back */ pci_write_long(dev, INTEL_BRIDGE_DCAEN_OFFSET, dca); } else { printf("DCA already enabled!

"); } } int main(void) { struct pci_access *pacc; struct pci_dev *dev; u8 type; pacc = pci_alloc(); pci_init(pacc); /* scan the PCI bus */ pci_scan_bus(pacc); /* for each device */ for (dev = pacc->devices; dev; dev=dev->next) { pci_fill_info(dev, PCI_FILL_IDENT | PCI_FILL_BASES); /* if it's an intel device */ if (dev->vendor_id == PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL) { /* read the header byte */ type = pci_read_byte(dev, PCI_HEADER_TYPE); /* if its a PCI bridge, check and enable DCA */ if (type == PCI_HEADER_TYPE_BRIDGE) { check_dca(dev); } } } msr_dca_enable(); return 0; }

Enable DCA in the CPU MSR

A model specific register (MSR) is a control register that is provided by a CPU to enable a feature that exists on a specific CPU. In this case, we care about the DCA MSR. In order to find it’s address, let’s consult the Intel Developer’s Manual 3B .



This register lives at offset 0x1f8. We just need to set it to 1 and we should be good to go.

Thankfully, there are device files in /dev for the MSRs of each CPU:

#define MSR_P6_DCA_CAP 0x000001f8 void msr_dca_enable(void) { char msr_file_name[64]; int fd = 0, i = 0; u64 data; /* for each CPU */ for (;i < NUM_CPUS; i++) { sprintf(msr_file_name, "/dev/cpu/%d/msr", i); /* open the MSR device file */ fd = open(msr_file_name, O_RDWR); if (fd < 0) { perror("open failed!"); exit(1); } /* read the current DCA status */ if (pread(fd, &data, sizeof(data), MSR_P6_DCA_CAP) != sizeof(data)) { perror("reading msr failed!"); exit(1); } printf("got msr value: %*llx

", 1, (unsigned long long)data); /* if DCA is not enabled */ if (!(data & 1)) { /* enable it */ data |= 1; /* write it back */ if (pwrite(fd, &data, sizeof(data), MSR_P6_DCA_CAP) != sizeof(data)) { perror("writing msr failed!"); exit(1); } } else { printf("msr already enabled for CPU %d

", i); } } }

Code for the hack is on github

Get it here: http://github.com/ice799/dca_force/tree/master

Putting it all together to get your speed boost

Checkout the hack from github: git clone git://github.com/ice799/dca_force.git Build the hack: make NUM_CPUS=whatever Run it: sudo ./dca_force Load the kernel module: sudo modprobe ioatdma Check your dmesg: dmesg | tail

You should see:

[ 72.782249] dca service started, version 1.8 [ 72.838853] ioatdma 0000:00:08.0: setting latency timer to 64 [ 72.838865] ioatdma 0000:00:08.0: Intel(R) I/OAT DMA Engine found, 4 channels, device version 0x12, driver version 3.64 [ 72.904027] alloc irq_desc for 56 on cpu 0 node 0 [ 72.904030] alloc kstat_irqs on cpu 0 node 0 [ 72.904039] ioatdma 0000:00:08.0: irq 56 for MSI/MSI-X

in your dmesg.

You should NOT SEE

[ 8.367333] ioatdma 0000:00:08.0: DCA is disabled in BIOS

You can now enjoy the DCA performance boost your BIOS or hosting provider didn't want you to have!

Conclusion

Intel I/OAT and DCA is pretty cool, and enabling it can give pretty substantial performance wins

Cool features are sometimes stuffed away in the BIOS

If you don't have access to your BIOS, you should ask you provider nicely to do it for you

If your BIOS doesn't have a toggle switch for the feature you need, do a BIOS update

If all else fails and you know what you are doing, you can sometimes pull off nasty hacks like this in userland to get what you want

Thanks for reading and don't forget to subscribe (via RSS or e-mail) and follow me on twitter.

P.S.

I know, I know. I skipped Part 2 of the signals post (here's Part 1 if you missed it). Part 2 is coming soon!

References