Commits
Florian Westphal committed 87e389b4c20
netfilter: conntrack: small conntrack lookup optimization ____nf_conntrack_find() performs checks on the conntrack objects in this order: 1. if (nf_ct_is_expired(ct)) This fetches ct->timeout, in third cache line. The hnnode that is used to store the list pointers resides in the first (origin) or second (reply tuple) cache lines. This test rarely passes, but its necessary to reap obsolete entries. 2. if (nf_ct_is_dying(ct)) This fetches ct->status, also in third cache line. The test is useless, and can be removed: Consider: cpu0 cpu1 ct = ____nf_conntrack_find() atomic_inc_not_zero(ct) -> ok nf_ct_key_equal -> ok is_dying -> DYING bit not set, ok set_bit(ct, DYING); ... unhash ... etc. return ct -> returning a ct with dying bit set, despite having a test for it. This (unlikely) case is fine - refcount prevents ct from getting free'd. 3. if (nf_ct_key_equal(h, tuple, zone, net)) nf_ct_key_equal checks in following order: 1. Tuple equal (first or second cacheline) 2. Zone equal (third cacheline) 3. confirmed bit set (->status, third cacheline) 4. net namespace match (third cacheline). Swapping "timeout" and "cpu" places timeout in the first cacheline. This has two advantages: 1. For a conntrack that won't even match the original tuple, we will now only fetch the first and maybe the second cacheline instead of always accessing the 3rd one as well. 2. in case of TCP ct->timeout changes frequently because we reduce/increase it when there are packets outstanding in the network. The first cacheline contains both the reference count and the ct spinlock, i.e. moving timeout there avoids writes to 3rd cacheline. The restart sequence in __nf_conntrack_find() is removed, if we found a candidate, but then fail to increment the refcount or discover the tuple has changed (object recycling), just pretend we did not find an entry. A second lookup won't find anything until another CPU adds a new conntrack with identical tuple into the hash table, which is very unlikely. We have the confirmation-time checks (when we hold hash lock) that deal with identical entries and even perform clash resolution in some cases. Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de> Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>