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    Epyc VM to VM networking slow

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Compute
    206 Posts 23 Posters 101.3k Views 26 Watching
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    • S Offline
      Seneram @Forza
      last edited by

      @Forza We have tried all the settings avail to tweak on our hardware, We have a full big twin chassi we have dedicated to vates doing testing of this issue and the first roughly month was spent going over settings together with vates and making sure everything was tweaked properly.

      AMD is involved themself and if anyone knows AMD firmware settings and tweaking it would be AMD.

      In all seriousness it is a very good suggestion but it has been looked into and unfortunately do minimal or no difference.

      ForzaF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • ForzaF Offline
        Forza @Seneram
        last edited by

        @Seneram thanks, was guessing it was the case. I hope the issue is resolved soon. 🙏

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • olivierlambertO Offline
          olivierlambert Vates 🪐 Co-Founder CEO
          last edited by

          Please note that we are actively investigating to it, and believe me it's costly (25k€ already invested to track this down). So as you can see, it's a priority and something we are actively working on. AMD is also aware of it.

          J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
          • gskgerG Offline
            gskger Top contributor @bleader
            last edited by gskger

            @bleader Had some time to test this on an AMD system (HP T740 Thin Client). Hopefully it helps a bit, even it is not an Epyc CPU.

            Host:

            • CPU: AMD Ryzen Embedded V1756B
            • Number of sockets: 1
            • CPU pinning: no
            • XCP-NG version: 8.3 beta 1 (updated with yum update as of today)
            • Output of xl info -n:
            [22:05 hpt740 ~]# xl info -n
            host                   : hpt740
            release                : 4.19.0+1
            version                : #1 SMP Wed Jan 24 17:19:11 CET 2024
            machine                : x86_64
            nr_cpus                : 8
            max_cpu_id             : 15
            nr_nodes               : 1
            cores_per_socket       : 4
            threads_per_core       : 2
            cpu_mhz                : 3244.038
            hw_caps                : 178bf3ff:7ed8320b:2e500800:244033ff:0000000f:209c01a9:00000000:00000500
            virt_caps              : pv hvm hvm_directio pv_directio hap shadow
            total_memory           : 30636
            free_memory            : 17610
            sharing_freed_memory   : 0
            sharing_used_memory    : 0
            outstanding_claims     : 0
            free_cpus              : 0
            cpu_topology           :
            cpu:    core    socket     node
              0:       0        0        0
              1:       0        0        0
              2:       1        0        0
              3:       1        0        0
              4:       2        0        0
              5:       2        0        0
              6:       3        0        0
              7:       3        0        0
            device topology        :
            device           node
            No device topology data available
            numa_info              :
            node:    memsize    memfree    distances
               0:     34803      17610      10
            xen_major              : 4
            xen_minor              : 13
            xen_extra              : .5-10.58
            xen_version            : 4.13.5-10.58
            xen_caps               : xen-3.0-x86_64 hvm-3.0-x86_32 hvm-3.0-x86_32p hvm-3.0-x86_64
            xen_scheduler          : credit
            xen_pagesize           : 4096
            platform_params        : virt_start=0xffff800000000000
            xen_changeset          : 708e83f0e7d1, pq 8e58b4872724
            xen_commandline        : watchdog ucode=scan dom0_max_vcpus=1-8 crashkernel=256M,below=4G console=vga vga=mode-0x0311 dom0_mem=4294967296B,max:4294967296B
            cc_compiler            : gcc (GCC) 11.2.1 20210728 (Red Hat 11.2.1-1)
            cc_compile_by          : mockbuild
            cc_compile_domain      : [unknown]
            cc_compile_date        : Thu Jan 25 10:20:16 CET 2024
            build_id               : ae0904d024e04d4daf2ecdfddc37ea146f48d7e1
            xend_config_format     : 4
            

            Server and client VMs are both Debian 12 (Linux 6.1.0-18-amd64) with 4 cores and 4G RAM. xentop is client/server/dom0

            V2V 1T   90/140/210   5.1 Gbits/sec
            V2V 4T  150/220/260   8.1 Gbits/sec 
            H2V 1T    0/170/210  10.2 Gbits/sec*
            H2V 4T    0/310/340  11.9 Gbits/sec*
            *: with some spread of cpu utilization and throughput
            

            Minimum of three runs per test scenario.

            bleaderB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • olivierlambertO Offline
              olivierlambert Vates 🪐 Co-Founder CEO
              last edited by

              We made tests on Ryzen CPUs and we couldn't really reproduce the problem: it seems to be EPYC specific.

              bleaderB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • bleaderB Online
                bleader Vates 🪐 XCP-ng Team @olivierlambert
                last edited by

                @olivierlambert We did talk in DM before, I told him any data is always welcome, especially as I didn't even know this range of CPUs 🙂

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • bleaderB Online
                  bleader Vates 🪐 XCP-ng Team @gskger
                  last edited by

                  @gskger It does seem quite lower than the 5950x and the 7600 we tested, but:

                  • it is a zen1 if I'm not mistaken
                  • in the 4 threads case, with 8 threads on the physical CPU, the VMs and dom0 are actually sharing ressources
                  • for single thread I guess the generation and memory speed could explain the difference.

                  I would say that this confirms these ryzen cpus are not really impacted either.

                  Thanks for sharing, I'll update the table tomorrow.

                  gskgerG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • gskgerG Offline
                    gskger Top contributor @bleader
                    last edited by gskger

                    @bleader you are correct, the V1756B is a low power (45W TDP) desktop CPU of the AMD Ryzen embedded v1000 series based on the ZEN microarchitecture with 4 cores and 8 threads. It operates at a base freqeuncy of 3.25 GHz and a boost frequency of 3.6 GHz max. The HP T740 thin client is a capable low power, low noise computer for running XCP-ng in a homelab, but it's not a real match for serious AMD desktop or server CPUs.

                    M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • M Offline
                      manilx @gskger
                      last edited by manilx

                      @gskger Returning to this:

                      Our backups on our business deployment, 2 HPE, (,ProLiant DL325 Gen10 Plus v2,) with AMD EPYC 7543P 32-Core Processor connected via redundant 10G nic's and switched to 10G NAS (QNAP, Synology) for storage and backups we get backup speeds of 80-90MiB/s tops with NBP.
                      ScreenShot 2024-04-10 at 10.53.59.png
                      ScreenShot 2024-04-10 at 10.42.45.png

                      On my Homelab with Protectli Mini PC connected via 10G also to 10G QNAP I get 250-300 MiB/s !!!!!!
                      ScreenShot 2024-04-10 at 10.57.44.png
                      ScreenShot 2024-04-10 at 10.42.57.png

                      This really is a problem for us now since we started with XCPNG 1 yr ago. Slow backup/restore speeds are a hindrance in our backup strategy.

                      Now that I switched my Homelab from Proxmox (using it for 3yrs) to XCPNG I stumbled upn this speed difference and it is incredible.

                      I wonder if it is not also related to this issue with EPYC networking.

                      P.S: I have opened a ticket BUT I wanted ti share this here also.

                      florentF S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • florentF Offline
                        florent Vates 🪐 XO Team @manilx
                        last edited by

                        @manilx hi, I am working on the backup side, that is a very interesting finding. I have some question to rule out some hypothesis :

                        What storage do you use on both side ? iscsi / nfs ?
                        Is XO running on the master ?

                        M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • olivierlambertO Offline
                          olivierlambert Vates 🪐 Co-Founder CEO
                          last edited by

                          @bleader do you remember if we also had slower network speed between a VM and the Dom0 or only between 2 regular guests?

                          bleaderB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • S Offline
                            Seneram @manilx
                            last edited by

                            @manilx @florent it would make sense since XOA vm for backups is after all an VM and should be impacted by VM network issues for epycs.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • olivierlambertO Offline
                              olivierlambert Vates 🪐 Co-Founder CEO
                              last edited by

                              Not necessarily. XOA is a VM, but it's communicating with the Dom0, which is a VM indeed, but not a regular one. Could have been interesting to check if XOA VM is not sitting on the same host it's doing a backup, to see the result.

                              M S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • bleaderB Online
                                bleader Vates 🪐 XCP-ng Team @olivierlambert
                                last edited by

                                @olivierlambert vm to host is impacted too, althrough less, reaching over 10Gbps on a zen2 epyc.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • M Offline
                                  manilx @florent
                                  last edited by

                                  @florent Hi,
                                  Both storages are NFS, all connections 10G.
                                  On both cases XO/XOA is running on the master.

                                  florentF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • M Offline
                                    manilx @olivierlambert
                                    last edited by

                                    @olivierlambert I have tested this already. It doesn't matter if the XOA VM is on the master or another host. Backup speeds are "the same"

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • S Offline
                                      Seneram @olivierlambert
                                      last edited by

                                      @olivierlambert as @bleader mentioned. All testing shows that it is any VM networking at all. Vm to vm, vm to host, vm to external appliances are all equally affected. Just that vm to vm issue is half the bandwidth of all other usecases since i has to handle traffic to both VMs and as such is found faster. But no matter how the VM communicates there is an upper roof bandwidth limit that is VERY low.

                                      M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • M Offline
                                        manilx @Seneram
                                        last edited by manilx

                                        @Seneram As explained, we have been living with this for 1yr now but at the time Vates told us that all was OK and that backup speeds were normal at 80-90 MiB/s.

                                        It was just NOW that I have it running at the HomeLab on crap Intel PC's ( 😉 ) that I see that HUGE speed difference. And this thread has opened my eyes also.....

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • J Offline
                                          JamesG @olivierlambert
                                          last edited by

                                          While I'm very happy to see this getting some attention now, I am a bit disappointed that this has been reported for so long (easily two years or more) and is only now getting serious attention. Hopefully it will be resolved fairly soon.

                                          That said...If you need high-speed networking in Epyc VM's now, SR-IOV can be your friend. Using ConnectX-4 25Gb cards I can hit 22-23Gb/s with guest VM's. Obviously SR-IOV brings along a whole other set of issues, but it's a way to get fast networking today.

                                          S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • S Offline
                                            Seneram @JamesG
                                            last edited by

                                            @JamesG this bug has not been reported for two years. This thread is 6 months and our big report is open about the same amount of time.

                                            It has had excellent attention since day one of us reporting it .

                                            J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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