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@Timothy_Hall and others:
After upgrading a cluster of 23900s from R80.20/Jumbo 87 to R80.30/Jumbo 111, I noticed some things I found interesting. This is still running the 2.6 kernel code (I don't believe 3.10 is supported on 23900 until R80.40)
1. While SMT was disabled in R80.20 on the 23900, after upgrading to R80.30, it was enabled by default.
2. The 23900 has 36 cores. With SMT enabled, it has 72 'virtual' cores. By default, once SMT turned on, it created 40 firewall workers in CoreXL (20 cores), It had 16 SND threads (8 cores), and 16 threads (8 cores) were completely idle.
Questions;
Here is the output of cpview that shows the breakdown:
# cpview
|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| CPVIEW.CPU 17Dec2019 15:28:19 |
|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| Overview SysInfo Network CPU I/O Software-blades Hardware-Health Advanced |
|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| Overview Top-Protocols Top-Connections |
|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| Host |
|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| CPU: |
| |
| CPU User System Idle I/O wait Interrupts |
| 0 0% 16% 84% 0% 485,534 |
| 1 0% 16% 84% 0% 485,629 |
| 2 0% 16% 85% 0% 485,705 |
| 3 0% 12% 88% 0% 485,811 |
| 4 0% 11% 89% 0% 485,919 |
| 5 0% 15% 86% 0% 486,003 |
| 6 0% 11% 89% 0% 486,095 |
| 7 0% 11% 89% 0% 486,172 |
| 8 0% 0% 100% 0% 486,277 |
| 9 0% 0% 100% 0% 486,382 |
| 10 0% 0% 100% 0% 486,462 |
| 11 0% 0% 100% 0% 486,538 |
| 12 0% 0% 100% 0% 486,620 |
| 13 0% 0% 100% 0% 486,707 |
| 14 0% 0% 100% 0% 486,786 |
| 15 0% 0% 100% 0% 486,854 |
| 16 2% 9% 88% 0% 486,932 |
| 17 3% 8% 89% 0% 487,024 |
| 18 0% 10% 90% 0% 487,097 |
| 19 0% 7% 93% 0% 487,164 |
| 20 0% 9% 90% 0% 487,252 |
| 21 0% 7% 93% 0% 487,343 |
| 22 0% 7% 92% 0% 487,420 |
| 23 0% 8% 92% 0% 487,524 |
| 24 0% 16% 85% 0% 487,618 |
| 25 0% 9% 91% 0% 487,750 |
| 26 0% 10% 90% 0% 487,856 |
| 27 0% 10% 90% 0% 487,939 |
| 28 0% 9% 91% 0% 488,015 |
| 29 0% 9% 91% 0% 488,110 |
| 30 0% 9% 91% 0% 488,200 |
| 31 0% 8% 92% 0% 488,290 |
| 32 0% 10% 90% 0% 488,396 |
| 33 0% 12% 89% 0% 488,538 |
| 34 0% 24% 76% 0% 488,627 |
| 35 5% 19% 76% 0% 977,404 |
| 36 0% 15% 85% 0% 488,790 |
| 37 0% 17% 83% 0% 488,875 |
| 38 0% 15% 86% 0% 488,973 |
| 39 0% 13% 88% 0% 489,055 |
| 40 0% 12% 88% 0% 489,138 |
| 41 0% 11% 89% 0% 489,229 |
| 42 0% 11% 89% 0% 133 |
| 43 0% 14% 86% 0% 236 |
| 44 0% 0% 100% 0% 335 |
| 45 0% 0% 100% 0% 423 |
| 46 0% 0% 100% 0% 375 |
| 47 0% 0% 100% 0% 93 |
| 48 0% 0% 100% 0% 156 |
| 49 0% 0% 100% 0% 240 |
| 50 0% 0% 100% 0% 359 |
| 51 0% 0% 100% 0% 454 |
| 52 1% 10% 90% 0% 1,081 |
| 53 0% 8% 92% 0% 623 |
| 54 0% 11% 89% 0% 707 |
| 55 0% 10% 90% 0% 808 |
| 56 0% 8% 92% 0% 880 |
| 57 0% 7% 93% 0% 960 |
| 58 1% 10% 90% 0% 1,066 |
| 59 1% 12% 88% 0% 1,178 |
| 60 0% 16% 84% 0% 1,244 |
| 61 0% 11% 89% 0% 1,321 |
| 62 0% 11% 89% 0% 1,401 |
| 63 0% 13% 86% 0% 1,480 |
| 64 0% 9% 91% 0% 3,111 |
| 65 0% 9% 91% 0% 1,636 |
| 66 0% 14% 86% 0% 1,695 |
| 67 1% 11% 88% 0% 3,560 |
| 68 0% 9% 91% 0% 1,868 |
| 69 1% 10% 89% 0% 3,926 |
| 70 2% 12% 86% 0% 2,072 |
| 71 2% 15% 83% 0% 2,165
The 40 core limit for CoreXL will apply regardless of kernel version (2.6.18 vs. 3.10) if USFW is disabled. It appears that USFW will not be enabled in R80.30 by default unless you are using the 3.10 kernel, but it can be manually switched on under the 2.6.18 kernel. We are in a bit of a transition to a new Gaia kernel in R80.30, this should get cleared up by R80.40 which will supposedly require the 3.10 kernel.
SMT must have originally been enabled in the BIOS but disabled by cpconfig, not sure why it would get switched on like that after the upgrade.
My guess is that you had an 8/28 split when SMT was in a disabled state prior to the upgrade. When SMT got enabled by the upgrade process, it tried to double the CoreXL split to 16/56, but hit the 40 core limit due to USFW not being enabled (because you are using the 2.6.18 kernel), resulting in a 16/40 split and 16 unused cores.
You could manually enable USFW to take advantage of all 72 cores under kernel 2.6.18, but in general I do not recommend changing whatever the default state of USFW is without consulting TAC first.
As to whether turning SMT back off will be more efficient that depends. What does fwaccel stats -s show? If more than 70% of your traffic is fully accelerated (not likely), then disabling SMT will definitely help.
In your specific case under R80.30 kernel 2.6.18, USFW did not get enabled by the upgrade due to the use of the 2.6.18 kernel; at least for the moment unless you manually enable USFW (check with TAC first!) it would probably be better to disable SMT.
I wrote this in another article: High CPU utilization during process fwk0_dev_0
According to SK the UMFW is enabled from R80.30 by default. I'm afraid I noticed that a little differently. To confirm this I called a friend (He's a HP dealer.) and asked him if he had a HP DL380 with more then 40 cores in his company:-) Two hours later we were sitting in his LAB and installed R80.30 on this system.
R80.30 kernel 3.10 more then 40 cores -> UMFW is enabled (checked on HP DL 380 G10 2 * Platinum 8180MProcessor 28 cores = 56 cores)
R80.30 kernel 3.10 less then 40 cores -> UMFW is disabled (checked on HP DL 380 G10 1 * Platinum 8180MProcessor 28 cores)
Unfortunately I was not allowed to take the server with 56 cores home with me 🤣.
The installation under R80.30 (UMFW/KMFW) depends on how many cores the system has.
The licensed cores do not play a role for UMFW/KMFW.
R80.30 kernel 2.6 -> UMFW is disabled (checked on VMWare with 30 cores and with 46 cores)
...
Apparently the upgrade process enabled SMT, but not USFW:
# cpprod_util FwIsUsermode
0
# cat $FWDIR/boot/boot.conf
CTL_IPFORWARDING 1
DEFAULT_FILTER_PATH /etc/fw.boot/default.bin
KERN_INSTANCE_NUM 40
COREXL_INSTALLED 1
KERN6_INSTANCE_NUM 0
CORE_OVERRIDE 72
IPV6_INSTALLED 0
Suggestions? I don't typically like modifying these types of parameters that could then get over-written or lost during an upgrade process, or need to be re-configured if a box gets RMA'd.
The 40 core limit for CoreXL will apply regardless of kernel version (2.6.18 vs. 3.10) if USFW is disabled. It appears that USFW will not be enabled in R80.30 by default unless you are using the 3.10 kernel, but it can be manually switched on under the 2.6.18 kernel. We are in a bit of a transition to a new Gaia kernel in R80.30, this should get cleared up by R80.40 which will supposedly require the 3.10 kernel.
SMT must have originally been enabled in the BIOS but disabled by cpconfig, not sure why it would get switched on like that after the upgrade.
My guess is that you had an 8/28 split when SMT was in a disabled state prior to the upgrade. When SMT got enabled by the upgrade process, it tried to double the CoreXL split to 16/56, but hit the 40 core limit due to USFW not being enabled (because you are using the 2.6.18 kernel), resulting in a 16/40 split and 16 unused cores.
You could manually enable USFW to take advantage of all 72 cores under kernel 2.6.18, but in general I do not recommend changing whatever the default state of USFW is without consulting TAC first.
As to whether turning SMT back off will be more efficient that depends. What does fwaccel stats -s show? If more than 70% of your traffic is fully accelerated (not likely), then disabling SMT will definitely help.
In your specific case under R80.30 kernel 2.6.18, USFW did not get enabled by the upgrade due to the use of the 2.6.18 kernel; at least for the moment unless you manually enable USFW (check with TAC first!) it would probably be better to disable SMT.
I wrote this in another article: High CPU utilization during process fwk0_dev_0
According to SK the UMFW is enabled from R80.30 by default. I'm afraid I noticed that a little differently. To confirm this I called a friend (He's a HP dealer.) and asked him if he had a HP DL380 with more then 40 cores in his company:-) Two hours later we were sitting in his LAB and installed R80.30 on this system.
R80.30 kernel 3.10 more then 40 cores -> UMFW is enabled (checked on HP DL 380 G10 2 * Platinum 8180MProcessor 28 cores = 56 cores)
R80.30 kernel 3.10 less then 40 cores -> UMFW is disabled (checked on HP DL 380 G10 1 * Platinum 8180MProcessor 28 cores)
Unfortunately I was not allowed to take the server with 56 cores home with me 🤣.
The installation under R80.30 (UMFW/KMFW) depends on how many cores the system has.
The licensed cores do not play a role for UMFW/KMFW.
R80.30 kernel 2.6 -> UMFW is disabled (checked on VMWare with 30 cores and with 46 cores)
...
More read here:
- R80.x - Performance Tuning Tip - SMT (Hyper Threading)
- R80.x - Performance Tuning Tip – User Mode Firewall vs. Kernel Mode Firewall
To make sure that UMFW is activated, run the following command:
# cpprod_util FwIsUsermode
1 = User Mode Firewall
0 = Kernel Mode Firewall
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