scheduler_kist.c 31 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368369370371372373374375376377378379380381382383384385386387388389390391392393394395396397398399400401402403404405406407408409410411412413414415416417418419420421422423424425426427428429430431432433434435436437438439440441442443444445446447448449450451452453454455456457458459460461462463464465466467468469470471472473474475476477478479480481482483484485486487488489490491492493494495496497498499500501502503504505506507508509510511512513514515516517518519520521522523524525526527528529530531532533534535536537538539540541542543544545546547548549550551552553554555556557558559560561562563564565566567568569570571572573574575576577578579580581582583584585586587588589590591592593594595596597598599600601602603604605606607608609610611612613614615616617618619620621622623624625626627628629630631632633634635636637638639640641642643644645646647648649650651652653654655656657658659660661662663664665666667668669670671672673674675676677678679680681682683684685686687688689690691692693694695696697698699700701702703704705706707708709710711712713714715716717718719720721722723724725726727728729730731732733734735736737738739740741742743744745746747748749750751752753754755756757758759760761762763764765766767768769770771772773774775776777778779780781782783784785786787788789790791792793794795796797798799800801802803804805806807808809810811812813814815816817818819820821822823824825826827828829830831832833834835836837838839840
  1. /* Copyright (c) 2017-2018, The Tor Project, Inc. */
  2. /* See LICENSE for licensing information */
  3. #define SCHEDULER_KIST_PRIVATE
  4. #include "core/or/or.h"
  5. #include "lib/container/buffers.h"
  6. #include "app/config/config.h"
  7. #include "core/mainloop/connection.h"
  8. #include "feature/nodelist/networkstatus.h"
  9. #define TOR_CHANNEL_INTERNAL_
  10. #include "core/or/channel.h"
  11. #include "core/or/channeltls.h"
  12. #define SCHEDULER_PRIVATE_
  13. #include "core/or/scheduler.h"
  14. #include "lib/math/fp.h"
  15. #include "core/or/or_connection_st.h"
  16. #ifdef HAVE_SYS_IOCTL_H
  17. #include <sys/ioctl.h>
  18. #endif
  19. #ifdef HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT
  20. /* Kernel interface needed for KIST. */
  21. #include <netinet/tcp.h>
  22. #include <linux/sockios.h>
  23. #endif /* HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT */
  24. /*****************************************************************************
  25. * Data structures and supporting functions
  26. *****************************************************************************/
  27. /* Socket_table hash table stuff. The socket_table keeps track of per-socket
  28. * limit information imposed by kist and used by kist. */
  29. static uint32_t
  30. socket_table_ent_hash(const socket_table_ent_t *ent)
  31. {
  32. return (uint32_t)ent->chan->global_identifier;
  33. }
  34. static unsigned
  35. socket_table_ent_eq(const socket_table_ent_t *a, const socket_table_ent_t *b)
  36. {
  37. return a->chan == b->chan;
  38. }
  39. typedef HT_HEAD(socket_table_s, socket_table_ent_s) socket_table_t;
  40. static socket_table_t socket_table = HT_INITIALIZER();
  41. HT_PROTOTYPE(socket_table_s, socket_table_ent_s, node, socket_table_ent_hash,
  42. socket_table_ent_eq)
  43. HT_GENERATE2(socket_table_s, socket_table_ent_s, node, socket_table_ent_hash,
  44. socket_table_ent_eq, 0.6, tor_reallocarray, tor_free_)
  45. /* outbuf_table hash table stuff. The outbuf_table keeps track of which
  46. * channels have data sitting in their outbuf so the kist scheduler can force
  47. * a write from outbuf to kernel periodically during a run and at the end of a
  48. * run. */
  49. typedef struct outbuf_table_ent_s {
  50. HT_ENTRY(outbuf_table_ent_s) node;
  51. channel_t *chan;
  52. } outbuf_table_ent_t;
  53. static uint32_t
  54. outbuf_table_ent_hash(const outbuf_table_ent_t *ent)
  55. {
  56. return (uint32_t)ent->chan->global_identifier;
  57. }
  58. static unsigned
  59. outbuf_table_ent_eq(const outbuf_table_ent_t *a, const outbuf_table_ent_t *b)
  60. {
  61. return a->chan->global_identifier == b->chan->global_identifier;
  62. }
  63. HT_PROTOTYPE(outbuf_table_s, outbuf_table_ent_s, node, outbuf_table_ent_hash,
  64. outbuf_table_ent_eq)
  65. HT_GENERATE2(outbuf_table_s, outbuf_table_ent_s, node, outbuf_table_ent_hash,
  66. outbuf_table_ent_eq, 0.6, tor_reallocarray, tor_free_)
  67. /*****************************************************************************
  68. * Other internal data
  69. *****************************************************************************/
  70. /* Store the last time the scheduler was run so we can decide when to next run
  71. * the scheduler based on it. */
  72. static monotime_t scheduler_last_run;
  73. /* This is a factor for the extra_space calculation in kist per-socket limits.
  74. * It is the number of extra congestion windows we want to write to the kernel.
  75. */
  76. static double sock_buf_size_factor = 1.0;
  77. /* How often the scheduler runs. */
  78. STATIC int sched_run_interval = KIST_SCHED_RUN_INTERVAL_DEFAULT;
  79. #ifdef HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT
  80. /* Indicate if KIST lite mode is on or off. We can disable it at runtime.
  81. * Important to have because of the KISTLite -> KIST possible transition. */
  82. static unsigned int kist_lite_mode = 0;
  83. /* Indicate if we don't have the kernel support. This can happen if the kernel
  84. * changed and it doesn't recognized the values passed to the syscalls needed
  85. * by KIST. In that case, fallback to the naive approach. */
  86. static unsigned int kist_no_kernel_support = 0;
  87. #else /* !(defined(HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT)) */
  88. static unsigned int kist_lite_mode = 1;
  89. #endif /* defined(HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT) */
  90. /*****************************************************************************
  91. * Internally called function implementations
  92. *****************************************************************************/
  93. /* Little helper function to get the length of a channel's output buffer */
  94. static inline size_t
  95. channel_outbuf_length(channel_t *chan)
  96. {
  97. /* In theory, this can not happen because we can not scheduler a channel
  98. * without a connection that has its outbuf initialized. Just in case, bug
  99. * on this so we can understand a bit more why it happened. */
  100. if (SCHED_BUG(BASE_CHAN_TO_TLS(chan)->conn == NULL, chan)) {
  101. return 0;
  102. }
  103. return buf_datalen(TO_CONN(BASE_CHAN_TO_TLS(chan)->conn)->outbuf);
  104. }
  105. /* Little helper function for HT_FOREACH_FN. */
  106. static int
  107. each_channel_write_to_kernel(outbuf_table_ent_t *ent, void *data)
  108. {
  109. (void) data; /* Make compiler happy. */
  110. channel_write_to_kernel(ent->chan);
  111. return 0; /* Returning non-zero removes the element from the table. */
  112. }
  113. /* Free the given outbuf table entry ent. */
  114. static int
  115. free_outbuf_info_by_ent(outbuf_table_ent_t *ent, void *data)
  116. {
  117. (void) data; /* Make compiler happy. */
  118. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "Freeing outbuf table entry from chan=%" PRIu64,
  119. ent->chan->global_identifier);
  120. tor_free(ent);
  121. return 1; /* So HT_FOREACH_FN will remove the element */
  122. }
  123. /* Free the given socket table entry ent. */
  124. static int
  125. free_socket_info_by_ent(socket_table_ent_t *ent, void *data)
  126. {
  127. (void) data; /* Make compiler happy. */
  128. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "Freeing socket table entry from chan=%" PRIu64,
  129. ent->chan->global_identifier);
  130. tor_free(ent);
  131. return 1; /* So HT_FOREACH_FN will remove the element */
  132. }
  133. /* Clean up socket_table. Probably because the KIST sched impl is going away */
  134. static void
  135. free_all_socket_info(void)
  136. {
  137. HT_FOREACH_FN(socket_table_s, &socket_table, free_socket_info_by_ent, NULL);
  138. HT_CLEAR(socket_table_s, &socket_table);
  139. }
  140. static socket_table_ent_t *
  141. socket_table_search(socket_table_t *table, const channel_t *chan)
  142. {
  143. socket_table_ent_t search, *ent = NULL;
  144. search.chan = chan;
  145. ent = HT_FIND(socket_table_s, table, &search);
  146. return ent;
  147. }
  148. /* Free a socket entry in table for the given chan. */
  149. static void
  150. free_socket_info_by_chan(socket_table_t *table, const channel_t *chan)
  151. {
  152. socket_table_ent_t *ent = NULL;
  153. ent = socket_table_search(table, chan);
  154. if (!ent)
  155. return;
  156. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "scheduler free socket info for chan=%" PRIu64,
  157. chan->global_identifier);
  158. HT_REMOVE(socket_table_s, table, ent);
  159. free_socket_info_by_ent(ent, NULL);
  160. }
  161. /* Perform system calls for the given socket in order to calculate kist's
  162. * per-socket limit as documented in the function body. */
  163. MOCK_IMPL(void,
  164. update_socket_info_impl, (socket_table_ent_t *ent))
  165. {
  166. #ifdef HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT
  167. int64_t tcp_space, extra_space;
  168. const tor_socket_t sock =
  169. TO_CONN(BASE_CHAN_TO_TLS((channel_t *) ent->chan)->conn)->s;
  170. struct tcp_info tcp;
  171. socklen_t tcp_info_len = sizeof(tcp);
  172. if (kist_no_kernel_support || kist_lite_mode) {
  173. goto fallback;
  174. }
  175. /* Gather information */
  176. if (getsockopt(sock, SOL_TCP, TCP_INFO, (void *)&(tcp), &tcp_info_len) < 0) {
  177. if (errno == EINVAL) {
  178. /* Oops, this option is not provided by the kernel, we'll have to
  179. * disable KIST entirely. This can happen if tor was built on a machine
  180. * with the support previously or if the kernel was updated and lost the
  181. * support. */
  182. log_notice(LD_SCHED, "Looks like our kernel doesn't have the support "
  183. "for KIST anymore. We will fallback to the naive "
  184. "approach. Remove KIST from the Schedulers list "
  185. "to disable.");
  186. kist_no_kernel_support = 1;
  187. }
  188. goto fallback;
  189. }
  190. if (ioctl(sock, SIOCOUTQNSD, &(ent->notsent)) < 0) {
  191. if (errno == EINVAL) {
  192. log_notice(LD_SCHED, "Looks like our kernel doesn't have the support "
  193. "for KIST anymore. We will fallback to the naive "
  194. "approach. Remove KIST from the Schedulers list "
  195. "to disable.");
  196. /* Same reason as the above. */
  197. kist_no_kernel_support = 1;
  198. }
  199. goto fallback;
  200. }
  201. ent->cwnd = tcp.tcpi_snd_cwnd;
  202. ent->unacked = tcp.tcpi_unacked;
  203. ent->mss = tcp.tcpi_snd_mss;
  204. /* In order to reduce outbound kernel queuing delays and thus improve Tor's
  205. * ability to prioritize circuits, KIST wants to set a socket write limit
  206. * that is near the amount that the socket would be able to immediately send
  207. * into the Internet.
  208. *
  209. * We first calculate how much the socket could send immediately (assuming
  210. * completely full packets) according to the congestion window and the number
  211. * of unacked packets.
  212. *
  213. * Then we add a little extra space in a controlled way. We do this so any
  214. * when the kernel gets ACKs back for data currently sitting in the "TCP
  215. * space", it will already have some more data to send immediately. It will
  216. * not have to wait for the scheduler to run again. The amount of extra space
  217. * is a factor of the current congestion window. With the suggested
  218. * sock_buf_size_factor value of 1.0, we allow at most 2*cwnd bytes to sit in
  219. * the kernel: 1 cwnd on the wire waiting for ACKs and 1 cwnd ready and
  220. * waiting to be sent when those ACKs finally come.
  221. *
  222. * In the below diagram, we see some bytes in the TCP-space (denoted by '*')
  223. * that have be sent onto the wire and are waiting for ACKs. We have a little
  224. * more room in "TCP space" that we can fill with data that will be
  225. * immediately sent. We also see the "extra space" KIST calculates. The sum
  226. * of the empty "TCP space" and the "extra space" is the kist-imposed write
  227. * limit for this socket.
  228. *
  229. * <----------------kernel-outbound-socket-queue----------------|
  230. * <*********---------------------------------------------------|
  231. * |----TCP-space-----|----extra-space-----|
  232. * |------------------|
  233. * ^ ((cwnd - unacked) * mss) bytes
  234. * |--------------------|
  235. * ^ ((cwnd * mss) * factor) bytes
  236. */
  237. /* These values from the kernel are uint32_t, they will always fit into a
  238. * int64_t tcp_space variable but if the congestion window cwnd is smaller
  239. * than the unacked packets, the remaining TCP space is set to 0. */
  240. if (ent->cwnd >= ent->unacked) {
  241. tcp_space = (ent->cwnd - ent->unacked) * (int64_t)(ent->mss);
  242. } else {
  243. tcp_space = 0;
  244. }
  245. /* The clamp_double_to_int64 makes sure the first part fits into an int64_t.
  246. * In fact, if sock_buf_size_factor is still forced to be >= 0 in config.c,
  247. * then it will be positive for sure. Then we subtract a uint32_t. Getting a
  248. * negative value is OK, see after how it is being handled. */
  249. extra_space =
  250. clamp_double_to_int64(
  251. (ent->cwnd * (int64_t)ent->mss) * sock_buf_size_factor) -
  252. ent->notsent;
  253. if ((tcp_space + extra_space) < 0) {
  254. /* This means that the "notsent" queue is just too big so we shouldn't put
  255. * more in the kernel for now. */
  256. ent->limit = 0;
  257. } else {
  258. /* The positive sum of two int64_t will always fit into an uint64_t.
  259. * And we know this will always be positive, since we checked above. */
  260. ent->limit = (uint64_t)tcp_space + (uint64_t)extra_space;
  261. }
  262. return;
  263. #else /* !(defined(HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT)) */
  264. goto fallback;
  265. #endif /* defined(HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT) */
  266. fallback:
  267. /* If all of a sudden we don't have kist support, we just zero out all the
  268. * variables for this socket since we don't know what they should be. We
  269. * also allow the socket to write as much as it can from the estimated
  270. * number of cells the lower layer can accept, effectively returning it to
  271. * Vanilla scheduler behavior. */
  272. ent->cwnd = ent->unacked = ent->mss = ent->notsent = 0;
  273. /* This function calls the specialized channel object (currently channeltls)
  274. * and ask how many cells it can write on the outbuf which we then multiply
  275. * by the size of the cells for this channel. The cast is because this
  276. * function requires a non-const channel object, meh. */
  277. ent->limit = channel_num_cells_writeable((channel_t *) ent->chan) *
  278. (get_cell_network_size(ent->chan->wide_circ_ids) +
  279. TLS_PER_CELL_OVERHEAD);
  280. }
  281. /* Given a socket that isn't in the table, add it.
  282. * Given a socket that is in the table, re-init values that need init-ing
  283. * every scheduling run
  284. */
  285. static void
  286. init_socket_info(socket_table_t *table, const channel_t *chan)
  287. {
  288. socket_table_ent_t *ent = NULL;
  289. ent = socket_table_search(table, chan);
  290. if (!ent) {
  291. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "scheduler init socket info for chan=%" PRIu64,
  292. chan->global_identifier);
  293. ent = tor_malloc_zero(sizeof(*ent));
  294. ent->chan = chan;
  295. HT_INSERT(socket_table_s, table, ent);
  296. }
  297. ent->written = 0;
  298. }
  299. /* Add chan to the outbuf table if it isn't already in it. If it is, then don't
  300. * do anything */
  301. static void
  302. outbuf_table_add(outbuf_table_t *table, channel_t *chan)
  303. {
  304. outbuf_table_ent_t search, *ent;
  305. search.chan = chan;
  306. ent = HT_FIND(outbuf_table_s, table, &search);
  307. if (!ent) {
  308. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "scheduler init outbuf info for chan=%" PRIu64,
  309. chan->global_identifier);
  310. ent = tor_malloc_zero(sizeof(*ent));
  311. ent->chan = chan;
  312. HT_INSERT(outbuf_table_s, table, ent);
  313. }
  314. }
  315. static void
  316. outbuf_table_remove(outbuf_table_t *table, channel_t *chan)
  317. {
  318. outbuf_table_ent_t search, *ent;
  319. search.chan = chan;
  320. ent = HT_FIND(outbuf_table_s, table, &search);
  321. if (ent) {
  322. HT_REMOVE(outbuf_table_s, table, ent);
  323. free_outbuf_info_by_ent(ent, NULL);
  324. }
  325. }
  326. /* Set the scheduler running interval. */
  327. static void
  328. set_scheduler_run_interval(void)
  329. {
  330. int old_sched_run_interval = sched_run_interval;
  331. sched_run_interval = kist_scheduler_run_interval();
  332. if (old_sched_run_interval != sched_run_interval) {
  333. log_info(LD_SCHED, "Scheduler KIST changing its running interval "
  334. "from %" PRId32 " to %" PRId32,
  335. old_sched_run_interval, sched_run_interval);
  336. }
  337. }
  338. /* Return true iff the channel hasn't hit its kist-imposed write limit yet */
  339. static int
  340. socket_can_write(socket_table_t *table, const channel_t *chan)
  341. {
  342. socket_table_ent_t *ent = NULL;
  343. ent = socket_table_search(table, chan);
  344. if (SCHED_BUG(!ent, chan)) {
  345. return 1; // Just return true, saying that kist wouldn't limit the socket
  346. }
  347. /* We previously calculated a write limit for this socket. In the below
  348. * calculation, first determine how much room is left in bytes. Then divide
  349. * that by the amount of space a cell takes. If there's room for at least 1
  350. * cell, then KIST will allow the socket to write. */
  351. int64_t kist_limit_space =
  352. (int64_t) (ent->limit - ent->written) /
  353. (CELL_MAX_NETWORK_SIZE + TLS_PER_CELL_OVERHEAD);
  354. return kist_limit_space > 0;
  355. }
  356. /* Update the channel's socket kernel information. */
  357. static void
  358. update_socket_info(socket_table_t *table, const channel_t *chan)
  359. {
  360. socket_table_ent_t *ent = NULL;
  361. ent = socket_table_search(table, chan);
  362. if (SCHED_BUG(!ent, chan)) {
  363. return; // Whelp. Entry didn't exist for some reason so nothing to do.
  364. }
  365. update_socket_info_impl(ent);
  366. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "chan=%" PRIu64 " updated socket info, limit: %" PRIu64
  367. ", cwnd: %" PRIu32 ", unacked: %" PRIu32
  368. ", notsent: %" PRIu32 ", mss: %" PRIu32,
  369. ent->chan->global_identifier, ent->limit, ent->cwnd, ent->unacked,
  370. ent->notsent, ent->mss);
  371. }
  372. /* Increment the channel's socket written value by the number of bytes. */
  373. static void
  374. update_socket_written(socket_table_t *table, channel_t *chan, size_t bytes)
  375. {
  376. socket_table_ent_t *ent = NULL;
  377. ent = socket_table_search(table, chan);
  378. if (SCHED_BUG(!ent, chan)) {
  379. return; // Whelp. Entry didn't exist so nothing to do.
  380. }
  381. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "chan=%" PRIu64 " wrote %lu bytes, old was %" PRIi64,
  382. chan->global_identifier, (unsigned long) bytes, ent->written);
  383. ent->written += bytes;
  384. }
  385. /*
  386. * A naive KIST impl would write every single cell all the way to the kernel.
  387. * That would take a lot of system calls. A less bad KIST impl would write a
  388. * channel's outbuf to the kernel only when we are switching to a different
  389. * channel. But if we have two channels with equal priority, we end up writing
  390. * one cell for each and bouncing back and forth. This KIST impl avoids that
  391. * by only writing a channel's outbuf to the kernel if it has 8 cells or more
  392. * in it.
  393. */
  394. MOCK_IMPL(int, channel_should_write_to_kernel,
  395. (outbuf_table_t *table, channel_t *chan))
  396. {
  397. outbuf_table_add(table, chan);
  398. /* CELL_MAX_NETWORK_SIZE * 8 because we only want to write the outbuf to the
  399. * kernel if there's 8 or more cells waiting */
  400. return channel_outbuf_length(chan) > (CELL_MAX_NETWORK_SIZE * 8);
  401. }
  402. /* Little helper function to write a channel's outbuf all the way to the
  403. * kernel */
  404. MOCK_IMPL(void, channel_write_to_kernel, (channel_t *chan))
  405. {
  406. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "Writing %lu bytes to kernel for chan %" PRIu64,
  407. (unsigned long)channel_outbuf_length(chan),
  408. chan->global_identifier);
  409. connection_handle_write(TO_CONN(BASE_CHAN_TO_TLS(chan)->conn), 0);
  410. }
  411. /* Return true iff the scheduler has work to perform. */
  412. static int
  413. have_work(void)
  414. {
  415. smartlist_t *cp = get_channels_pending();
  416. IF_BUG_ONCE(!cp) {
  417. return 0; // channels_pending doesn't exist so... no work?
  418. }
  419. return smartlist_len(cp) > 0;
  420. }
  421. /* Function of the scheduler interface: free_all() */
  422. static void
  423. kist_free_all(void)
  424. {
  425. free_all_socket_info();
  426. }
  427. /* Function of the scheduler interface: on_channel_free() */
  428. static void
  429. kist_on_channel_free_fn(const channel_t *chan)
  430. {
  431. free_socket_info_by_chan(&socket_table, chan);
  432. }
  433. /* Function of the scheduler interface: on_new_consensus() */
  434. static void
  435. kist_scheduler_on_new_consensus(void)
  436. {
  437. set_scheduler_run_interval();
  438. }
  439. /* Function of the scheduler interface: on_new_options() */
  440. static void
  441. kist_scheduler_on_new_options(void)
  442. {
  443. sock_buf_size_factor = get_options()->KISTSockBufSizeFactor;
  444. /* Calls kist_scheduler_run_interval which calls get_options(). */
  445. set_scheduler_run_interval();
  446. }
  447. /* Function of the scheduler interface: init() */
  448. static void
  449. kist_scheduler_init(void)
  450. {
  451. /* When initializing the scheduler, the last run could be 0 because it is
  452. * declared static or a value in the past that was set when it was last
  453. * used. In both cases, we want to initialize it to now so we don't risk
  454. * using the value 0 which doesn't play well with our monotonic time
  455. * interface.
  456. *
  457. * One side effect is that the first scheduler run will be at the next tick
  458. * that is in now + 10 msec (KIST_SCHED_RUN_INTERVAL_DEFAULT) by default. */
  459. monotime_get(&scheduler_last_run);
  460. kist_scheduler_on_new_options();
  461. IF_BUG_ONCE(sched_run_interval == 0) {
  462. log_warn(LD_SCHED, "We are initing the KIST scheduler and noticed the "
  463. "KISTSchedRunInterval is telling us to not use KIST. That's "
  464. "weird! We'll continue using KIST, but at %" PRId32 "ms.",
  465. KIST_SCHED_RUN_INTERVAL_DEFAULT);
  466. sched_run_interval = KIST_SCHED_RUN_INTERVAL_DEFAULT;
  467. }
  468. }
  469. /* Function of the scheduler interface: schedule() */
  470. static void
  471. kist_scheduler_schedule(void)
  472. {
  473. struct monotime_t now;
  474. struct timeval next_run;
  475. int64_t diff;
  476. if (!have_work()) {
  477. return;
  478. }
  479. monotime_get(&now);
  480. /* If time is really monotonic, we can never have now being smaller than the
  481. * last scheduler run. The scheduler_last_run at first is set to 0.
  482. * Unfortunately, not all platforms guarantee monotonic time so we log at
  483. * info level but don't make it more noisy. */
  484. diff = monotime_diff_msec(&scheduler_last_run, &now);
  485. if (diff < 0) {
  486. log_info(LD_SCHED, "Monotonic time between now and last run of scheduler "
  487. "is negative: %" PRId64 ". Setting diff to 0.", diff);
  488. diff = 0;
  489. }
  490. if (diff < sched_run_interval) {
  491. next_run.tv_sec = 0;
  492. /* Takes 1000 ms -> us. This will always be valid because diff can NOT be
  493. * negative and can NOT be bigger than sched_run_interval so values can
  494. * only go from 1000 usec (diff set to interval - 1) to 100000 usec (diff
  495. * set to 0) for the maximum allowed run interval (100ms). */
  496. next_run.tv_usec = (int) ((sched_run_interval - diff) * 1000);
  497. /* Re-adding an event reschedules it. It does not duplicate it. */
  498. scheduler_ev_add(&next_run);
  499. } else {
  500. scheduler_ev_active();
  501. }
  502. }
  503. /* Function of the scheduler interface: run() */
  504. static void
  505. kist_scheduler_run(void)
  506. {
  507. /* Define variables */
  508. channel_t *chan = NULL; // current working channel
  509. /* The last distinct chan served in a sched loop. */
  510. channel_t *prev_chan = NULL;
  511. int flush_result; // temporarily store results from flush calls
  512. /* Channels to be re-adding to pending at the end */
  513. smartlist_t *to_readd = NULL;
  514. smartlist_t *cp = get_channels_pending();
  515. outbuf_table_t outbuf_table = HT_INITIALIZER();
  516. /* For each pending channel, collect new kernel information */
  517. SMARTLIST_FOREACH_BEGIN(cp, const channel_t *, pchan) {
  518. init_socket_info(&socket_table, pchan);
  519. update_socket_info(&socket_table, pchan);
  520. } SMARTLIST_FOREACH_END(pchan);
  521. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "Running the scheduler. %d channels pending",
  522. smartlist_len(cp));
  523. /* The main scheduling loop. Loop until there are no more pending channels */
  524. while (smartlist_len(cp) > 0) {
  525. /* get best channel */
  526. chan = smartlist_pqueue_pop(cp, scheduler_compare_channels,
  527. offsetof(channel_t, sched_heap_idx));
  528. if (SCHED_BUG(!chan, NULL)) {
  529. /* Some-freaking-how a NULL got into the channels_pending. That should
  530. * never happen, but it should be harmless to ignore it and keep looping.
  531. */
  532. continue;
  533. }
  534. outbuf_table_add(&outbuf_table, chan);
  535. /* if we have switched to a new channel, consider writing the previous
  536. * channel's outbuf to the kernel. */
  537. if (!prev_chan) {
  538. prev_chan = chan;
  539. }
  540. if (prev_chan != chan) {
  541. if (channel_should_write_to_kernel(&outbuf_table, prev_chan)) {
  542. channel_write_to_kernel(prev_chan);
  543. outbuf_table_remove(&outbuf_table, prev_chan);
  544. }
  545. prev_chan = chan;
  546. }
  547. /* Only flush and write if the per-socket limit hasn't been hit */
  548. if (socket_can_write(&socket_table, chan)) {
  549. /* flush to channel queue/outbuf */
  550. flush_result = (int)channel_flush_some_cells(chan, 1); // 1 for num cells
  551. /* XXX: While flushing cells, it is possible that the connection write
  552. * fails leading to the channel to be closed which triggers a release
  553. * and free its entry in the socket table. And because of a engineering
  554. * design issue, the error is not propagated back so we don't get an
  555. * error at this point. So before we continue, make sure the channel is
  556. * open and if not just ignore it. See #23751. */
  557. if (!CHANNEL_IS_OPEN(chan)) {
  558. /* Channel isn't open so we put it back in IDLE mode. It is either
  559. * renegotiating its TLS session or about to be released. */
  560. scheduler_set_channel_state(chan, SCHED_CHAN_IDLE);
  561. continue;
  562. }
  563. /* flush_result has the # cells flushed */
  564. if (flush_result > 0) {
  565. update_socket_written(&socket_table, chan, flush_result *
  566. (CELL_MAX_NETWORK_SIZE + TLS_PER_CELL_OVERHEAD));
  567. } else {
  568. /* XXX: This can happen because tor sometimes does flush in an
  569. * opportunistic way cells from the circuit to the outbuf so the
  570. * channel can end up here without having anything to flush nor needed
  571. * to write to the kernel. Hopefully we'll fix that soon but for now
  572. * we have to handle this case which happens kind of often. */
  573. log_debug(LD_SCHED,
  574. "We didn't flush anything on a chan that we think "
  575. "can write and wants to write. The channel's state is '%s' "
  576. "and in scheduler state '%s'. We're going to mark it as "
  577. "waiting_for_cells (as that's most likely the issue) and "
  578. "stop scheduling it this round.",
  579. channel_state_to_string(chan->state),
  580. get_scheduler_state_string(chan->scheduler_state));
  581. scheduler_set_channel_state(chan, SCHED_CHAN_WAITING_FOR_CELLS);
  582. continue;
  583. }
  584. }
  585. /* Decide what to do with the channel now */
  586. if (!channel_more_to_flush(chan) &&
  587. !socket_can_write(&socket_table, chan)) {
  588. /* Case 1: no more cells to send, and cannot write */
  589. /*
  590. * You might think we should put the channel in SCHED_CHAN_IDLE. And
  591. * you're probably correct. While implementing KIST, we found that the
  592. * scheduling system would sometimes lose track of channels when we did
  593. * that. We suspect it has to do with the difference between "can't
  594. * write because socket/outbuf is full" and KIST's "can't write because
  595. * we've arbitrarily decided that that's enough for now." Sometimes
  596. * channels run out of cells at the same time they hit their
  597. * kist-imposed write limit and maybe the rest of Tor doesn't put the
  598. * channel back in pending when it is supposed to.
  599. *
  600. * This should be investigated again. It is as simple as changing
  601. * SCHED_CHAN_WAITING_FOR_CELLS to SCHED_CHAN_IDLE and seeing if Tor
  602. * starts having serious throughput issues. Best done in shadow/chutney.
  603. */
  604. scheduler_set_channel_state(chan, SCHED_CHAN_WAITING_FOR_CELLS);
  605. } else if (!channel_more_to_flush(chan)) {
  606. /* Case 2: no more cells to send, but still open for writes */
  607. scheduler_set_channel_state(chan, SCHED_CHAN_WAITING_FOR_CELLS);
  608. } else if (!socket_can_write(&socket_table, chan)) {
  609. /* Case 3: cells to send, but cannot write */
  610. /*
  611. * We want to write, but can't. If we left the channel in
  612. * channels_pending, we would never exit the scheduling loop. We need to
  613. * add it to a temporary list of channels to be added to channels_pending
  614. * after the scheduling loop is over. They can hopefully be taken care of
  615. * in the next scheduling round.
  616. */
  617. if (!to_readd) {
  618. to_readd = smartlist_new();
  619. }
  620. smartlist_add(to_readd, chan);
  621. } else {
  622. /* Case 4: cells to send, and still open for writes */
  623. scheduler_set_channel_state(chan, SCHED_CHAN_PENDING);
  624. if (!SCHED_BUG(chan->sched_heap_idx != -1, chan)) {
  625. smartlist_pqueue_add(cp, scheduler_compare_channels,
  626. offsetof(channel_t, sched_heap_idx), chan);
  627. }
  628. }
  629. } /* End of main scheduling loop */
  630. /* Write the outbuf of any channels that still have data */
  631. HT_FOREACH_FN(outbuf_table_s, &outbuf_table, each_channel_write_to_kernel,
  632. NULL);
  633. /* We are done with it. */
  634. HT_FOREACH_FN(outbuf_table_s, &outbuf_table, free_outbuf_info_by_ent, NULL);
  635. HT_CLEAR(outbuf_table_s, &outbuf_table);
  636. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "len pending=%d, len to_readd=%d",
  637. smartlist_len(cp),
  638. (to_readd ? smartlist_len(to_readd) : -1));
  639. /* Re-add any channels we need to */
  640. if (to_readd) {
  641. SMARTLIST_FOREACH_BEGIN(to_readd, channel_t *, readd_chan) {
  642. scheduler_set_channel_state(readd_chan, SCHED_CHAN_PENDING);
  643. if (!smartlist_contains(cp, readd_chan)) {
  644. if (!SCHED_BUG(chan->sched_heap_idx != -1, chan)) {
  645. /* XXXX Note that the check above is in theory redundant with
  646. * the smartlist_contains check. But let's make sure we're
  647. * not messing anything up, and leave them both for now. */
  648. smartlist_pqueue_add(cp, scheduler_compare_channels,
  649. offsetof(channel_t, sched_heap_idx), readd_chan);
  650. }
  651. }
  652. } SMARTLIST_FOREACH_END(readd_chan);
  653. smartlist_free(to_readd);
  654. }
  655. monotime_get(&scheduler_last_run);
  656. }
  657. /*****************************************************************************
  658. * Externally called function implementations not called through scheduler_t
  659. *****************************************************************************/
  660. /* Stores the kist scheduler function pointers. */
  661. static scheduler_t kist_scheduler = {
  662. .type = SCHEDULER_KIST,
  663. .free_all = kist_free_all,
  664. .on_channel_free = kist_on_channel_free_fn,
  665. .init = kist_scheduler_init,
  666. .on_new_consensus = kist_scheduler_on_new_consensus,
  667. .schedule = kist_scheduler_schedule,
  668. .run = kist_scheduler_run,
  669. .on_new_options = kist_scheduler_on_new_options,
  670. };
  671. /* Return the KIST scheduler object. If it didn't exists, return a newly
  672. * allocated one but init() is not called. */
  673. scheduler_t *
  674. get_kist_scheduler(void)
  675. {
  676. return &kist_scheduler;
  677. }
  678. /* Check the torrc (and maybe consensus) for the configured KIST scheduler run
  679. * interval.
  680. * - If torrc > 0, then return the positive torrc value (should use KIST, and
  681. * should use the set value)
  682. * - If torrc == 0, then look in the consensus for what the value should be.
  683. * - If == 0, then return 0 (don't use KIST)
  684. * - If > 0, then return the positive consensus value
  685. * - If consensus doesn't say anything, return 10 milliseconds, default.
  686. */
  687. int
  688. kist_scheduler_run_interval(void)
  689. {
  690. int run_interval = get_options()->KISTSchedRunInterval;
  691. if (run_interval != 0) {
  692. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "Found KISTSchedRunInterval=%" PRId32 " in torrc. "
  693. "Using that.", run_interval);
  694. return run_interval;
  695. }
  696. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "KISTSchedRunInterval=0, turning to the consensus.");
  697. /* Will either be the consensus value or the default. Note that 0 can be
  698. * returned which means the consensus wants us to NOT use KIST. */
  699. return networkstatus_get_param(NULL, "KISTSchedRunInterval",
  700. KIST_SCHED_RUN_INTERVAL_DEFAULT,
  701. KIST_SCHED_RUN_INTERVAL_MIN,
  702. KIST_SCHED_RUN_INTERVAL_MAX);
  703. }
  704. /* Set KISTLite mode that is KIST without kernel support. */
  705. void
  706. scheduler_kist_set_lite_mode(void)
  707. {
  708. kist_lite_mode = 1;
  709. kist_scheduler.type = SCHEDULER_KIST_LITE;
  710. log_info(LD_SCHED,
  711. "Setting KIST scheduler without kernel support (KISTLite mode)");
  712. }
  713. /* Set KIST mode that is KIST with kernel support. */
  714. void
  715. scheduler_kist_set_full_mode(void)
  716. {
  717. kist_lite_mode = 0;
  718. kist_scheduler.type = SCHEDULER_KIST;
  719. log_info(LD_SCHED,
  720. "Setting KIST scheduler with kernel support (KIST mode)");
  721. }
  722. #ifdef HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT
  723. /* Return true iff the scheduler subsystem should use KIST. */
  724. int
  725. scheduler_can_use_kist(void)
  726. {
  727. if (kist_no_kernel_support) {
  728. /* We have no kernel support so we can't use KIST. */
  729. return 0;
  730. }
  731. /* We do have the support, time to check if we can get the interval that the
  732. * consensus can be disabling. */
  733. int run_interval = kist_scheduler_run_interval();
  734. log_debug(LD_SCHED, "Determined KIST sched_run_interval should be "
  735. "%" PRId32 ". Can%s use KIST.",
  736. run_interval, (run_interval > 0 ? "" : " not"));
  737. return run_interval > 0;
  738. }
  739. #else /* !(defined(HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT)) */
  740. int
  741. scheduler_can_use_kist(void)
  742. {
  743. return 0;
  744. }
  745. #endif /* defined(HAVE_KIST_SUPPORT) */