54a50941b7
Current xmit code only stops the txq after attempting to fill an IO buffer that hasn't been TX-completed yet. In many-connection scenarios, this can result in frequent rejected TX attempts, requeuing of skbs with NETDEV_TX_BUSY and extra overhead. Now that we have a proper 1-to-1 relation between stack-side txqs and our HW Queues, overhaul the stop/wake logic so that the xmit code stops the txq as needed. Given that we might map multiple skbs into a single buffer, it's crucial to ensure that the queue always provides an _entirely_ empty IO buffer. Otherwise large skbs (eg TSO) might not fit into the last available buffer. So whenever qeth_do_send_packet() first utilizes an _empty_ buffer, it updates & checks the used_buffers count. This now ensures that an skb passed to qeth_xmit() can always be mapped into an IO buffer, so remove all of the -EBUSY roll-back handling in the TX path. We preserve the minimal safety-checks ("Is this IO buffer really available?"), just in case some nasty future bug ever attempts to corrupt an in-use buffer. Signed-off-by: Julian Wiedmann <jwi@linux.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> |
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cio | ||
crypto | ||
net | ||
scsi | ||
virtio | ||
Makefile |