From ba9c5611f0888f143ff5faf28a73eac6ea20eaaf Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jakub Kicinski Date: Sat, 31 Jan 2026 14:54:54 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] docs: networking: mention that RSS table should be 4x the queue count Spell out the recommendation that the RSS table should be 4x the queue count to avoid traffic imbalance. Include minor rephrasing and removal of the explicit 128 entry example since a 128 entry table is inadequate on modern machines. Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260131225454.1225151-2-kuba@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski --- Documentation/networking/scaling.rst | 12 ++++++++---- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/networking/scaling.rst b/Documentation/networking/scaling.rst index 99b6a61e5e31c..0023afa530ec1 100644 --- a/Documentation/networking/scaling.rst +++ b/Documentation/networking/scaling.rst @@ -38,11 +38,15 @@ that is not the focus of these techniques. The filter used in RSS is typically a hash function over the network and/or transport layer headers-- for example, a 4-tuple hash over IP addresses and TCP ports of a packet. The most common hardware -implementation of RSS uses a 128-entry indirection table where each entry +implementation of RSS uses an indirection table where each entry stores a queue number. The receive queue for a packet is determined -by masking out the low order seven bits of the computed hash for the -packet (usually a Toeplitz hash), taking this number as a key into the -indirection table and reading the corresponding value. +by indexing the indirection table with the low order bits of the +computed hash for the packet (usually a Toeplitz hash). + +The indirection table helps even out the traffic distribution when queue +count is not a power of two. NICs should provide an indirection table +at least 4 times larger than the queue count. 4x table results in ~16% +imbalance between the queues, which is acceptable for most applications. Some NICs support symmetric RSS hashing where, if the IP (source address, destination address) and TCP/UDP (source port, destination port) tuples -- 2.47.3