A very tiny one (especially if you keep a small buffer pool around too).
To copy a packet is 2 cache line loads, which will dominate, some
writes that you wont be able to measure, and a writeback you won't be
able to instrument without a bus analyser.
For receive paths its up to the driver. The copy to smaller buffer is
something the driver can choose to do. It and it alone decide what skbuff
to throw at the kernel core
The bigger ring helping is interesting but itself begs a question. Do you
ever dirty rather than merely reference skbuff data. In that case a bigger
ring may simply be hiding the fact that the recycled skbuff has dirty
cached data that has to be written back. Does the combination of hardware
you have do the right thing when it comes to the invalidating - and do
you ever DMA into a partial cache line ?
Alan
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