* docs: add release v2.10.0 * fix link --------- Co-authored-by: elchead <elchead@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Thomas Tendyck <tt@edgeless.systems>
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Performance
This section analyzes the performance of Constellation.
Performance impact from runtime encryption
All nodes in a Constellation cluster run inside Confidential VMs (CVMs). Thus, Constellation's performance is directly affected by the performance of CVMs.
AMD and Azure jointly released a performance benchmark for CVMs based on 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors (Milan) with SEV-SNP. With a range of mostly compute-intensive benchmarks like SPEC CPU 2017 and CoreMark, they found that CVMs only have a small (2%--8%) performance degradation compared to standard VMs. You can expect to see similar performance for compute-intensive workloads running with Constellation on Azure.
Similarly, AMD and Google jointly released a performance benchmark for CVMs based on 3rd Gen AMD EPYC processors (Milan) with SEV-SNP. With high-performance computing workloads like WRF, NAMD, Ansys CFS, and Ansys LS_DYNA, they found similar results with only small (2%--4%) performance degradation compared to standard VMs. You can expect to see similar performance for compute-intensive workloads running with Constellation on GCP.
Performance impact from storage and network
To assess the overall performance of Constellation, this benchmark evaluates Constellation v2.6.0 in terms of storage I/O using fio
and network performance using the Kubernetes Network Benchmark.
This benchmark tested Constellation on Azure and GCP and compared the results against the managed Kubernetes offerings AKS and GKE.
Configurations
Constellation
The benchmark was conducted with Constellation v2.6.0, Kubernetes v1.25.7, and Cilium v1.12. It ran on the following infrastructure configurations.
Constellation on Azure:
- Nodes: 3 (1 Control-plane, 2 Worker)
- Machines:
DC4as_v5
: 3rd Generation AMD EPYC 7763v (Milan) processor with 4 Cores, 16 GiB memory - CVM:
true
- Region:
West US
- Zone:
2
Constellation on GCP:
- Nodes: 3 (1 Control-plane, 2 Worker)
- Machines:
n2d-standard-4
: 2nd Generation AMD EPYC (Rome) processor with 4 Cores, 16 GiB of memory - CVM:
true
- Zone:
europe-west3-b
AKS
On AKS, the benchmark used Kubernetes v1.24.9
and nodes with version AKSUbuntu-1804gen2containerd-2023.02.15
.
AKS ran with the kubenet
CNI and the default CSI driver for Azure Disk.
The following infrastructure configurations was used:
- Nodes: 2 (2 Worker)
- Machines:
D4as_v5
: 3rd Generation AMD EPYC 7763v (Milan) processor with 4 Cores, 16 GiB memory - CVM:
false
- Region:
West US
- Zone:
2
GKE
On GKE, the benchmark used Kubernetes v1.24.9
and nodes with version 1.24.9-gke.3200
.
GKE ran with the kubenet
CNI and the default CSI driver for Compute Engine persistent disk.
The following infrastructure configurations was used:
- Nodes: 2 (2 Worker)
- Machines:
n2d-standard-4
2nd Generation AMD EPYC (Rome) processor with 4 Cores, 16 GiB of memory - CVM:
false
- Zone:
europe-west3-b
Results
Network
This section gives a thorough analysis of the network performance of Constellation, specifically focusing on measuring TCP and UDP bandwidth.
The benchmark measured the bandwidth of pod-to-pod and pod-to-service connections between two different nodes using iperf
.
GKE and Constellation on GCP had a maximum network bandwidth of 10 Gbps.
AKS with Standard_D4as_v5
machines a maximum network bandwidth of 12.5 Gbps.
The Confidential VM equivalent Standard_DC4as_v5
currently has a network bandwidth of 1.25 Gbps.
Therefore, to make the test comparable, both AKS and Constellation on Azure were running with Standard_DC4as_v5
machines and 1.25 Gbps bandwidth.
Constellation on Azure and AKS used an MTU of 1500. Constellation on GCP used an MTU of 8896. GKE used an MTU of 1450.
The difference in network bandwidth can largely be attributed to two factors.
- Constellation's network encryption via Cilium and WireGuard, which protects data in-transit.
- AMD SEV using SWIOTLB bounce buffers for all DMA including network I/O.
Pod-to-Pod
In this scenario, the client Pod connects directly to the server pod via its IP address.
flowchart LR
subgraph Node A
Client[Client]
end
subgraph Node B
Server[Server]
end
Client ==>|traffic| Server
The results for "Pod-to-Pod" on Azure are as follows:
The results for "Pod-to-Pod" on GCP are as follows:
Pod-to-Service
In this scenario, the client Pod connects to the server Pod via a ClusterIP service. This is more relevant to real-world use cases.
flowchart LR
subgraph Node A
Client[Client] ==>|traffic| Service[Service]
end
subgraph Node B
Server[Server]
end
Service ==>|traffic| Server
The results for "Pod-to-Pod" on Azure are as follows:
The results for "Pod-to-Pod" on GCP are as follows:
In our recent comparison of Constellation on GCP with GKE, Constellation has 58% less TCP bandwidth. However, UDP bandwidth was slightly better with Constellation, thanks to its higher MTU.
Similarly, when comparing Constellation on Azure with AKS using CVMs, Constellation achieved approximately 10% less TCP and 40% less UDP bandwidth.
Storage I/O
Azure and GCP offer persistent storage for their Kubernetes services AKS and GKE via the Container Storage Interface (CSI). CSI storage in Kubernetes is available via PersistentVolumes
(PV) and consumed via PersistentVolumeClaims
(PVC).
Upon requesting persistent storage through a PVC, GKE and AKS will provision a PV as defined by a default storage class.
Constellation provides persistent storage on Azure and GCP that's encrypted on the CSI layer.
Similarly, upon a PVC request, Constellation will provision a PV via a default storage class.
For Constellation on Azure and AKS, the benchmark ran with Azure Disk storage Standard SSD of 400 GiB size. The DC4as machine type with four cores provides the following maximum performance:
- 6400 (20000 burst) IOPS
- 144 MB/s (600 MB/s burst) throughput
However, the performance is bound by the capabilities of the 512 GiB Standard SSD size (the size class of 400 GiB volumes):
- 500 (600 burst) IOPS
- 60 MB/s (150 MB/s burst) throughput
For Constellation on GCP and GKE, the benchmark ran with Compute Engine Persistent Disk Storage pd-balanced of 400 GiB size. The N2D machine type with four cores and pd-balanced provides the following maximum performance:
- 3,000 read IOPS
- 15,000 write IOPS
- 240 MB/s read throughput
- 240 MB/s write throughput
However, the performance is bound by the capabilities of a Zonal balanced PD
with 400 GiB size:
- 2400 read IOPS
- 2400 write IOPS
- 112 MB/s read throughput
- 112 MB/s write throughput
The fio
benchmark consists of several tests.
The benchmark used Kubestr
to run fio
in Kubernetes.
The default test performs randomized access patterns that accurately depict worst-case I/O scenarios for most applications.
The following fio
settings were used:
- No Cloud caching
- No OS caching
- Single CPU
- 60 seconds runtime
- 10 seconds ramp-up time
- 10 GiB file
- IOPS: 4 KB blocks and 128 iodepth
- Bandwidth: 1024 KB blocks and 128 iodepth
For more details, see the fio
test configuration.
The results for IOPS on Azure are as follows:
The results for IOPS on GCP are as follows:
The results for bandwidth on Azure are as follows:
The results for bandwidth on GCP are as follows:
On GCP, the results exceed the maximum performance guarantees of the chosen disk type. There are two possible explanations for this. The first is that there may be cloud caching in place that isn't configurable. Alternatively, the underlying provisioned disk size may be larger than what was requested, resulting in higher performance boundaries.
When comparing Constellation on GCP with GKE, Constellation has similar bandwidth but about 10% less IOPS performance. On Azure, Constellation has similar IOPS performance compared to AKS, where both likely hit the maximum storage performance. However, Constellation has approximately 15% less read and write bandwidth.
Conclusion
Despite the added security benefits that Constellation provides, it only incurs a slight performance overhead when compared to managed Kubernetes offerings such as AKS and GKE. In most compute benchmarks, Constellation is on par, and while it may be slightly slower in certain I/O scenarios due to network and storage encryption, we're confident that we can reduce this overhead to single digits.
For instance, storage encryption only adds between 10% to 15% overhead in terms of bandwidth and IOPS. Meanwhile, the biggest performance impact that Constellation currently faces is network encryption, which can incur up to 58% overhead on a 10 Gbps network. However, the Cilium team has conducted benchmarks with Cilium using WireGuard encryption on a 100 Gbps network that yielded over 15 Gbps, and we're confident that we can provide a similar level of performance with Constellation in our upcoming releases.
Overall, Constellation strikes a great balance between security and performance, and we're continuously working to improve its performance capabilities while maintaining its high level of security.