Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

vinci1989
Posts: 28
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2018 6:07 pm

Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby vinci1989 » Mon Jun 19, 2023 10:09 am

I've recently implemented OTA over HTTP in a project running on an ESP32-S3-WROOM-2-N32R8V. Having 8MB of PSRAM my first approach was to simply send the whole firmware as a single HTTP PUT request. That would still be my preferred method if it weren't for the problem of easily running into an HTTP receive timeout once the firmware has multiple MBs. By default this timeout is set to 5s. Of course one could increase it, but this negatively effects all other HTTP requests running on the server.

So I rewrote my app to use WebSockets instead. First I used packet sizes of 32kB. Much to my surprise transmitting (and asynchronously responding) to a single packet already triggers the previously mentioned 5s delay! How is that possible? Transmitting a 1.3MB firmware with a single HTTP PUT request took less than 60s in my network. How can 32kB of data suddenly take 5s?

Does anyone have any deeper insight on the WebSocket implementation? Where could this bottleneck be?

MicroController
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Location: Europe, Germany

Re: Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby MicroController » Mon Jun 19, 2023 1:40 pm

What's the size of the buffer you're trying to read (httpd_req_recv(...)?) data into?
You may get a timeout result if the buffer cannot be completely filled within the given timeframe. Trying to read 1MB at once may trigger a timeout where 100 reads @ 10kB may not.

vinci1989
Posts: 28
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2018 6:07 pm

Re: Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby vinci1989 » Mon Jun 19, 2023 2:35 pm

Oh... that's news to me. I've simply allocated the whole thing in one go. Thanks for the hint I'll try that.

/edit
Thank you, doing multiple calls to httpd_req_recv works like a charm.

I now still wonder though... why the f. is the WebSocket implementation SO slow? :lol:
Transmitting a 1.3MB firmware to my device with an HTTP request takes 5.05s.
Transmitting the same firmware with WebSockets takes 8min! The packet size does hardly matter in that case...

MicroController
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Location: Europe, Germany

Re: Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby MicroController » Mon Jun 19, 2023 7:16 pm

Does the WS client send all data in one go, or does it wait for some server response every X kB?

vinci1989
Posts: 28
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2018 6:07 pm

Re: Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby vinci1989 » Tue Jun 20, 2023 3:38 am

Ok, I've totally misjudged that sorry. Turns out the bottleneck is writing to flash memory, not anything HTTP related.
Transmitting the 1.3MB firmware takes just about 5s with HTTP, but writing it to an OTA partition then takes ~7.6min which is almost what I got before when using WebSockets (plus some minor delays because every packet got acknowledged).

I'm currently using the "OTA_WITH_SEQUENTIAL_WRITES" macro as second parameter when invoking esp_ota_begin as everything else gives me a TG1WDT_SYS_RST panic. I assume the flash write times could be improved upon if one could erase the entire partition at once instead of sequentially... the question is how though.

boarchuz
Posts: 606
Joined: Tue Aug 21, 2018 5:28 am

Re: Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby boarchuz » Tue Jun 20, 2023 5:16 am

vinci1989 wrote:
Tue Jun 20, 2023 3:38 am
writing it to an OTA partition then takes ~7.6min

I'm currently using the "OTA_WITH_SEQUENTIAL_WRITES" macro as second parameter when invoking esp_ota_begin as everything else gives me a TG1WDT_SYS_RST panic. I assume the flash write times could be improved upon if one could erase the entire partition at once instead of sequentially...
That's an abnormally long time. Is there anything else going on that might be locking up the flash for extended periods while OTA is busy? No higher priority task taking a huge amount of CPU time? Can you lower the log level?

If you know the binary size in advance (usually you can get this from the Content-Length header) then you can provide that to esp_ota_begin. Alternately, use 0 to erase the entire partition in advance.

Ensure you have enabled CONFIG_SPI_FLASH_YIELD_DURING_ERASE.

vinci1989
Posts: 28
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2018 6:07 pm

Re: Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby vinci1989 » Tue Jun 20, 2023 12:13 pm

boarchuz wrote:
Tue Jun 20, 2023 5:16 am
That's an abnormally long time. Is there anything else going on that might be locking up the flash for extended periods while OTA is busy? No higher priority task taking a huge amount of CPU time? Can you lower the log level?
You were right again. My feeling was way off on how much CPU time I already spend somewhere else.
I've increased the OTA task priority and voila, the time the 1.3MB update now takes dropped down to 3min.
boarchuz wrote:
Tue Jun 20, 2023 5:16 am
If you know the binary size in advance (usually you can get this from the Content-Length header) then you can provide that to esp_ota_begin. Alternately, use 0 to erase the entire partition in advance.
For some reason neither does work for me. Both, true size and 0 trigger a TG1WDT_SYS_RST panic.
I've also tried the config option "CONFIG_SPI_FLASH_CHECK_ERASE_TIMEOUT_DISABLED" to no success.
Can't say where this panic comes from. I've also tried to disable every watchdog (core0&1 and interrupts)... weird.
boarchuz wrote:
Tue Jun 20, 2023 5:16 am
Ensure you have enabled CONFIG_SPI_FLASH_YIELD_DURING_ERASE.
This option is enabled.

boarchuz
Posts: 606
Joined: Tue Aug 21, 2018 5:28 am

Re: Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby boarchuz » Tue Jun 20, 2023 10:28 pm

It sounds like the task watchdog. I suspect that, even with SPI_FLASH_YIELD_DURING_ERASE, these other very busy tasks still don't have enough time to get through their work. The obvious and easy thing to do is increase SPI_FLASH_ERASE_YIELD_TICKS so that the OTA task will give other tasks more time to jump in and do their thing while erasing flash.

Other things to do are to see if you can reduce CPU load in these other tasks, at least while OTA is active, and consider if pinning/unpinning to CPU(s) can shuffle workloads around in a way that reduces contention.

vinci1989
Posts: 28
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2018 6:07 pm

Re: Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby vinci1989 » Fri Jun 23, 2023 6:55 am

I've had another task one the same core performing ADC conversions with 4ksps. Suspending this task before performing the erase operation solved the issue of the triggered watchdog.

Thank you very much for all the useful replies!

michaelk
Posts: 4
Joined: Sat Jan 02, 2016 5:23 pm

Re: Why are WebSockets so painfully slow?

Postby michaelk » Tue Jul 04, 2023 3:28 am

How is your latency?
The packet latency can be a few hundred ms when in low power mode. Without low power its ~15ms. This may account for the poor throughput.

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 esp_wifi_set_ps(WIFI_PS_NONE);

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