diff options
| author | Roman Gushchin <[email protected]> | 2021-02-24 12:03:11 -0800 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Linus Torvalds <[email protected]> | 2021-02-24 13:38:29 -0800 |
| commit | 2e9bd483159939ed2c0704b914294653c8341d25 (patch) | |
| tree | 878ce98090f4ad550e476a5e80c746f62c44fda8 /tools/perf/scripts/python | |
| parent | cad8320b4b395702e49578580c70026c8271ea88 (diff) | |
mm: memcg/slab: pre-allocate obj_cgroups for slab caches with SLAB_ACCOUNT
In general it's unknown in advance if a slab page will contain accounted
objects or not. In order to avoid memory waste, an obj_cgroup vector is
allocated dynamically when a need to account of a new object arises. Such
approach is memory efficient, but requires an expensive cmpxchg() to set
up the memcg/objcgs pointer, because an allocation can race with a
different allocation on another cpu.
But in some common cases it's known for sure that a slab page will contain
accounted objects: if the page belongs to a slab cache with a SLAB_ACCOUNT
flag set. It includes such popular objects like vm_area_struct, anon_vma,
task_struct, etc.
In such cases we can pre-allocate the objcgs vector and simple assign it
to the page without any atomic operations, because at this early stage the
page is not visible to anyone else.
A very simplistic benchmark (allocating 10000000 64-bytes objects in a
row) shows ~15% win. In the real life it seems that most workloads are
not very sensitive to the speed of (accounted) slab allocations.
[[email protected]: open-code set_page_objcgs() and add some comments, by Johannes]
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/[email protected]
[[email protected]: fix it for mm-slub-call-account_slab_page-after-slab-page-initialization-fix.patch]
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/[email protected]
Signed-off-by: Roman Gushchin <[email protected]>
Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Shakeel Butt <[email protected]>
Cc: Michal Hocko <[email protected]>
Cc: Christoph Lameter <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <[email protected]>
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/perf/scripts/python')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions