• M
    mm: send one IPI per CPU to TLB flush all entries after unmapping pages · 72b252ae
    Mel Gorman 提交于
    An IPI is sent to flush remote TLBs when a page is unmapped that was
    potentially accesssed by other CPUs.  There are many circumstances where
    this happens but the obvious one is kswapd reclaiming pages belonging to a
    running process as kswapd and the task are likely running on separate
    CPUs.
    
    On small machines, this is not a significant problem but as machine gets
    larger with more cores and more memory, the cost of these IPIs can be
    high.  This patch uses a simple structure that tracks CPUs that
    potentially have TLB entries for pages being unmapped.  When the unmapping
    is complete, the full TLB is flushed on the assumption that a refill cost
    is lower than flushing individual entries.
    
    Architectures wishing to do this must give the following guarantee.
    
            If a clean page is unmapped and not immediately flushed, the
            architecture must guarantee that a write to that linear address
            from a CPU with a cached TLB entry will trap a page fault.
    
    This is essentially what the kernel already depends on but the window is
    much larger with this patch applied and is worth highlighting.  The
    architecture should consider whether the cost of the full TLB flush is
    higher than sending an IPI to flush each individual entry.  An additional
    architecture helper called flush_tlb_local is required.  It's a trivial
    wrapper with some accounting in the x86 case.
    
    The impact of this patch depends on the workload as measuring any benefit
    requires both mapped pages co-located on the LRU and memory pressure.  The
    case with the biggest impact is multiple processes reading mapped pages
    taken from the vm-scalability test suite.  The test case uses NR_CPU
    readers of mapped files that consume 10*RAM.
    
    Linear mapped reader on a 4-node machine with 64G RAM and 48 CPUs
    
                                               4.2.0-rc1          4.2.0-rc1
                                                 vanilla       flushfull-v7
    Ops lru-file-mmap-read-elapsed      159.62 (  0.00%)   120.68 ( 24.40%)
    Ops lru-file-mmap-read-time_range    30.59 (  0.00%)     2.80 ( 90.85%)
    Ops lru-file-mmap-read-time_stddv     6.70 (  0.00%)     0.64 ( 90.38%)
    
               4.2.0-rc1    4.2.0-rc1
                 vanilla flushfull-v7
    User          581.00       611.43
    System       5804.93      4111.76
    Elapsed       161.03       122.12
    
    This is showing that the readers completed 24.40% faster with 29% less
    system CPU time.  From vmstats, it is known that the vanilla kernel was
    interrupted roughly 900K times per second during the steady phase of the
    test and the patched kernel was interrupts 180K times per second.
    
    The impact is lower on a single socket machine.
    
                                               4.2.0-rc1          4.2.0-rc1
                                                 vanilla       flushfull-v7
    Ops lru-file-mmap-read-elapsed       25.33 (  0.00%)    20.38 ( 19.54%)
    Ops lru-file-mmap-read-time_range     0.91 (  0.00%)     1.44 (-58.24%)
    Ops lru-file-mmap-read-time_stddv     0.28 (  0.00%)     0.47 (-65.34%)
    
               4.2.0-rc1    4.2.0-rc1
                 vanilla flushfull-v7
    User           58.09        57.64
    System        111.82        76.56
    Elapsed        27.29        22.55
    
    It's still a noticeable improvement with vmstat showing interrupts went
    from roughly 500K per second to 45K per second.
    
    The patch will have no impact on workloads with no memory pressure or have
    relatively few mapped pages.  It will have an unpredictable impact on the
    workload running on the CPU being flushed as it'll depend on how many TLB
    entries need to be refilled and how long that takes.  Worst case, the TLB
    will be completely cleared of active entries when the target PFNs were not
    resident at all.
    
    [sasha.levin@oracle.com: trace tlb flush after disabling preemption in try_to_unmap_flush]
    Signed-off-by: NMel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
    Reviewed-by: NRik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
    Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@intel.com>
    Acked-by: NIngo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
    Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
    Signed-off-by: NSasha Levin <sasha.levin@oracle.com>
    Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com>
    Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
    Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
    72b252ae
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