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    drm/i915: Enable lockless lookup of request tracking via RCU · 0eafec6d
    Chris Wilson 提交于
    If we enable RCU for the requests (providing a grace period where we can
    inspect a "dead" request before it is freed), we can allow callers to
    carefully perform lockless lookup of an active request.
    
    However, by enabling deferred freeing of requests, we can potentially
    hog a lot of memory when dealing with tens of thousands of requests per
    second - with a quick insertion of a synchronize_rcu() inside our
    shrinker callback, that issue disappears.
    
    v2: Currently, it is our responsibility to handle reclaim i.e. to avoid
    hogging memory with the delayed slab frees. At the moment, we wait for a
    grace period in the shrinker, and block for all RCU callbacks on oom.
    Suggested alternatives focus on flushing our RCU callback when we have a
    certain number of outstanding request frees, and blocking on that flush
    after a second high watermark. (So rather than wait for the system to
    run out of memory, we stop issuing requests - both are nondeterministic.)
    
    Paul E. McKenney wrote:
    
    Another approach is synchronize_rcu() after some largish number of
    requests.  The advantage of this approach is that it throttles the
    production of callbacks at the source.  The corresponding disadvantage
    is that it slows things up.
    
    Another approach is to use call_rcu(), but if the previous call_rcu()
    is still in flight, block waiting for it.  Yet another approach is
    the get_state_synchronize_rcu() / cond_synchronize_rcu() pair.  The
    idea is to do something like this:
    
            cond_synchronize_rcu(cookie);
            cookie = get_state_synchronize_rcu();
    
    You would of course do an initial get_state_synchronize_rcu() to
    get things going.  This would not block unless there was less than
    one grace period's worth of time between invocations.  But this
    assumes a busy system, where there is almost always a grace period
    in flight.  But you can make that happen as follows:
    
            cond_synchronize_rcu(cookie);
            cookie = get_state_synchronize_rcu();
            call_rcu(&my_rcu_head, noop_function);
    
    Note that you need additional code to make sure that the old callback
    has completed before doing a new one.  Setting and clearing a flag
    with appropriate memory ordering control suffices (e.g,. smp_load_acquire()
    and smp_store_release()).
    
    v3: More comments on compiler and processor order of operations within
    the RCU lookup and discover we can use rcu_access_pointer() here instead.
    
    v4: Wrap i915_gem_active_get_rcu() to take the rcu_read_lock itself.
    Signed-off-by: NChris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
    Cc: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@linux.intel.com>
    Cc: "Goel, Akash" <akash.goel@intel.com>
    Cc: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
    Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
    Reviewed-by: NDaniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
    Link: http://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/1470324762-2545-25-git-send-email-chris@chris-wilson.co.uk
    0eafec6d
i915_gem_request.h 20.7 KB