Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 9:55 AM Puranjay Mohan <puranjay@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> > On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 5:14 AM Puranjay Mohan <puranjay@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> >> >> From: Puranjay Mohan <puranjay12@xxxxxxxxx> >> >> >> >> Support an instruction for resolving absolute addresses of per-CPU >> >> data from their per-CPU offsets. This instruction is internal-only and >> >> users are not allowed to use them directly. They will only be used for >> >> internal inlining optimizations for now between BPF verifier and BPF >> >> JITs. >> >> >> >> Since commit 7158627686f0 ("arm64: percpu: implement optimised pcpu >> >> access using tpidr_el1"), the per-cpu offset for the CPU is stored in >> >> the tpidr_el1/2 register of that CPU. >> >> >> >> To support this BPF instruction in the ARM64 JIT, the following ARM64 >> >> instructions are emitted: >> >> >> >> mov dst, src // Move src to dst, if src != dst >> >> mrs tmp, tpidr_el1/2 // Move per-cpu offset of the current cpu in tmp. >> >> add dst, dst, tmp // Add the per cpu offset to the dst. >> >> >> >> To measure the performance improvement provided by this change, the >> >> benchmark in [1] was used: >> >> >> >> Before: >> >> glob-arr-inc : 23.597 ± 0.012M/s >> >> arr-inc : 23.173 ± 0.019M/s >> >> hash-inc : 12.186 ± 0.028M/s >> >> >> >> After: >> >> glob-arr-inc : 23.819 ± 0.034M/s >> >> arr-inc : 23.285 ± 0.017M/s >> > >> > I still expected a better improvement (global-arr-inc's results >> > improved more than arr-inc, which is completely different from >> > x86-64), but it's still a good thing to support this for arm64, of >> > course. >> > >> > ack for generic parts I can understand: >> > >> > Acked-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@xxxxxxxxxx> >> > >> >> I will have to do more research to find why we don't see very high >> improvement. >> >> But this is what is happening here: >> >> This was the complete picture before inlining: >> >> int cpu = bpf_get_smp_processor_id(); >> mov x10, #0xffffffffffffd4a8 >> movk x10, #0x802c, lsl #16 >> movk x10, #0x8000, lsl #32 >> blr x10 ---------------------------------------> nop >> nop >> adrp x0, 0xffff800082128000 >> mrs x1, tpidr_el1 >> add x0, x0, #0x8 >> ldrsw x0, [x0, x1] >> <----------------------------------------ret >> add x7, x0, #0x0 >> >> >> Now we have: >> >> int cpu = bpf_get_smp_processor_id(); >> mov x7, #0xffff8000ffffffff >> movk x7, #0x8212, lsl #16 >> movk x7, #0x8008 >> mrs x10, tpidr_el1 >> add x7, x7, x10 >> ldr w7, [x7] >> >> >> So, we have removed multiple instructions including a branch and a >> return. I was expecting to see more improvement. This benchmark is taken >> from a KVM based virtual machine, maybe if I do it on bare-metal I would >> see more improvement ? > > I see, yeah, I think it might change significantly. I remember back > from times when I was benchmarking BPF ringbuf, I was getting > very-very different results from inside QEMU vs bare metal. And I > don't mean just in absolute numbers. QEMU/KVM seems to change a lot of > things when it comes to contentions, atomic instructions, etc, etc. > Anyways, for benchmarking, always try to do bare metal. > I found the solution to this. I am seeing much better performance when implementing this inlining in the JIT through another method, similar to what I did for riscv see[1] [1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240430175834.33152-3-puranjay@xxxxxxxxxx/ Will do the same for ARM64 in V5 of this series. Thanks, Puranjay