On 3/18/24 10:28, Maíra Canal wrote:
Hi Christian,
On 3/18/24 10:10, Christian König wrote:
Am 18.03.24 um 13:42 schrieb Maíra Canal:
Hi Christian,
On 3/12/24 10:48, Christian König wrote:
Am 12.03.24 um 14:09 schrieb Tvrtko Ursulin:
On 12/03/2024 10:37, Christian König wrote:
Am 12.03.24 um 11:31 schrieb Tvrtko Ursulin:
On 12/03/2024 10:23, Christian König wrote:
Am 12.03.24 um 10:30 schrieb Tvrtko Ursulin:
On 12/03/2024 08:59, Christian König wrote:
Am 12.03.24 um 09:51 schrieb Tvrtko Ursulin:
Hi Maira,
On 11/03/2024 10:05, Maíra Canal wrote:
For some applications, such as using huge pages, we might
want to have a
different mountpoint, for which we pass in mount flags that
better match
our usecase.
Therefore, add a new parameter to drm_gem_object_init() that
allow us to
define the tmpfs mountpoint where the GEM object will be
created. If
this parameter is NULL, then we fallback to shmem_file_setup().
One strategy for reducing churn, and so the number of drivers
this patch touches, could be to add a lower level
drm_gem_object_init() (which takes vfsmount, call it
__drm_gem_object_init(), or drm__gem_object_init_mnt(), and
make drm_gem_object_init() call that one with a NULL argument.
I would even go a step further into the other direction. The
shmem backed GEM object is just some special handling as far
as I can see.
So I would rather suggest to rename all drm_gem_* function
which only deal with the shmem backed GEM object into
drm_gem_shmem_*.
That makes sense although it would be very churny. I at least
would be on the fence regarding the cost vs benefit.
Yeah, it should clearly not be part of this patch here.
Also the explanation why a different mount point helps with
something isn't very satisfying.
Not satisfying as you think it is not detailed enough to say
driver wants to use huge pages for performance? Or not
satisying as you question why huge pages would help?
That huge pages are beneficial is clear to me, but I'm missing
the connection why a different mount point helps with using huge
pages.
Ah right, same as in i915, one needs to mount a tmpfs instance
passing huge=within_size or huge=always option. Default is
'never', see man 5 tmpfs.
Thanks for the explanation, I wasn't aware of that.
Mhm, shouldn't we always use huge pages? Is there a reason for a
DRM device to not use huge pages with the shmem backend?
AFAIU, according to b901bb89324a ("drm/i915/gemfs: enable THP"),
back then the understanding was within_size may overallocate,
meaning there would be some space wastage, until the memory
pressure makes the thp code split the trailing huge page. I haven't
checked if that still applies.
Other than that I don't know if some drivers/platforms could have
problems if they have some limitations or hardcoded assumptions
when they iterate the sg list.
Yeah, that was the whole point behind my question. As far as I can
see this isn't driver specific, but platform specific.
I might be wrong here, but I think we should then probably not have
that handling in each individual driver, but rather centralized in
the DRM code.
I don't see a point in enabling THP for all shmem drivers. A huge page
is only useful if the driver is going to use it. On V3D, for example,
I only need huge pages because I need the memory contiguously allocated
to implement Super Pages. Otherwise, if we don't have the Super Pages
support implemented in the driver, I would be creating memory pressure
without any performance gain.
Well that's the point I'm disagreeing with. THP doesn't seem to create
much extra memory pressure for this use case.
As far as I can see background for the option is that files in tmpfs
usually have a varying size, so it usually isn't beneficial to
allocate a huge page just to find that the shmem file is much smaller
than what's needed.
But GEM objects have a fixed size. So we of hand knew if we need 4KiB
or 1GiB and can therefore directly allocate huge pages if they are
available and object large enough to back them with.
If the memory pressure is so high that we don't have huge pages
available the shmem code falls back to standard pages anyway.
The matter is: how do we define the point where the memory pressure is
high? For example, notice that in this implementation of Super Pages
for the V3D driver, I only use a Super Page if the BO is bigger than
2MB. I'm doing that because the Raspberry Pi only has 4GB of RAM
available for the GPU. If I created huge pages for every BO allocation
(and initially, I tried that), I would end up with hangs in some
applications.
At least, for V3D, I wouldn't like to see THP being used for all the
allocations. But, we have maintainers of other drivers in the CC.
Okay, I'm thinking about a compromise. What if we create a gemfs
mountpoint in the DRM core and everytime we init a object, we can
choose if we will use huge pages or not. Therefore,
drm_gem_shmem_create() would have a new parameter called huge_pages,
that can be true or false.
This way each driver would have the opportunity to use its own
heuristics to create huge pages.
What do you think?
Best Regards,
- Maíra
Best Regards,
- Maíra
So THP is almost always beneficial for GEM even if the driver doesn't
actually need it. The only potential case I can think of which might
not be handled gracefully is the tail pages, e.g. huge + 4kib.
But that is trivial to optimize in the shmem code when the final size
of the file is known beforehand.
Regards,
Christian.
Best Regards,
- Maíra
Regards,
Christian.
Te Cc is plenty large so perhaps someone else will have additional
information. :)
Regards,
Tvrtko
I mean it would make this patch here even smaller.
Regards,
Christian.
Regards,
Tvrtko