Adding s390 folks and list On 06/06/2017 03:08 PM, Paolo Bonzini wrote: > > > On 06/06/2017 12:53, Peter Zijlstra wrote: >> On Mon, Jun 05, 2017 at 03:09:50PM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote: >>> There would be a slowdown if 1) fast this_cpu_inc is not available and >>> cannot be implemented (this usually means that atomic_inc has implicit >>> memory barriers), >> >> I don't get this. >> >> How is per-cpu crud related to being strongly ordered? >> >> this_cpu_ has 3 forms: >> >> x86: single instruction >> arm64,s390: preempt_disable()+atomic_op >> generic: local_irq_save()+normal_op >> >> Only s390 is TSO, arm64 is very much a weak arch. > > Right, and thus arm64 can implement a fast this_cpu_inc using LL/SC. > s390 cannot because its atomic_inc has implicit memory barriers. > > s390's this_cpu_inc is *faster* than the generic one, but still pretty slow. FWIW, we improved the performance of local_irq_save/restore some time ago with commit 204ee2c5643199a2 ("s390/irqflags: optimize irq restore") and disable/enable seem to be reasonably fast (3-5ns on my system doing both disable/enable in a loop) on todays systems. So I would assume that the generic implementation would not be that bad. A the same time, the implicit memory barrier of the atomic_inc should be even cheaper. In contrast to x86, a full smp_mb seems to be almost for free (looks like <= 1 cycle for a bcr 14,0 and no contention). So I _think_ that this should be really fast enough. As a side note, I am asking myself, though, why we do need the preempt_disable/enable for the cases where we use the opcodes like lao (atomic load and or to a memory location) and friends. > >>> and 2) local_irq_save/restore is slower than disabling >>> preemption. The main architecture with these constraints is s390, which >>> however is already paying the price in __srcu_read_unlock and has not >>> complained. >> >> IIRC only PPC (and hopefully soon x86) has a local_irq_save() that is as >> fast as preempt_disable(). > > 1 = arch-specific this_cpu_inc is available > 2 = local_irq_save/restore as fast as preempt_disable/enable > > If either 1 or 2 are true, this patch makes SRCU faster or equal > > x86 (single instruction): 1 = true, 2 = false -> ok > arm64 (weakly ordered): 1 = true, 2 = false -> ok > powerpc: 1 = false, 2 = true -> ok > s390: 1 = false, 2 = false -> slower > > For other LL/SC architectures, notably arm, fast this_cpu_* ops not yet > available, but could be written pretty easily. > >>> A valid optimization on s390 would be to skip the smp_mb; >>> AIUI, this_cpu_inc implies a memory barrier (!) due to its implementation. >> >> You mean the s390 this_cpu_inc() in specific, right? Because >> this_cpu_inc() in general does not imply any such thing. > > Yes, of course, this is only for s390. > > Alternatively, we could change the counters to atomic_t and use > smp_mb__{before,after}_atomic, as in the (unnecessary) srcutiny patch. > That should shave a few cycles on x86 too, since "lock inc" is faster > than "inc; mfence". For srcuclassic (and stable) however I'd rather > keep the simple __this_cpu_inc -> this_cpu_inc change. > > Paolo >