On Wed, 2013-08-14 at 06:47 -0700, H. Peter Anvin wrote: > On x86, you never want to take the address of a percpu variable if you > can avoid it, as you end up generating code like: > > movq %fs:0,%rax > subl $1,(%rax) Hmmm.. #define cpu_rq(cpu) (&per_cpu(runqueues, (cpu))) #define this_rq() (&__get_cpu_var(runqueues)) ffffffff81438c7f: 48 c7 c3 80 11 01 00 mov $0x11180,%rbx /* * this_rq must be evaluated again because prev may have moved * CPUs since it called schedule(), thus the 'rq' on its stack * frame will be invalid. */ finish_task_switch(this_rq(), prev); ffffffff81438c86: e8 25 b4 c0 ff callq ffffffff810440b0 <finish_task_switch> * The context switch have flipped the stack from under us * and restored the local variables which were saved when * this task called schedule() in the past. prev == current * is still correct, but it can be moved to another cpu/rq. */ cpu = smp_processor_id(); ffffffff81438c8b: 65 8b 04 25 b8 c5 00 mov %gs:0xc5b8,%eax ffffffff81438c92: 00 rq = cpu_rq(cpu); ffffffff81438c93: 48 98 cltq ffffffff81438c95: 48 03 1c c5 00 f3 bb add -0x7e440d00(,%rax,8),%rbx ..so could the rq = cpu_rq(cpu) sequence be improved cycle expenditure wise by squirreling rq pointer away in a percpu this_rq, and replacing cpu_rq(cpu) above with a __this_cpu_read(this_rq) version of this_rq()? -Mike -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-arch" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html