On Wed, Nov 08, 2023 at 01:03:33AM +0100, Mateusz Guzik wrote: > On 11/8/23, Kees Cook <kees@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On November 7, 2023 3:08:47 PM PST, Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik@xxxxxxxxx> > > wrote: > >>On 11/7/23, Kees Cook <keescook@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> On Tue, Nov 07, 2023 at 10:23:16PM +0100, Mateusz Guzik wrote: > >>>> If the patch which dodges second lookup still somehow appears slower a > >>>> flamegraph or other profile would be nice. I can volunteer to take a > >>>> look at what's going on provided above measurements will be done and > >>>> show funkyness. > >>> > >>> When I looked at this last, it seemed like all the work done in > >>> do_filp_open() (my patch, which moved the lookup earlier) was heavier > >>> than the duplicate filename_lookup(). > >>> > >>> What I didn't test was moving the sched_exec() before the mm creation, > >>> which Peter confirmed shouldn't be a problem, but I think that might be > >>> only a tiny benefit, if at all. > >>> > >>> If you can do some comparisons, that would be great; it always takes me > >>> a fair bit of time to get set up for flame graph generation, etc. :) > >>> > >> > >>So I spawned *one* process executing one statocally linked binary in a > >>loop, test case from http://apollo.backplane.com/DFlyMisc/doexec.c . > >> > >>The profile is definitely not what I expected: > >> 5.85% [kernel] [k] asm_exc_page_fault > >> 5.84% [kernel] [k] __pv_queued_spin_lock_slowpath > >>[snip] > >> > >>I'm going to have to recompile with lock profiling, meanwhile > >>according to bpftrace > >>(bpftrace -e 'kprobe:__pv_queued_spin_lock_slowpath { @[kstack()] = > >> count(); }') > >>top hits would be: > >> > >>@[ > >> __pv_queued_spin_lock_slowpath+1 > >> _raw_spin_lock+37 > >> __schedule+192 > >> schedule_idle+38 > >> do_idle+366 > >> cpu_startup_entry+38 > >> start_secondary+282 > >> secondary_startup_64_no_verify+381 > >>]: 181 > >>@[ > >> __pv_queued_spin_lock_slowpath+1 > >> _raw_spin_lock_irq+43 > >> wait_for_completion+141 > >> stop_one_cpu+127 > >> sched_exec+165 > > > > There's the suspicious sched_exec() I was talking about! :) > > > > I think it needs to be moved, and perhaps _later_ instead of earlier? > > Hmm... > > > > I'm getting around 3.4k execs/s. However, if I "taskset -c 3 > ./static-doexec 1" the number goes up to about 9.5k and lock > contention disappears from the profile. So off hand looks like the > task is walking around the box when it perhaps could be avoided -- it > is idle apart from running the test. Again this is going to require a > serious look instead of ad hoc pokes. Peter, is this something you can speak to? It seems like execve() forces a change in running CPU. Is this really something we want to be doing? Or is there some better way to keep it on the same CPU unless there is contention? -Kees -- Kees Cook