It is documented in Documentation/admin-guide/hw-vuln/spectre.rst, that disabling indirect branch speculation for a user-space process creates more overhead and cause it to run slower. The performance hit varies by CPU, but on the AMD A4-9120C and A6-9220C CPUs, a simple ping-pong using pipes between two processes runs ~10x slower when disabling IB speculation. Patch 2, included in this RFC but not intended for commit, is a simple program that demonstrates this issue. Running on a A4-9120C without IB speculation disabled, each process ping-pong takes ~7us: localhost ~ # taskset 1 /usr/local/bin/test ... iters: 262144, t: 1936300, iter/sec: 135383, us/iter: 7 But when IB speculation is disabled, that number increases significantly: localhost ~ # taskset 1 /usr/local/bin/test d ... iters: 16384, t: 1500518, iter/sec: 10918, us/iter: 91 Although this test is a worst-case scenario, we can also consider a real situation: an audio server (i.e. pulse). If we imagine a low-latency capture, with 10ms packets and a concurrent task on the same CPU (i.e. video encoding, for a video call), the audio server will preempt the CPU at a rate of 100HZ. At 91us overhead per preemption (switching to and from the audio process), that's 0.9% overhead for one process doing preemption. In real-world testing (on a A4-9120C), I've seen 9% of CPU used by IBPB when doing a 2-person video call. With this patch, the number of IBPBs issued can be reduced to the minimum necessary, only when there's a potential attacker->victim process switch. Running on the same A4-9120C device, this patch reduces the performance hit of IBPB by ~half, as expected: localhost ~ # taskset 1 /usr/local/bin/test ds ... iters: 32768, t: 1824043, iter/sec: 17964, us/iter: 55 It should be noted, CPUs from multiple vendors experience a performance hit due to IBPB. I also tested a Intel i3-8130U which sees a noticable (~2x) increase in process switch time due to IBPB. IB spec enabled: localhost ~ # taskset 1 /usr/local/bin/test ... iters: 262144, t: 1210821us, iter/sec: 216501, us/iter: 4 IB spec disabled: localhost ~ # taskset 1 /usr/local/bin/test d ... iters: 131072, t: 1257583us, iter/sec: 104225, us/iter: 9 Open questions: - There are a significant number of task flags, which also now reaches the limit of the 'long' on 32-bit systems. Should the 'mode' flags be stored somewhere else? - Having x86-specific flags in linux/sched.h feels wrong. However, this is the mechanism for doing atomic flag updates. Is there an alternate approach? Open tasks: - Documentation - Naming Changes in v2: - Make flag per-process using prctl(). Anand K Mistry (2): x86/speculation: Allow per-process control of when to issue IBPB selftests: Benchmark for the cost of disabling IB speculation arch/x86/include/asm/thread_info.h | 4 + arch/x86/kernel/cpu/bugs.c | 56 +++++++++ arch/x86/kernel/process.c | 10 ++ arch/x86/mm/tlb.c | 51 ++++++-- include/linux/sched.h | 10 ++ include/uapi/linux/prctl.h | 5 + .../testing/selftests/ib_spec/ib_spec_bench.c | 109 ++++++++++++++++++ 7 files changed, 236 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) create mode 100644 tools/testing/selftests/ib_spec/ib_spec_bench.c -- 2.31.1.498.g6c1eba8ee3d-goog