在 2024/7/10 7:55, Andrii Nakryiko 写道: > On Mon, Jul 8, 2024 at 6:00 PM Liao Chang <liaochang1@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Reduce the runtime overhead for struct return_instance data managed by >> uretprobe. This patch replaces the dynamic allocation with statically >> allocated array, leverage two facts that are limited nesting depth of >> uretprobe (max 64) and the function call style of return_instance usage >> (create at entry, free at exit). >> >> This patch has been tested on Kunpeng916 (Hi1616), 4 NUMA nodes, 64 >> cores @ 2.4GHz. Redis benchmarks show a throughput gain by 2% for Redis >> GET and SET commands: >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------ >> Test case | No uretprobes | uretprobes | uretprobes >> | | (current) | (optimized) >> ================================================================== >> Redis SET (RPS) | 47025 | 40619 (-13.6%) | 41529 (-11.6%) >> ------------------------------------------------------------------ >> Redis GET (RPS) | 46715 | 41426 (-11.3%) | 42306 (-9.4%) >> ------------------------------------------------------------------ >> >> Signed-off-by: Liao Chang <liaochang1@xxxxxxxxxx> >> --- >> include/linux/uprobes.h | 10 ++- >> kernel/events/uprobes.c | 162 ++++++++++++++++++++++++---------------- >> 2 files changed, 105 insertions(+), 67 deletions(-) >> > > [...] > >> +static void cleanup_return_instances(struct uprobe_task *utask, bool chained, >> + struct pt_regs *regs) >> +{ >> + struct return_frame *frame = &utask->frame; >> + struct return_instance *ri = frame->return_instance; >> + enum rp_check ctx = chained ? RP_CHECK_CHAIN_CALL : RP_CHECK_CALL; >> + >> + while (ri && !arch_uretprobe_is_alive(ri, ctx, regs)) { >> + ri = next_ret_instance(frame, ri); >> + utask->depth--; >> + } >> + frame->return_instance = ri; >> +} >> + >> +static struct return_instance *alloc_return_instance(struct uprobe_task *task) >> +{ >> + struct return_frame *frame = &task->frame; >> + >> + if (!frame->vaddr) { >> + frame->vaddr = kcalloc(MAX_URETPROBE_DEPTH, >> + sizeof(struct return_instance), GFP_KERNEL); > > Are you just pre-allocating MAX_URETPROBE_DEPTH instances always? > I.e., even if we need just one (because there is no recursion), you'd > still waste memory for all 64 ones? This is the truth. On my testing machines, each struct return_instance data is 28 bytes, resulting in a total pre-allocated 1792 bytes when the first instrumented function is hit. > > That seems rather wasteful. > > Have you considered using objpool for fast reuse across multiple CPUs? > Check lib/objpool.c. After studying how kretprobe uses objpool, I'm convinced it is a right solution for managing return_instance in uretporbe. While I need some time to fully understand the objpool code itself and run some benchmark to verify its performance. Thanks for the suggestion. > >> + if (!frame->vaddr) >> + return NULL; >> + } >> + >> + if (!frame->return_instance) { >> + frame->return_instance = frame->vaddr; >> + return frame->return_instance; >> + } >> + >> + return ++frame->return_instance; >> +} >> + >> +static inline bool return_frame_empty(struct uprobe_task *task) >> +{ >> + return !task->frame.return_instance; >> } >> >> /* > > [...] -- BR Liao, Chang