On Fri, Aug 31, 2018 at 12:45 AM Julian Stecklina <jsteckli@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I've been spending some cycles on the XPFO patch set this week. For the > patch set as it was posted for v4.13, the performance overhead of > compiling a Linux kernel is ~40% on x86_64[1]. The overhead comes almost > completely from TLB flushing. If we can live with stale TLB entries > allowing temporary access (which I think is reasonable), we can remove > all TLB flushing (on x86). This reduces the overhead to 2-3% for > kernel compile. I have to say, even 2-3% for a kernel compile sounds absolutely horrendous. Kernel bullds are 90% user space at least for me, so a 2-3% slowdown from a kernel is not some small unnoticeable thing. Linus