On Thu, Jun 16, 2011 at 1:26 PM, Tim Chen <tim.c.chen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I ran exim with different kernel versions. Using 2.6.39-vanilla > kernel as a baseline, the results are as follow: > > Throughput > 2.6.39(vanilla) 100.0% > 2.6.39+ra-patch 166.7% (+66.7%) (note: tmpfs readahead patchset is merged in 3.0-rc2) > 3.0-rc2(vanilla) 68.0% (-32%) > 3.0-rc2+linus 115.7% (+15.7%) > 3.0-rc2+linus+softirq 86.2% (-17.3%) Ok, so batching the semaphore operations makes more of a difference than I would have expected. I guess I'll cook up an improved patch that does it for the vma exit case too, and see if that just makes the semaphores be a non-issue. > I also notice that the run to run variations have increased quite a bit for 3.0-rc2. > I'm using 6 runs per kernel. Perhaps a side effect of converting the anon_vma->lock to mutex? So the thing about using the mutexes is that heavy contention on a spinlock is very stable: it may be *slow*, but it's reliable, nicely queued, and has very few surprises. On a mutex, heavy contention results in very subtle behavior, with the adaptive spinning often - but certainly not always - making the mutex act as a spinlock, but once you have lots of contention the adaptive spinning breaks down. And then you have lots of random interactions with the scheduler and 'need_resched' etc. The only valid answer to lock contention is invariably always just "don't do that then". We've been pretty good at getting rid of problematic locks, but this one clearly isn't one of the ones we've fixed ;) Linus -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxx For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Fight unfair telecom internet charges in Canada: sign http://stopthemeter.ca/ Don't email: <a href