On Tue, Jan 05, 2021 at 10:23:52AM -0800, Roman Gushchin wrote: > On Tue, Jan 05, 2021 at 04:07:42PM +0000, Imran Khan wrote: > > While allocating objects whose size is multiple of PAGE_SIZE, > > say kmalloc-4K, we charge one page for extra bytes corresponding > > to the obj_cgroup membership pointer and remainder of the charged > > page gets added to per-cpu stocked bytes. If this allocation is > > followed by another allocation of the same size, the stocked bytes > > will not suffice and thus we endup charging an extra page > > again for membership pointer and remainder of this page gets added > > to per-cpu stocked bytes. This second addition will cause amount of > > stocked bytes to go beyond PAGE_SIZE and hence will result in > > invocation of drain_obj_stock. > > > > So if we are in a scenario where we are consecutively allocating, > > several PAGE_SIZE multiple sized objects, the stocked bytes will > > never be enough to suffice a request and every second request will > > trigger draining of stocked bytes. > > > > For example invoking __alloc_skb multiple times with > > 2K < packet size < 4K will give a call graph like: > > > > __alloc_skb > > | > > |__kmalloc_reserve.isra.61 > > | | > > | |__kmalloc_node_track_caller > > | | | > > | | |slab_pre_alloc_hook.constprop.88 > > | | obj_cgroup_charge > > | | | | > > | | | |__memcg_kmem_charge > > | | | | | > > | | | | |page_counter_try_charge > > | | | | > > | | | |refill_obj_stock > > | | | | | > > | | | | |drain_obj_stock.isra.68 > > | | | | | | > > | | | | | |__memcg_kmem_uncharge > > | | | | | | | > > | | | | | | |page_counter_uncharge > > | | | | | | | | > > | | | | | | | |page_counter_cancel > > | | | > > | | | > > | | |__slab_alloc > > | | | | > > | | | |___slab_alloc > > | | | | > > | | |slab_post_alloc_hook > > > > This frequent draining of stock bytes and resultant charging of pages > > increases the CPU load and hence deteriorates the scheduler latency. > > > > The above mentioned scenario and it's impact can be seen by running > > hackbench with large packet size on v5.8 and subsequent kernels. The > > deterioration in hackbench number starts appearing from v5.9 kernel, > > 'commit f2fe7b09a52b ("mm: memcg/slab: charge individual slab objects > > instead of pages")'. > > > > Increasing the draining limit to twice of KMALLOC_MAX_CACHE_SIZE > > (a safe upper limit for size of slab cache objects), will avoid draining > > of stock, every second allocation request, for the above mentioned > > scenario and hence will reduce the CPU load for such cases. For > > allocation of smaller objects or other allocation patterns the behaviour > > will be same as before. > > > > This change increases the draining threshold for per-cpu stocked bytes > > from PAGE_SIZE to KMALLOC_MAX_CACHE_SIZE * 2. > > Hello, Imran! > > Yes, it makes total sense to me. > > Btw, in earlier versions of the new slab controller there was a separate stock > for byte-sized charging and it was 32 pages large. Later Johannes suggested > the current layered design and he thought that because of the layering a single > page is enough for the upper layer. > > > > > Below are the hackbench numbers with and without this change on > > v5.10.0-rc7. > > > > Without this change: > > # hackbench process 10 1000 -s 100000 > > Running in process mode with 10 groups using 40 file descriptors > > each (== 400 tasks) > > Each sender will pass 100 messages of 100000 bytes > > Time: 4.401 > > > > # hackbench process 10 1000 -s 100000 > > Running in process mode with 10 groups using 40 file descriptors > > each (== 400 tasks) > > Each sender will pass 100 messages of 100000 bytes > > Time: 4.470 > > > > With this change: > > # hackbench process 10 1000 -s 100000 > > Running in process mode with 10 groups using 40 file descriptors > > each (== 400 tasks) > > Each sender will pass 100 messages of 100000 bytes > > Time: 3.782 > > > > # hackbench process 10 1000 -s 100000 > > Running in process mode with 10 groups using 40 file descriptors > > each (== 400 tasks) > > Each sender will pass 100 messages of 100000 bytes > > Time: 3.827 > > > > As can be seen the change gives an improvement of about 15% in hackbench > > numbers. > > Also numbers obtained with the change are inline with those obtained > > from v5.8 kernel. > > The difference is quite impressive! > > I wonder if you tried smaller values than KMALLOC_MAX_CACHE_SIZE * 2? > Let's say 16 and 32? > > KMALLOC_MAX_CACHE_SIZE * 2 makes sense to me, but then the whole construction > with two layer caching is very questionable. Anyway, it's not a reason to not > merge your patch, just something I wanna look at later. Hm, can you, please, benchmark the following change (without your change)? @@ -3204,7 +3204,7 @@ static void drain_obj_stock(struct memcg_stock_pcp *stock) if (nr_pages) { rcu_read_lock(); - __memcg_kmem_uncharge(obj_cgroup_memcg(old), nr_pages); + refill_stock(obj_cgroup_memcg(old), nr_pages); rcu_read_unlock(); }