On Sep 20, 2022, at 11:53 PM, Anshuman Khandual <anshuman.khandual@xxxxxxx> wrote: > ⚠ External Email > > On 8/22/22 13:51, Yicong Yang wrote: >> +static inline void arch_tlbbatch_add_mm(struct arch_tlbflush_unmap_batch *batch, >> + struct mm_struct *mm, >> + unsigned long uaddr) >> +{ >> + __flush_tlb_page_nosync(mm, uaddr); >> +} >> + >> +static inline void arch_tlbbatch_flush(struct arch_tlbflush_unmap_batch *batch) >> +{ >> + dsb(ish); >> +} > > Just wondering if arch_tlbbatch_add_mm() could also detect continuous mapping > TLB invalidation requests on a given mm and try to generate a range based TLB > invalidation such as flush_tlb_range(). > > struct arch_tlbflush_unmap_batch via task->tlb_ubc->arch can track continuous > ranges while being queued up via arch_tlbbatch_add_mm(), any range formed can > later be flushed in subsequent arch_tlbbatch_flush() ? > > OR > > It might not be worth the effort and complexity, in comparison to performance > improvement, TLB range flush brings in ? So here are my 2 cents, based on my experience with Intel-x86. It is likely different on arm64, but perhaps it can provide you some insight into what parameters you should measure and consider. In general there is a tradeoff between full TLB flushes and entry-specific ones. Flushing specific entries takes more time than flushing the entire TLB, but sade TLB refills. Dave Hansen made some calculations in the past and came up with 33 as a magic cutoff number, i.e., if you need to flush more than 33 entries, just flush the entire TLB. I am not sure that this exact number is very meaningful, since one might argue that it should’ve taken PTI into account (which might require twice as many TLB invalidations). Anyhow, back to arch_tlbbatch_add_mm(). It may be possible to track ranges, but the question is whether you would actually succeed in forming continuous ranges that are eventually (on x86) smaller than the full TLB flush cutoff (=33). Questionable (perhaps better with MGLRU?). Then, you should remember that tracking should be very efficient, since even few cache misses might have greater cost than what you save by selective-flushing. Finally, on x86 you would need to invoke the smp/IPI layer multiple times to send different cores the relevant range they need to flush. IOW: It is somewhat complicated to implement efficeintly. On x86, and probably other IPI-based TLB shootdown systems, does not have clear performance benefit (IMHO).