On Thu, Feb 16, 2023 at 01:29:59PM +0100, Linux regression tracking (Thorsten Leemhuis) wrote: > Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker. > > On 20.12.22 19:48, Roman Gushchin wrote: > > Sven Luther reported a regression in the posix message queues > > performance caused by switching to the per-object tracking of > > slab objects introduced by patch series ending with the > > commit 10befea91b61 ("mm: memcg/slab: use a single set of kmem_caches for all > > allocations"). > > Quick inquiry: what happened to below patch? It was supposed to fix a > performance regression reported here: Hi Thorsten! I wouldn't call it simple a regression, things a bit more complicated: it was a switch to a different approach with different trade-offs, which IMO make more sense for the majority of real-world workloads. In two words: individual kernel memory allocations became somewhat slower (but still fast), but we've saved 40%+ of slab memory on typical systems and reduced the memory fragmentation. The regression reported by Sven and my "fix" are related to one very specific case: posix message queues. To my knowledge they are not widely used for anything that performance-sensitive, so it's quite a niche use case. My "fix" was also hand-crafted for the benchmark provided by Sven, so it might not work for a more generic case. And I don't think it can be easily generalized without adding cpu or memory overhead. On the other hand I'm working on improving the speed of kernel memory allocations in general (I posted early versions some weeks ago). Hopefully it will mitigate the problem for Sven as well, so we won't need these message queue-specific hacks. Thanks!