On Wed, Mar 08, 2023 at 11:41:02AM +0200, Mike Rapoport wrote: > From: "Mike Rapoport (IBM)" <rppt@xxxxxxxxxx> > > When set_memory or set_direct_map APIs used to change attribute or > permissions for chunks of several pages, the large PMD that maps these > pages in the direct map must be split. Fragmenting the direct map in such > manner causes TLB pressure and, eventually, performance degradation. > > To avoid excessive direct map fragmentation, add ability to allocate > "unmapped" pages with __GFP_UNMAPPED flag that will cause removal of the > allocated pages from the direct map and use a cache of the unmapped pages. > > This cache is replenished with higher order pages with preference for > PMD_SIZE pages when possible so that there will be fewer splits of large > pages in the direct map. > > The cache is implemented as a buddy allocator, so it can serve high order > allocations of unmapped pages. So I'm late to this discussion, I stumbled in because of my own run in with executable memory allocation. I understand that post LSF this patchset seems to not be going anywhere, but OTOH there's also been a desire for better executable memory allocation; as noted by tglx and elsewhere, there _is_ a definite performance impact on page size with kernel text - I've seen numbers in the multiple single digit percentage range in the past. This patchset does seem to me to be roughly the right approach for that, and coupled with the slab allocator for sub-page sized allocations it seems there's the potential for getting a nice interface that spans the full range of allocation sizes, from small bpf/trampoline allocations up to modules. Is this patchset worth reviving/continuing with? Was it really just the needed module refactoring that was the blocker?