On 6/28/23 18:44, Roman Gushchin wrote: > On Tue, Jun 27, 2023 at 12:32:15PM -0700, David Rientjes wrote: >> On Tue, 27 Jun 2023, Julian Pidancet wrote: >> >> > Make CONFIG_SLAB_MERGE_DEFAULT default to n unless CONFIG_SLUB_TINY is >> > enabled. Benefits of slab merging is limited on systems that are not >> > memory constrained: the overhead is negligible and evidence of its >> > effect on cache hotness is hard to come by. >> > >> >> I don't have an objection to this, I think it makes sense. > > +1 > > I believe the overhead was much larger when we had per-memcg slab caches, > but now it should be fairly small on most systems. > > But I wonder if we need a new flag (SLAB_MERGE?) to explicitly force merging > on per-slab cache basis. Damn, we just tried to add SLAB_NO_MERGE, that is if Linus pulls the PR, as I've just found out that the last time he hated the idea [1] :) (but at the same time I think the current attempt is very different in that it's not coming via a random tree, and the comments make it clear that it's not for everyone to enable in production configs just because they think they are special). But SLAB_MERGE, I doubt it would get many users being opt-in. People would have to consciously opt-in to not being special. As for changing the default, we definitely need to see the memory usage results first, as was mentioned. It's not expected that disabling merging would decrease performance, so no wonder the test didn't find such decrease, but the expected downside is really increased memory overhead. But then again it's just a default and most people would use a distro config anyway, and neither option seems to be an obvious winner to me? As for the "security by default" argument, AFAIK we don't enable freelist hardening/randomization by default, and I thought (not being the expert on this) the heap spraying attacks concerned mainly generic kmalloc cache users (see also [2]) and not some specific named caches being merged? [1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/CA+55aFyepmdpbg9U2Pvp+aHjKmmGCrTK2ywzqfmaOTMXQasYNw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ [2] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230626031835.2279738-1-gongruiqi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > I believe there are some cases when slab caches can > be created in noticeable numbers and in those cases the memory footprint might > be noticeable. > > Thanks!