On Thu, Feb 15, 2024 at 03:40:59PM +0000, Ryan Roberts wrote: > Change the readahead config so that if it is being requested for an > executable mapping, do a synchronous read of an arch-specified size in a > naturally aligned manner. > > On arm64 if memory is physically contiguous and naturally aligned to the > "contpte" size, we can use contpte mappings, which improves utilization > of the TLB. When paired with the "multi-size THP" changes, this works > well to reduce dTLB pressure. However iTLB pressure is still high due to > executable mappings having a low liklihood of being in the required > folio size and mapping alignment, even when the filesystem supports > readahead into large folios (e.g. XFS). > > The reason for the low liklihood is that the current readahead algorithm > starts with an order-2 folio and increases the folio order by 2 every > time the readahead mark is hit. But most executable memory is faulted in > fairly randomly and so the readahead mark is rarely hit and most > executable folios remain order-2. Yup, this is a bug in the readahead code, and really has nothing to do with executable files, mmap or the architecture. We don't want some magic new VM_EXEC min folio size per architecture thingy to be set - we just want readahead to do the right thing. Indeed, we are already adding a mapping minimum folio order directive to the address space to allow for filesystem block sizes greater than PAGE_SIZE. That's the generic mechanism that this functionality requires. See here: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-xfs/20240213093713.1753368-5-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ (Probably worth reading some of the other readahead mods in that series and the discussion because readahead needs to ensure that it fill entire high order folios in a single IO to avoid partial folio up-to-date states from partial reads.) IOWs, it seems to me that we could use this proposed generic mapping min order functionality when mmap() is run and VM_EXEC is set to set the min order to, say, 64kB. Then the readahead code would simply do the right thing, as would all other reads and writes to that mapping. We could trigger this in the ->mmap() method of the filesystem so that filesysetms that can use large folios can turn it on, whilst other filesystems remain blissfully unaware of the functionality. Filesystems could also do smarter things here, too. eg. enable PMD alignment for large mapped files.... -Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx