Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@xxxxxxx> writes: > Hi Huang, Ying, > > > On 12/03/2024 07:51, Huang, Ying wrote: >> Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@xxxxxxx> writes: >> >>> Multi-size THP enables performance improvements by allocating large, >>> pte-mapped folios for anonymous memory. However I've observed that on an >>> arm64 system running a parallel workload (e.g. kernel compilation) >>> across many cores, under high memory pressure, the speed regresses. This >>> is due to bottlenecking on the increased number of TLBIs added due to >>> all the extra folio splitting when the large folios are swapped out. >>> >>> Therefore, solve this regression by adding support for swapping out mTHP >>> without needing to split the folio, just like is already done for >>> PMD-sized THP. This change only applies when CONFIG_THP_SWAP is enabled, >>> and when the swap backing store is a non-rotating block device. These >>> are the same constraints as for the existing PMD-sized THP swap-out >>> support. >>> >>> Note that no attempt is made to swap-in (m)THP here - this is still done >>> page-by-page, like for PMD-sized THP. But swapping-out mTHP is a >>> prerequisite for swapping-in mTHP. >>> >>> The main change here is to improve the swap entry allocator so that it >>> can allocate any power-of-2 number of contiguous entries between [1, (1 >>> << PMD_ORDER)]. This is done by allocating a cluster for each distinct >>> order and allocating sequentially from it until the cluster is full. >>> This ensures that we don't need to search the map and we get no >>> fragmentation due to alignment padding for different orders in the >>> cluster. If there is no current cluster for a given order, we attempt to >>> allocate a free cluster from the list. If there are no free clusters, we >>> fail the allocation and the caller can fall back to splitting the folio >>> and allocates individual entries (as per existing PMD-sized THP >>> fallback). >>> >>> The per-order current clusters are maintained per-cpu using the existing >>> infrastructure. This is done to avoid interleving pages from different >>> tasks, which would prevent IO being batched. This is already done for >>> the order-0 allocations so we follow the same pattern. >>> >>> As is done for order-0 per-cpu clusters, the scanner now can steal >>> order-0 entries from any per-cpu-per-order reserved cluster. This >>> ensures that when the swap file is getting full, space doesn't get tied >>> up in the per-cpu reserves. >>> >>> This change only modifies swap to be able to accept any order mTHP. It >>> doesn't change the callers to elide doing the actual split. That will be >>> done in separate changes. > > [...] > >>> @@ -905,17 +961,18 @@ static int scan_swap_map_slots(struct swap_info_struct *si, >>> } >>> >>> if (si->swap_map[offset]) { >>> + VM_WARN_ON(order > 0); >>> unlock_cluster(ci); >>> if (!n_ret) >>> goto scan; >>> else >>> goto done; >>> } >>> - WRITE_ONCE(si->swap_map[offset], usage); >>> - inc_cluster_info_page(si, si->cluster_info, offset); >>> + memset(si->swap_map + offset, usage, nr_pages); >> >> Add barrier() here corresponds to original WRITE_ONCE()? >> unlock_cluster(ci) may be NOP for some swap devices. > > Looking at this a bit more closely, I'm not sure this is needed. Even if there > is no cluster, the swap_info is still locked, so unlocking that will act as a > barrier. There are a number of other callsites that memset(si->swap_map) without > an explicit barrier and with the swap_info locked. > > Looking at the original commit that added the WRITE_ONCE() it was worried about > a race with reading swap_map in _swap_info_get(). But that site is now annotated > with a data_race(), which will suppress the warning. And I don't believe there > are any places that read swap_map locklessly and depend upon observing ordering > between it and other state? So I think the si unlock is sufficient? > > I'm not planning to add barrier() here. Let me know if you disagree. swap_map[] may be read locklessly in swap_offset_available_and_locked() in parallel. IIUC, WRITE_ONCE() here is to make the writing take effect as early as possible there. > >> >>> + add_cluster_info_page(si, si->cluster_info, offset, nr_pages); >>> unlock_cluster(ci); -- Best Regards, Huang, Ying