On Tue, Mar 30, 2021 at 08:51:54PM +0200, Jesper Dangaard Brouer wrote: > On Mon, 29 Mar 2021 13:06:42 +0100 > Mel Gorman <mgorman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > This series requires patches in Andrew's tree so the series is also > > available at > > > > git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mel/linux.git mm-percpu-local_lock-v1r15 > > > > tldr: Jesper and Chuck, it would be nice to verify if this series helps > > the allocation rate of the bulk page allocator. RT people, this > > *partially* addresses some problems PREEMPT_RT has with the page > > allocator but it needs review. > > I've run a new micro-benchmark[1] which shows: > (CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-1650 v4 @ 3.60GHz) > > <Editting to focus on arrays> > BASELINE > single_page alloc+put: 194 cycles(tsc) 54.106 ns > > ARRAY variant: time_bulk_page_alloc_free_array: step=bulk size > > Per elem: 195 cycles(tsc) 54.225 ns (step:1) > Per elem: 127 cycles(tsc) 35.492 ns (step:2) > Per elem: 117 cycles(tsc) 32.643 ns (step:3) > Per elem: 111 cycles(tsc) 30.992 ns (step:4) > Per elem: 106 cycles(tsc) 29.606 ns (step:8) > Per elem: 102 cycles(tsc) 28.532 ns (step:16) > Per elem: 99 cycles(tsc) 27.728 ns (step:32) > Per elem: 98 cycles(tsc) 27.252 ns (step:64) > Per elem: 97 cycles(tsc) 27.090 ns (step:128) > > This should be seen in comparison with the older micro-benchmark[2] > done on branch mm-bulk-rebase-v5r9. > > BASELINE > single_page alloc+put: Per elem: 199 cycles(tsc) 55.472 ns > > ARRAY variant: time_bulk_page_alloc_free_array: step=bulk size > > Per elem: 202 cycles(tsc) 56.383 ns (step:1) > Per elem: 144 cycles(tsc) 40.047 ns (step:2) > Per elem: 134 cycles(tsc) 37.339 ns (step:3) > Per elem: 128 cycles(tsc) 35.578 ns (step:4) > Per elem: 120 cycles(tsc) 33.592 ns (step:8) > Per elem: 116 cycles(tsc) 32.362 ns (step:16) > Per elem: 113 cycles(tsc) 31.476 ns (step:32) > Per elem: 110 cycles(tsc) 30.633 ns (step:64) > Per elem: 110 cycles(tsc) 30.596 ns (step:128) > Ok, so bulk allocation is faster than allocating single pages, no surprise there. Putting the array figures for bulk allocation into tabular format and comparing we get; Array variant (time to allocate a page in nanoseconds, lower is better) Baseline Patched 1 56.383 54.225 (+3.83%) 2 40.047 35.492 (+11.38%) 3 37.339 32.643 (+12.58%) 4 35.578 30.992 (+12.89%) 8 33.592 29.606 (+11.87%) 16 32.362 28.532 (+11.85%) 32 31.476 27.728 (+11.91%) 64 30.633 27.252 (+11.04%) 128 30.596 27.090 (+11.46%) The series is 11-12% faster when allocating multiple pages. That's a fairly positive outcome and I'll include this in the series leader if you have no objections. Thanks Jesper! -- Mel Gorman SUSE Labs