On Thu, Nov 30, 2017 at 09:32:01AM -0800, Sean Christopherson wrote: > On Sat, Nov 25, 2017 at 09:29:24PM +0200, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote: > > +static void *sgx_try_alloc_page(void) > > +{ > > + struct sgx_epc_bank *bank; > > + void *page = NULL; > > + int i; > > + > > + for (i = 0; i < sgx_nr_epc_banks; i++) { > > + bank = &sgx_epc_banks[i]; > > + > > + down_write(&bank->lock); > > Is a R/W semaphore actually preferable to a spinlock? Concurrent > free calls don't seem that interesting/beneficial because freeing > an enclave's pages isn't multiplexed across multiple CPUs, unlike > the allocation of EPC pages. I get about ~10-15% performance increase on high stress. It is benefical to spinlock. > As a whole, I'm not a fan of packing the EPC page pointers into an > array rather than encapsulating them in a struct+list. The primary > benefit I see for the array approach is that it saves ~8 bytes per > free EPC page, but at a cost of increased memory usage for in-use > pages and severely restricting the ability to enhance/modify how > EPC pages are tracked, reclaimed, etc... This is not true. You can put EPC page descriptor to any structure you want. list_head can be dropped from struct sgx_enc_page too. > The main issue is that the array approach relies on the caller to > handle reclaim. This effectively makes it impossible to reclaim > pages from multiple processes, requires other consumers e.g. KVM > to implement their own reclaim logic and kthread, and prevents > cgroup accounting because the cgroup can't initiate reclaim. Not really following here. /Jarkko