From: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
To: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net>
Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>,
Christoph Lameter <cl@linux.com>, Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com>,
Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@suse.cz>,
Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>,
Linux-MM <linux-mm@kvack.org>,
Linux-Kernel <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
Rick Jones <rick.jones2@hpe.com>, Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>,
brouer@redhat.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH] mm: page_alloc: High-order per-cpu page allocator v3
Date: Wed, 30 Nov 2016 16:06:12 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20161130160612.474ca93c@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20161130140615.3bbn7576iwbyc3op@techsingularity.net>
On Wed, 30 Nov 2016 14:06:15 +0000
Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 30, 2016 at 01:40:34PM +0100, Jesper Dangaard Brouer wrote:
> >
> > On Sun, 27 Nov 2016 13:19:54 +0000 Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> wrote:
> >
> > [...]
> > > SLUB has been the default small kernel object allocator for quite some time
> > > but it is not universally used due to performance concerns and a reliance
> > > on high-order pages. The high-order concerns has two major components --
> > > high-order pages are not always available and high-order page allocations
> > > potentially contend on the zone->lock. This patch addresses some concerns
> > > about the zone lock contention by extending the per-cpu page allocator to
> > > cache high-order pages. The patch makes the following modifications
> > >
> > > o New per-cpu lists are added to cache the high-order pages. This increases
> > > the cache footprint of the per-cpu allocator and overall usage but for
> > > some workloads, this will be offset by reduced contention on zone->lock.
> >
> > This will also help performance of NIC driver that allocator
> > higher-order pages for their RX-ring queue (and chop it up for MTU).
> > I do like this patch, even-though I'm working on moving drivers away
> > from allocation these high-order pages.
> >
> > Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <brouer@redhat.com>
> >
>
> Thanks.
>
> > [...]
> > > This is the result from netperf running UDP_STREAM on localhost. It was
> > > selected on the basis that it is slab-intensive and has been the subject
> > > of previous SLAB vs SLUB comparisons with the caveat that this is not
> > > testing between two physical hosts.
> >
> > I do like you are using a networking test to benchmark this. Looking at
> > the results, my initial response is that the improvements are basically
> > too good to be true.
> >
>
> FWIW, LKP independently measured the boost to be 23% so it's expected
> there will be different results depending on exact configuration and CPU.
Yes, noticed that, nice (which was a SCTP test)
https://lists.01.org/pipermail/lkp/2016-November/005210.html
It is of-cause great. It is just strange I cannot reproduce it on my
high-end box, with manual testing. I'll try your test suite and try to
figure out what is wrong with my setup.
> > Can you share how you tested this with netperf and the specific netperf
> > parameters?
>
> The mmtests config file used is
> configs/config-global-dhp__network-netperf-unbound so all details can be
> extrapolated or reproduced from that.
I didn't know of mmtests: https://github.com/gormanm/mmtests
It looks nice and quite comprehensive! :-)
> > e.g.
> > How do you configure the send/recv sizes?
>
> Static range of sizes specified in the config file.
I'll figure it out... reading your shell code :-)
export NETPERF_BUFFER_SIZES=64,128,256,1024,2048,3312,4096,8192,16384
https://github.com/gormanm/mmtests/blob/master/configs/config-global-dhp__network-netperf-unbound#L72
I see you are using netperf 2.4.5 and setting both the send an recv
size (-- -m and -M) which is fine.
I don't quite get why you are setting the socket recv size (with -- -s
and -S) to such a small number, size + 256.
SOCKETSIZE_OPT="-s $((SIZE+256)) -S $((SIZE+256))
netperf-2.4.5-installed/bin/netperf -t UDP_STREAM -i 3 3 -I 95 5 -H 127.0.0.1 \
-- -s 320 -S 320 -m 64 -M 64 -P 15895
netperf-2.4.5-installed/bin/netperf -t UDP_STREAM -i 3 3 -I 95 5 -H 127.0.0.1 \
-- -s 384 -S 384 -m 128 -M 128 -P 15895
netperf-2.4.5-installed/bin/netperf -t UDP_STREAM -i 3 3 -I 95 5 -H 127.0.0.1 \
-- -s 1280 -S 1280 -m 1024 -M 1024 -P 15895
> > Have you pinned netperf and netserver on different CPUs?
> >
>
> No. While it's possible to do a pinned test which helps stability, it
> also tends to be less reflective of what happens in a variety of
> workloads so I took the "harder" option.
Agree.
--
Best regards,
Jesper Dangaard Brouer
MSc.CS, Principal Kernel Engineer at Red Hat
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/brouer
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2016-11-30 15:06 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 22+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2016-11-27 13:19 [PATCH] mm: page_alloc: High-order per-cpu page allocator v3 Mel Gorman
2016-11-28 11:00 ` Vlastimil Babka
2016-11-28 11:45 ` Mel Gorman
2016-11-30 8:55 ` Mel Gorman
2016-11-28 15:39 ` Christoph Lameter
2016-11-28 16:21 ` Mel Gorman
2016-11-28 16:38 ` Christoph Lameter
2016-11-28 18:47 ` Mel Gorman
2016-11-28 18:54 ` Christoph Lameter
2016-11-28 20:59 ` Vlastimil Babka
2016-11-28 19:54 ` Johannes Weiner
2016-11-30 12:40 ` Jesper Dangaard Brouer
2016-11-30 14:06 ` Mel Gorman
2016-11-30 15:06 ` Jesper Dangaard Brouer [this message]
2016-11-30 16:35 ` Mel Gorman
2016-12-01 17:34 ` Jesper Dangaard Brouer
2016-12-01 22:17 ` Paolo Abeni
2016-12-02 15:37 ` Jesper Dangaard Brouer
2016-12-02 15:44 ` Paolo Abeni
2016-11-30 13:05 ` Michal Hocko
2016-11-30 14:16 ` Mel Gorman
2016-11-30 14:59 ` Michal Hocko
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