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* [PATCH v3] mm/page_alloc: replace kernel_init_pages() with batch page clearing
@ 2026-04-22 10:26 Hrushikesh Salunke
  2026-04-22 18:25 ` David Hildenbrand (Arm)
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Hrushikesh Salunke @ 2026-04-22 10:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: akpm, david, ljs, Liam.Howlett, vbabka, rppt, surenb, mhocko,
	jackmanb, hannes, ziy
  Cc: linux-mm, linux-kernel, rkodsara, bharata, ankur.a.arora,
	shivankg, hsalunke

When init_on_alloc is enabled, kernel_init_pages() clears every page
one at a time via clear_highpage_kasan_tagged(), which incurs per-page
kmap_local_page()/kunmap_local() overhead and prevents the architecture
clearing primitive from operating on contiguous ranges.

Introduce clear_highpages_kasan_tagged() in highmem.h, a batch
clearing helper that calls clear_pages() for the full contiguous range
on !HIGHMEM systems, bypassing the per-page kmap overhead and allowing
a single invocation of the arch clearing primitive across the entire
allocation. The HIGHMEM path falls back to per-page clearing since
those pages require kmap.

Replace kernel_init_pages() with direct calls to the new helper, as it
becomes a trivial wrapper.

Allocating 8192 x 2MB HugeTLB pages (16GB) with init_on_alloc=1:

  Before: 0.445s
  After:  0.166s  (-62.7%, 2.68x faster)

Kernel time (sys) reduction per workload with init_on_alloc=1:

  Workload            Before       After       Change
  Graph500 64C128T    30m 41.8s    15m 14.8s   -50.3%
  Graph500 16C32T     15m 56.7s     9m 43.7s   -39.0%
  Pagerank 32T         1m 58.5s     1m 12.8s   -38.5%
  Pagerank 128T        2m 36.3s     1m 40.4s   -35.7%

Signed-off-by: Hrushikesh Salunke <hsalunke@amd.com>
Acked-by: Vlastimil Babka (SUSE) <vbabka@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Zi Yan <ziy@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Pankaj Gupta <pankaj.gupta@amd.com>
---
base commit: 2bcc13c29c711381d815c1ba5d5b25737400c71a

v2: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260421042451.76918-1-hsalunke@amd.com/
v1: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260408092441.435133-1-hsalunke@amd.com/

Changes since v2:
- Moved kasan_disable_current()/kasan_enable_current() into
  clear_highpages_kasan_tagged(), per David and Zi Yan's suggestion.
- Removed kernel_init_pages() and replaced its two call sites with
  direct calls to the helper.

Changes since v1:
- Dropped cond_resched() and PROCESS_PAGES_NON_PREEMPT_BATCH as
  kernel_init_pages() runs inside the page allocator and can be
  called from atomic context, making cond_resched() unsafe. The
  original code never had a cond_resched() here, and the
  performance gain comes from batching, not rescheduling.

- Moved the !HIGHMEM/HIGHMEM branching into a new
  clear_highpages_kasan_tagged() helper in highmem.h, per David's
  suggestion.

 include/linux/highmem.h | 15 +++++++++++++++
 mm/page_alloc.c         | 15 ++-------------
 2 files changed, 17 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)

diff --git a/include/linux/highmem.h b/include/linux/highmem.h
index af03db851a1d..1178b786b5b0 100644
--- a/include/linux/highmem.h
+++ b/include/linux/highmem.h
@@ -345,6 +345,21 @@ static inline void clear_highpage_kasan_tagged(struct page *page)
 	kunmap_local(kaddr);
 }
 
+static inline void clear_highpages_kasan_tagged(struct page *page, int numpages)
+{
+	/* s390's use of memset() could override KASAN redzones. */
+	kasan_disable_current();
+	if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HIGHMEM)) {
+		clear_pages(kasan_reset_tag(page_address(page)), numpages);
+	} else {
+		int i;
+
+		for (i = 0; i < numpages; i++)
+			clear_highpage_kasan_tagged(page + i);
+	}
+	kasan_enable_current();
+}
+
 #ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_TAG_CLEAR_HIGHPAGES
 
 /* Return false to let people know we did not initialize the pages */
diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c
index 65e205111553..2908d24dd3e2 100644
--- a/mm/page_alloc.c
+++ b/mm/page_alloc.c
@@ -1208,17 +1208,6 @@ static inline bool should_skip_kasan_poison(struct page *page)
 	return page_kasan_tag(page) == KASAN_TAG_KERNEL;
 }
 
-static void kernel_init_pages(struct page *page, int numpages)
-{
-	int i;
-
-	/* s390's use of memset() could override KASAN redzones. */
-	kasan_disable_current();
-	for (i = 0; i < numpages; i++)
-		clear_highpage_kasan_tagged(page + i);
-	kasan_enable_current();
-}
-
 #ifdef CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING
 
 /* Should be called only if mem_alloc_profiling_enabled() */
@@ -1428,7 +1417,7 @@ __always_inline bool __free_pages_prepare(struct page *page,
 			init = false;
 	}
 	if (init)
-		kernel_init_pages(page, 1 << order);
+		clear_highpages_kasan_tagged(page, 1 << order);
 
 	/*
 	 * arch_free_page() can make the page's contents inaccessible.  s390
@@ -1853,7 +1842,7 @@ inline void post_alloc_hook(struct page *page, unsigned int order,
 	}
 	/* If memory is still not initialized, initialize it now. */
 	if (init)
-		kernel_init_pages(page, 1 << order);
+		clear_highpages_kasan_tagged(page, 1 << order);
 
 	set_page_owner(page, order, gfp_flags);
 	page_table_check_alloc(page, order);
-- 
2.43.0



^ permalink raw reply related	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH v3] mm/page_alloc: replace kernel_init_pages() with batch page clearing
  2026-04-22 10:26 [PATCH v3] mm/page_alloc: replace kernel_init_pages() with batch page clearing Hrushikesh Salunke
@ 2026-04-22 18:25 ` David Hildenbrand (Arm)
  2026-04-23  5:09   ` Salunke, Hrushikesh
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: David Hildenbrand (Arm) @ 2026-04-22 18:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Hrushikesh Salunke, akpm, ljs, Liam.Howlett, vbabka, rppt, surenb,
	mhocko, jackmanb, hannes, ziy
  Cc: linux-mm, linux-kernel, rkodsara, bharata, ankur.a.arora,
	shivankg

On 4/22/26 12:26, Hrushikesh Salunke wrote:
> When init_on_alloc is enabled, kernel_init_pages() clears every page
> one at a time via clear_highpage_kasan_tagged(), which incurs per-page
> kmap_local_page()/kunmap_local() overhead and prevents the architecture
> clearing primitive from operating on contiguous ranges.
> 
> Introduce clear_highpages_kasan_tagged() in highmem.h, a batch
> clearing helper that calls clear_pages() for the full contiguous range
> on !HIGHMEM systems, bypassing the per-page kmap overhead and allowing
> a single invocation of the arch clearing primitive across the entire
> allocation. The HIGHMEM path falls back to per-page clearing since
> those pages require kmap.
> 
> Replace kernel_init_pages() with direct calls to the new helper, as it
> becomes a trivial wrapper.
> 
> Allocating 8192 x 2MB HugeTLB pages (16GB) with init_on_alloc=1:
> 
>   Before: 0.445s
>   After:  0.166s  (-62.7%, 2.68x faster)
> 
> Kernel time (sys) reduction per workload with init_on_alloc=1:
> 
>   Workload            Before       After       Change
>   Graph500 64C128T    30m 41.8s    15m 14.8s   -50.3%
>   Graph500 16C32T     15m 56.7s     9m 43.7s   -39.0%
>   Pagerank 32T         1m 58.5s     1m 12.8s   -38.5%
>   Pagerank 128T        2m 36.3s     1m 40.4s   -35.7%

We do have some elaborate handling in clear_contig_highpages() to chunk it up
(and to call cond_resched()). But that function can get called with much bigger
ranges.

I'm not concerned about the cond_resched() -- we wouldn't do one here before --
but I'm wondering whether we could end up triggering a HW instruction that is
uninterruptible and takes a rather long time.

But clear_contig_highpages() breaks it into 32MiB chunks, and only x86 supports
it so far. So we won't exceed that with the maximum buddy order of 4MiB on x86.

Acked-by: David Hildenbrand (Arm) <david@kernel.org>

-- 
Cheers,

David


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH v3] mm/page_alloc: replace kernel_init_pages() with batch page clearing
  2026-04-22 18:25 ` David Hildenbrand (Arm)
@ 2026-04-23  5:09   ` Salunke, Hrushikesh
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Salunke, Hrushikesh @ 2026-04-23  5:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Hildenbrand (Arm), akpm, ljs, Liam.Howlett, vbabka, rppt,
	surenb, mhocko, jackmanb, hannes, ziy
  Cc: linux-mm, linux-kernel, rkodsara, bharata, ankur.a.arora,
	shivankg


On 22-04-2026 23:55, David Hildenbrand (Arm) wrote:
> Caution: This message originated from an External Source. Use proper caution when opening attachments, clicking links, or responding.
>
>
> On 4/22/26 12:26, Hrushikesh Salunke wrote:
>> When init_on_alloc is enabled, kernel_init_pages() clears every page
>> one at a time via clear_highpage_kasan_tagged(), which incurs per-page
>> kmap_local_page()/kunmap_local() overhead and prevents the architecture
>> clearing primitive from operating on contiguous ranges.
>>
>> Introduce clear_highpages_kasan_tagged() in highmem.h, a batch
>> clearing helper that calls clear_pages() for the full contiguous range
>> on !HIGHMEM systems, bypassing the per-page kmap overhead and allowing
>> a single invocation of the arch clearing primitive across the entire
>> allocation. The HIGHMEM path falls back to per-page clearing since
>> those pages require kmap.
>>
>> Replace kernel_init_pages() with direct calls to the new helper, as it
>> becomes a trivial wrapper.
>>
>> Allocating 8192 x 2MB HugeTLB pages (16GB) with init_on_alloc=1:
>>
>>   Before: 0.445s
>>   After:  0.166s  (-62.7%, 2.68x faster)
>>
>> Kernel time (sys) reduction per workload with init_on_alloc=1:
>>
>>   Workload            Before       After       Change
>>   Graph500 64C128T    30m 41.8s    15m 14.8s   -50.3%
>>   Graph500 16C32T     15m 56.7s     9m 43.7s   -39.0%
>>   Pagerank 32T         1m 58.5s     1m 12.8s   -38.5%
>>   Pagerank 128T        2m 36.3s     1m 40.4s   -35.7%
> We do have some elaborate handling in clear_contig_highpages() to chunk it up
> (and to call cond_resched()). But that function can get called with much bigger
> ranges.
>
> I'm not concerned about the cond_resched() -- we wouldn't do one here before --
> but I'm wondering whether we could end up triggering a HW instruction that is
> uninterruptible and takes a rather long time.
>
> But clear_contig_highpages() breaks it into 32MiB chunks, and only x86 supports
> it so far. So we won't exceed that with the maximum buddy order of 4MiB on x86.
>
> Acked-by: David Hildenbrand (Arm) <david@kernel.org>
>
> --
> Cheers,
>
> David

Right, on x86 the max buddy order keeps it well within safe limits.

Also, rep stosb/stosq on x86, currently used for clearing, is
interruptible, the CPU can take interrupts between iterations and
resume where it left off. So even for larger ranges it wouldn't be a
single uninterruptible operation. Other architectures use a per-page
loop for clearing, so the same applies there.

Thanks for the Ack!

Regards,
Hrushikesh




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

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2026-04-22 10:26 [PATCH v3] mm/page_alloc: replace kernel_init_pages() with batch page clearing Hrushikesh Salunke
2026-04-22 18:25 ` David Hildenbrand (Arm)
2026-04-23  5:09   ` Salunke, Hrushikesh

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