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From: Raghavendra K T <rkodsara@amd.com>
To: "Salunke, Hrushikesh" <hsalunke@amd.com>,
	"Vlastimil Babka (SUSE)" <vbabka@kernel.org>,
	akpm@linux-foundation.org, surenb@google.com, mhocko@suse.com,
	jackmanb@google.com, hannes@cmpxchg.org, ziy@nvidia.com
Cc: linux-mm@kvack.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org,
	bharata@amd.com, ankur.a.arora@oracle.com, shivankg@amd.com,
	David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] mm/page_alloc: use batch page clearing in kernel_init_pages()
Date: Wed, 8 Apr 2026 16:46:48 +0530	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <aceb0077-b206-4484-b102-07de537dcb1e@amd.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4e8c218b-ac5e-4674-9e1e-acf750f0a5c8@amd.com>



On 4/8/2026 4:14 PM, Salunke, Hrushikesh wrote:
> [Some people who received this message don't often get email from hsalunke@amd.com. Learn why this is important at https://aka.ms/LearnAboutSenderIdentification ]
> 
> On 08-04-2026 15:17, Vlastimil Babka (SUSE) wrote:
> 
>> Caution: This message originated from an External Source. Use proper caution when opening attachments, clicking links, or responding.
>>
>>
>> On 4/8/26 11:24, Hrushikesh Salunke wrote:
>>> When init_on_alloc is enabled, kernel_init_pages() clears every page
>>> one at a time, calling clear_page() per page.  This is unnecessarily
>>> slow for large contiguous allocations (mTHPs, HugeTLB) that dominate
>>> real workloads.
>>>
>>> On 64-bit (!HIGHMEM) systems, switch to clearing pages in batch via
>>> clear_pages(), bypassing the per-page kmap_local_page()/kunmap_local()
>>> overhead and allowing the arch clearing primitive to operate on the full
>>> contiguous range in a single invocation.  The batch size is the full
>>> allocation when the preempt model is preemptible (preemption points are
>>> implicit), or PROCESS_PAGES_NON_PREEMPT_BATCH otherwise, with
>>> cond_resched() between batches to limit scheduling latency under
>>> cooperative preemption.
>>>
>>> The HIGHMEM path is kept as-is since those pages require kmap.
>>>
>>> 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>
>>> ---
>>> base commit: 1a2fbbe3653f0ebb24af9b306a8a968287344a35
>> Any way to reuse the code added by [1], e.g. clear_user_highpages()?
>>
>> [1]
>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20250917152418.4077386-1-ankur.a.arora@oracle.com/
> 
> Thanks for the review. Sure, I will check if code reuse is possible.
> Meanwhile I found another issue with the current patch.
> 
> kernel_init_pages() runs inside the allocator (post_alloc_hook and
> __free_pages_prepare), so it inherits whatever context the caller is in.
> Testing with CONFIG_DEBUG_ATOMIC_SLEEP=y and CONFIG_PROVE_LOCKING=y, I
> hit this during exit_group() -> exit_mmap() -> __zap_vma_range, where a
> page allocation happens while the PTE lock and RCU read lock are held,
> making the cond_resched() in the clearing loop illegal:
> 
> [ 1997.353228] BUG: sleeping function called from invalid context at mm/page_alloc.c:1235
> [ 1997.353433] in_atomic(): 1, irqs_disabled(): 0, non_block: 0, pid: 19725, name: bash
> [ 1997.353572] preempt_count: 1, expected: 0
> [ 1997.353706] RCU nest depth: 1, expected: 0
> [ 1997.353837] 3 locks held by bash/19725:
> [ 1997.353839]  #0: ff38cd415971e540 (&mm->mmap_lock){++++}-{4:4}, at: exit_mmap+0x6e/0x430
> [ 1997.353850]  #1: ffffffffb03d6f60 (rcu_read_lock){....}-{1:3}, at: __pte_offset_map+0x2c/0x220
> [ 1997.353855]  #2: ff38cd410deb4618 (ptlock_ptr(ptdesc)#2){+.+.}-{3:3}, at: pte_offset_map_lock+0x92/0x170
> [ 1997.353868] Call Trace:
> [ 1997.353870]  <TASK>
> [ 1997.353873]  dump_stack_lvl+0x91/0xb0
> [ 1997.353877]  __might_resched+0x15f/0x290
> [ 1997.353882]  kernel_init_pages+0x4b/0xa0
> [ 1997.353886]  get_page_from_freelist+0x406/0x1e60
> [ 1997.353895]  __alloc_frozen_pages_noprof+0x1d8/0x1730
> [ 1997.353912]  alloc_pages_mpol+0xa4/0x190
> [ 1997.353917]  alloc_pages_noprof+0x59/0xd0
> [ 1997.353919]  get_free_pages_noprof+0x11/0x40
> [ 1997.353921]  __tlb_remove_folio_pages_size.isra.0+0x7f/0xe0
> [ 1997.353923]  __zap_vma_range+0x1bbd/0x1f40
> [ 1997.353931]  unmap_vmas+0xd9/0x1d0
> [ 1997.353934]  exit_mmap+0x10a/0x430
> [ 1997.353943]  __mmput+0x3d/0x130
> [ 1997.353947]  do_exit+0x2a7/0xae0
> [ 1997.353951]  do_group_exit+0x36/0xa0
> [ 1997.353953]  __x64_sys_exit_group+0x18/0x20
> [ 1997.353959]  do_syscall_64+0xe1/0x710
> [ 1997.353990]  entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x76/0x7e
> [ 1997.354003]  </TASK>
> 
> This also means clear_contig_highpages() can't be directly reused here
> since it has an unconditional might_sleep() + cond_resched(). I'll look
> into this. Any suggestions on the right way to handle cond_resched()
> in a context that may or may not be atomic?
> 
> Thanks,
> Hrushikesh
> 
>>>   mm/page_alloc.c | 19 +++++++++++++++++--
>>>   1 file changed, 17 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c
>>> index b1c5430cad4e..178cbebadd50 100644
>>> --- a/mm/page_alloc.c
>>> +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c
>>> @@ -1224,8 +1224,23 @@ static void kernel_init_pages(struct page *page, int numpages)
>>>
>>>        /* s390's use of memset() could override KASAN redzones. */
>>>        kasan_disable_current();
>>> -     for (i = 0; i < numpages; i++)
>>> -             clear_highpage_kasan_tagged(page + i);
>>> +
>>> +     if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HIGHMEM)) {
>>> +             void *addr = kasan_reset_tag(page_address(page));
>>> +             unsigned int unit = preempt_model_preemptible() ?
>>> +                                     numpages : PROCESS_PAGES_NON_PREEMPT_BATCH;
>>> +             int count;
>>> +
>>> +             for (i = 0; i < numpages; i += count) {
>>> +                     cond_resched();

Just thinking,
Considering that for preemptible kernel/preempt_auto preempt_count()
knows about preemption points to decide where it can preempt,

and

for non_preemptible kernel and voluntary kernel it is safe to do
preemption at PROCESS_PAGES_NON_PREEMPT_BATCH granularity

do we need cond_resched() here ?

Let me know if I am missing something.

>>> +                     count = min_t(int, unit, numpages - i);
>>> +                     clear_pages(addr + (i << PAGE_SHIFT), count);
>>> +             }
>>> +     } else {
>>> +             for (i = 0; i < numpages; i++)
>>> +                     clear_highpage_kasan_tagged(page + i);
>>> +     }
>>> +
>>>        kasan_enable_current();
>>>   }
>>>

Regards
- Raghu



  parent reply	other threads:[~2026-04-08 11:17 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 8+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2026-04-08  9:24 [PATCH] mm/page_alloc: use batch page clearing in kernel_init_pages() Hrushikesh Salunke
2026-04-08  9:47 ` Vlastimil Babka (SUSE)
2026-04-08 10:44   ` Salunke, Hrushikesh
2026-04-08 10:53     ` David Hildenbrand (Arm)
2026-04-08 11:16     ` Raghavendra K T [this message]
2026-04-08 16:24       ` Raghavendra K T
2026-04-08 15:32     ` Andrew Morton
2026-04-08 11:32 ` [syzbot ci] " syzbot ci

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