Re: [PATCH] procfs: provide slub's /proc/slabinfo

From: Matt Mackall
Date: Mon Jan 07 2008 - 14:04:17 EST



On Mon, 2008-01-07 at 20:06 +0200, Pekka J Enberg wrote:
> Hi Matt,
>
> On Sun, 6 Jan 2008, Matt Mackall wrote:
> > I don't have any particular "terrible" workloads for SLUB. But my
> > attempts to simply boot with all three allocators to init=/bin/bash in,
> > say, lguest show a fair margin for SLOB.
>
> Sorry, I once again have bad news ;-). I did some testing with
>
> lguest --block=<rootfile> 32 /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.24-rc6 root=/dev/vda init=doit
>
> where rootfile is
>
> http://uml.nagafix.co.uk/BusyBox-1.5.0/BusyBox-1.5.0-x86-root_fs.bz2
>
> and the "doit" script in the guest passed as init= is just
>
> #!/bin/sh
> mount -t proc proc /proc
> cat /proc/meminfo | grep MemTotal
> cat /proc/meminfo | grep MemFree
> cat /proc/meminfo | grep Slab
>
> and the results are:
>
> [ the minimum, maximum, and average are of captured from 10 individual runs ]
>
> Free (kB) Used (kB)
> Total (kB) min max average min max average
> SLUB (no debug) 26536 23868 23892 23877.6 2644 2668 2658.4
> SLOB 26548 23472 23640 23579.6 2908 3076 2968.4
> SLAB (no debug) 26544 23316 23364 23343.2 3180 3228 3200.8
> SLUB (with debug) 26484 23120 23136 23127.2 3348 3364 3356.8
>
> So it seems that on average SLUB uses 300 kilobytes *less memory* (!) (which is
> roughly 1% of total memory available) after boot than SLOB for my
> configuration.

Fascinating. Which kernel version are you using? This patch doesn't seem
to have made it to mainline:

---

slob: fix free block merging at head of subpage

We weren't merging freed blocks at the beginning of the free list.
Fixing this showed a 2.5% efficiency improvement in a userspace test
harness.

Signed-off-by: Matt Mackall <mpm@xxxxxxxxxxx>

diff -r 5374012889d6 mm/slob.c
--- a/mm/slob.c Wed Dec 05 09:27:46 2007 -0800
+++ b/mm/slob.c Wed Dec 05 16:10:37 2007 -0600
@@ -398,6 +398,10 @@ static void slob_free(void *block, int s
sp->units += units;

if (b < sp->free) {
+ if (b + units == sp->free) {
+ units += slob_units(sp->free);
+ sp->free = slob_next(sp->free);
+ }
set_slob(b, units, sp->free);
sp->free = b;
} else {

---

> One possible explanation is that the high internal fragmentation (space
> allocated but not used) of SLUB kmalloc() only affects short-lived allocations
> and thus does not show up in the more permanent memory footprint. Likewise, it
> could be that SLOB has higher external fragmentation (small blocks that are
> unavailable for allocation) of which SLUB does not suffer from. Dunno, haven't
> investigated as my results are contradictory to yours.

I suppose that's possible.

> I am beginning to think this is highly dependent on .config so would you mind
> sending me one you're using for testing, Matt?

I'm sure I don't have it any more, as that was back in July or so. How
about you send me your config and I'll try to figure out what's going
on?

--
Mathematics is the supreme nostalgia of our time.

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/