Re: [PATCH RT] arm*: disable NEON in kernel mode

From: Dave Martin
Date: Fri Dec 01 2017 - 12:58:54 EST


On Fri, Dec 01, 2017 at 03:03:35PM +0000, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
>
> l
> > On 1 Dec 2017, at 14:36, Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> >> On 2017-12-01 14:18:28 [+0000], Mark Rutland wrote:
> >> [Adding Ard, who wrote the NEON crypto code]
> >>
> >>> On Fri, Dec 01, 2017 at 02:45:06PM +0100, Sebastian Andrzej Siewior wrote:
> >>> +arm folks, to let you know
> >>>
> >>>> On 2017-12-01 11:43:32 [+0100], To linux-rt-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> >>>> NEON in kernel mode is used by the crypto algorithms and raid6 code.
> >>>> While the raid6 code looks okay, the crypto algorithms do not: NEON
> >>>> is enabled on first invocation and may allocate/free/map memory before
> >>>> the NEON mode is disabled again.
> >>
> >> Could you elaborate on why this is a problem?
> >>
> >> I guess this is because kernel_neon_{begin,end}() disable preemption?
> >>
> >> ... is this specific to RT?
> >
> > It is RT specific, yes. One thing are the unbounded latencies since
> > everything in this preempt_disable section can take time depending on
> > the size of the request.
> > The other thing is code like in
> > arch/arm64/crypto/aes-ce-ccm-glue.c:ccm_encrypt()
> >
> > where within this preempt_disable() section skcipher_walk_done() is
> > invoked. That function can allocate/free/map memory which is okay for
> > !RT but is not for RT. I tried to break those loops for x86 [0] and I
> > simply didn't had the time to do the same for ARM. I am aware that
> > store/restore of the NEON registers (as SSE and AVX) is expensive and
> > doing a lot of operations in one go is desired.
>
> I wouldnât mind fixing the code instead. We never disable the neon,
> but only stack the contents of the registers the first time, and
> unstack them only before returning to userland (with the exception of
> nested neon use in softirq context). When this code was introduced,
> we always stacked/unstacked the whole register file eagerly every
> time.

+1, at least for arm64. I don't see a really compelling reason for
holding kernel-mode NEON around memory management now that we have a
strict save-once-restore-lazily model.

This may not work so well for arm though -- I haven't looked at that
code for a while.


If there is memory manamement in any core loop, you already lost
the performance battle, and an extra
kernel_neon_end()+kernel_neon_begin() may not be that catastrophic.

[...]

Cheers
---Dave