[PATCH v5 0/4] apparmor: cache buffers on percpu list if there is lock, contention

From: John Johansen
Date: Tue Oct 17 2023 - 05:21:28 EST


On 10/5/23 21:18, Sergey Senozhatsky wrote:
On (23/06/26 17:31), John Johansen wrote:
On 6/26/23 16:33, Anil Altinay wrote:
Hi John,

I was wondering if you get a chance to work on patch v4. Please let me know if you need help with testing.


yeah, testing help is always much appreciated. I have a v4, and I am
working on 3 alternate version to compare against, to help give a better
sense if we can get away with simplifying or tweak the scaling.

I should be able to post them out some time tonight.

Hi John,

Did you get a chance to post v4? I may be able to give it some testing
on our real-life case.

sorry yes, how about a v5. That is simplified with 3 follow on patches
that aren't strictly necessary, but some combination of them might be
better than just the base patch, but splitting them out makes the
individual changes easier to review.

---


df323337e507 ("apparmor: Use a memory pool instead per-CPU caches")
changed buffer allocation to use a memory pool, however on a heavily
loaded machine there can be lock contention on the global buffers
lock. Add a percpu list to cache buffers on when lock contention is
encountered.

When allocating buffers attempt to use cached buffers first,
before taking the global buffers lock. When freeing buffers
try to put them back to the global list but if contention is
encountered, put the buffer on the percpu list.

The length of time a buffer is held on the percpu list is dynamically
adjusted based on lock contention.

v5:
- simplify base patch by removing: improvements can be added later
- MAX_LOCAL and must lock
- contention scaling.
v4:
- fix percpu ->count buffer count which had been spliced across a
debug patch.
- introduce define for MAX_LOCAL_COUNT
- rework count check and locking around it.
- update commit message to reference commit that introduced the
memory.
v3:
- limit number of buffers that can be pushed onto the percpu
list. This avoids a problem on some kernels where one percpu
list can inherit buffers from another cpu after a reschedule,
causing more kernel memory to used than is necessary. Under
normal conditions this should eventually return to normal
but under pathelogical conditions the extra memory consumption
may have been unbouanded
v2:
- dynamically adjust buffer hold time on percpu list based on
lock contention.
v1:
- cache buffers on percpu list on lock contention

Reported-by: Sergey Senozhatsky <senozhatsky@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>