Re: [RFC PATCH v2 0/6] slub: Delay freezing of CPU partial slabs

From: Chengming Zhou
Date: Mon Oct 23 2023 - 22:22:22 EST


On 2023/10/23 23:46, Vlastimil Babka wrote:
> On 10/21/23 16:43, chengming.zhou@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
>> From: Chengming Zhou <zhouchengming@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>
> Hi!
>
>> Changes in RFC v2:
>> - Reuse PG_workingset bit to keep track of whether slub is on the
>> per-node partial list, as suggested by Matthew Wilcox.
>> - Fix OOM problem on kernel without CONFIG_SLUB_CPU_PARTIAL, which
>> is caused by leak of partial slabs when get_partial_node().
>> - Add a patch to simplify acquire_slab().
>> - Reorder patches a little.
>> - v1: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231017154439.3036608-1-chengming.zhou@xxxxxxxxx/
>>
>> 1. Problem
>> ==========
>> Now we have to freeze the slab when get from the node partial list, and
>> unfreeze the slab when put to the node partial list. Because we need to
>> rely on the node list_lock to synchronize the "frozen" bit changes.
>>
>> This implementation has some drawbacks:
>>
>> - Alloc path: twice cmpxchg_double.
>> It has to get some partial slabs from node when the allocator has used
>> up the CPU partial slabs. So it freeze the slab (one cmpxchg_double)
>> with node list_lock held, put those frozen slabs on its CPU partial
>> list. Later ___slab_alloc() will cmpxchg_double try-loop again if that
>> slab is picked to use.
>>
>> - Alloc path: amplified contention on node list_lock.
>> Since we have to synchronize the "frozen" bit changes under the node
>> list_lock, the contention of slab (struct page) can be transferred
>> to the node list_lock. On machine with many CPUs in one node, the
>> contention of list_lock will be amplified by all CPUs' alloc path.
>>
>> The current code has to workaround this problem by avoiding using
>> cmpxchg_double try-loop, which will just break and return when
>> contention of page encountered and the first cmpxchg_double failed.
>> But this workaround has its own problem.
>
> I'd note here: For more context, see 9b1ea29bc0d7 ("Revert "mm, slub:
> consider rest of partial list if acquire_slab() fails"")

Good, will add it.

>
>> - Free path: redundant unfreeze.
>> __slab_free() will freeze and cache some slabs on its partial list,
>> and flush them to the node partial list when exceed, which has to
>> unfreeze those slabs again under the node list_lock. Actually we
>> don't need to freeze slab on CPU partial list, in which case we
>> can save the unfreeze cmpxchg_double operations in flush path.
>>
>> 2. Solution
>> ===========
>> We solve these problems by leaving slabs unfrozen when moving out of
>> the node partial list and on CPU partial list, so "frozen" bit is 0.
>>
>> These partial slabs won't be manipulate concurrently by alloc path,
>> the only racer is free path, which may manipulate its list when !inuse.
>> So we need to introduce another synchronization way to avoid it, we
>> reuse PG_workingset to keep track of whether the slab is on node partial
>> list or not, only in that case we can manipulate the slab list.
>>
>> The slab will be delay frozen when it's picked to actively use by the
>> CPU, it becomes full at the same time, in which case we still need to
>> rely on "frozen" bit to avoid manipulating its list. So the slab will
>> be frozen only when activate use and be unfrozen only when deactivate.
>
> Interesting solution! I wonder if we could go a bit further and remove
> acquire_slab() completely. Because AFAICS even after your changes,
> acquire_slab() is still attempted including freezing the slab, which means
> still doing an cmpxchg_double under the list_lock, and now also handling the
> special case when it failed, but we at least filled percpu partial lists.
> What if we only filled the partial list without freezing, and then froze the
> first slab outside of the list_lock?

Good idea, we can return one slab and put other slabs to the CPU partial list.
So we can remove the acquire_slab() completely and don't need to handle the
fail case. The code will be cleaner, too.

>
> Or more precisely, instead of returning the acquired "object" we would
> return the first slab removed from partial list. I think it would simplify
> the code a bit, and further reduce list_lock holding times.

Ok, I will do this in the next version. But I find we have to return the object
in the "IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_SLUB_TINY) || kmem_cache_debug(s)" case, in which
we need to allocate a single object under the node list_lock.

Maybe we can use "struct partial_context" to return the object in this case?

struct partial_context {
- struct slab **slab;
gfp_t flags;
unsigned int orig_size;
+ void *object;
};

Then we can change all get_partial interfaces to return a slab. Do you agree
with this way?

>
> I'll also point out a few more details, but it's not a full detailed review
> as the suggestion above, and another for 4/5, could mean a rather
> significant change for v3.

Thank you!

>
> Thanks!
>
>> 3. Testing
>> ==========
>> We just did some simple testing on a server with 128 CPUs (2 nodes) to
>> compare performance for now.
>>
>> - perf bench sched messaging -g 5 -t -l 100000
>> baseline RFC
>> 7.042s 6.966s
>> 7.022s 7.045s
>> 7.054s 6.985s
>>
>> - stress-ng --rawpkt 128 --rawpkt-ops 100000000
>> baseline RFC
>> 2.42s 2.15s
>> 2.45s 2.16s
>> 2.44s 2.17s
>>
>> It shows above there is about 10% improvement on stress-ng rawpkt
>> testcase, although no much improvement on perf sched bench testcase.
>>
>> Thanks for any comment and code review!
>>
>> Chengming Zhou (6):
>> slub: Keep track of whether slub is on the per-node partial list
>> slub: Prepare __slab_free() for unfrozen partial slab out of node
>> partial list
>> slub: Don't freeze slabs for cpu partial
>> slub: Simplify acquire_slab()
>> slub: Introduce get_cpu_partial()
>> slub: Optimize deactivate_slab()
>>
>> include/linux/page-flags.h | 2 +
>> mm/slab.h | 19 +++
>> mm/slub.c | 245 +++++++++++++++++++------------------
>> 3 files changed, 150 insertions(+), 116 deletions(-)
>>
>