Re: [Fwd: Re: [PATCH v2 2/2] x86: add prefetching to do_csum]

From: Joe Perches
Date: Tue Nov 12 2013 - 15:38:06 EST


On Tue, 2013-11-12 at 14:50 -0500, Neil Horman wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 12, 2013 at 09:33:35AM -0800, Joe Perches wrote:
> > On Tue, 2013-11-12 at 12:12 -0500, Neil Horman wrote:
[]
> > > So, the numbers are correct now that I returned my hardware to its previous
> > > interrupt affinity state, but the trend seems to be the same (namely that there
> > > isn't a clear one). We seem to find peak performance around a readahead of 2
> > > cachelines, but its very small (about 3%), and its inconsistent (larger set
> > > sizes fall to either side of that stride). So I don't see it as a clear win. I
> > > still think we should probably scrap the readahead for now, just take the perf
> > > bits, and revisit this when we can use the vector instructions or the
> > > independent carry chain instructions to improve this more consistently.
> > >
> > > Thoughts
> >
> > Perhaps a single prefetch, not of the first addr but of
> > the addr after PREFETCH_STRIDE would work best but only
> > if length is > PREFETCH_STRIDE.
> >
> > I'd try:
> >
> > if (len > PREFETCH_STRIDE)
> > prefetch(buf + PREFETCH_STRIDE);
> > while (count64) {
> > etc...
> > }
> >
> > I still don't know how much that impacts very short lengths.
> > Can you please add a 20 byte length to your tests?
> Sure, I modified the code so that we only prefetched 2 cache lines ahead, but
> only if the overall length of the input buffer is more than 2 cache lines.
> Below are the results (all counts are the average of 1000000 iterations of the
> csum operation, as previous tests were, I just omitted that column).
>
> len set cycles/byte cycles/byte improvement
> no prefetch prefetch
> ===========================================================
> 20B 64MB 45.014989 44.402432 1.3%
> 20B 128MB 44.900317 46.146447 -2.7%
> 20B 256MB 45.303223 48.193623 -6.3%
> 20B 512MB 45.615301 44.486872 2.2%
[]
> I'm still left thinking we should just abandon the prefetch at this point and
> keep the perf code until we have new instructions to help us with this further,
> unless you see something I dont.

I tend to agree but perhaps the 3% performance
increase with a prefetch for longer lengths is
actually significant and desirable.

It doesn't seem you've done the test I suggested
where prefetch is done only for
"len > PREFETCH_STRIDE".

Is it ever useful to do a prefetch of the
address/data being accessed by the next
instruction?

Anyway, thanks for doing all the work.

Joe

--
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/