Re: [PATCH] mm, vmacache: Add kconfig VMACACHE_SHIFT

From: Sasha Levin
Date: Fri Jan 23 2015 - 20:02:51 EST


On 01/23/2015 12:14 AM, WANG Chao wrote:
> On 01/22/15 at 11:22am, Rik van Riel wrote:
>> > On 01/22/2015 11:19 AM, Davidlohr Bueso wrote:
>>> > > On Thu, 2015-01-22 at 15:57 +0800, WANG Chao wrote:
>>>> > >> Hi, Davidlohr
>>>> > >>
>>>> > >> On 01/21/15 at 11:46pm, Davidlohr Bueso wrote:
>>>>> > >>> On Thu, 2015-01-22 at 14:29 +0800, WANG Chao wrote:
>>>>>> > >>>> Add a new kconfig option VMACACHE_SHIFT (as a power of 2) to specify the
>>>>>> > >>>> number of slots vma cache has for each thread. Range is chosen 0-4 (1-16
>>>>>> > >>>> slots) to consider both overhead and performance penalty. Default is 2
>>>>>> > >>>> (4 slots) as it originally is, which provides good enough balance.
>>>>>> > >>>>
>>>>> > >>>
>>>>> > >>> Nack. I don't feel comfortable making scalability features of core code
>>>>> > >>> configurable.
>>>> > >>
>>>> > >> Out of respect, is this a general rule not making scalability features
>>>> > >> of core code configurable?
>>> > >
>>> > > I doubt its a rule, just common sense. Users have no business
>>> > > configuring such low level details. The optimizations need to
>>> > > transparently work for everyone.
>> >
>> > There may sometimes be a good reason for making this kind of
>> > thing configurable, but since there were no performance
>> > numbers in the changelog, I have not seen any such reason for
>> > this particular change :)
> True. I didn't run any kind of benchmark, thus no numbers here. This is
> purely hypothetical.
>
> I'm glad to run some tests. For the sake of consistency, could you
> please show me a hint how do you measure at the first place? I can do
> hit-rate, but I don't know how you measure cpu cycles. Could you
> elaborate?

I don't think there's a need to look for problems where there are none.

Have you observed a performance issue that might be improved by changing
the shift here?


Thanks,
Sasha
--
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/