Re: [PATCH v8 4/5] locking/qspinlock: Introduce starvation avoidance into CNA

From: Alex Kogan
Date: Tue Feb 04 2020 - 12:54:49 EST




> On Feb 4, 2020, at 12:39 PM, Waiman Long <longman@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On 2/4/20 12:27 PM, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
>> On Tue, Feb 04, 2020 at 11:54:02AM -0500, Alex Kogan wrote:
>>>> On Feb 3, 2020, at 10:47 AM, Waiman Long <longman@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 2/3/20 10:28 AM, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
>>>>> On Mon, Feb 03, 2020 at 09:59:12AM -0500, Waiman Long wrote:
>>>>>> On 2/3/20 8:45 AM, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
>>>>>>> Presumably you have a workload where CNA is actually a win? That is,
>>>>>>> what inspired you to go down this road? Which actual kernel lock is so
>>>>>>> contended on NUMA machines that we need to do this?
>>> There are quite a few actually. files_struct.file_lock, file_lock_context.flc_lock
>>> and lockref.lock are some concrete examples that get very hot in will-it-scale
>>> benchmarks.
>> Right, that's all a variant of banging on the same resources across
>> nodes. I'm not sure there's anything fundamental we can fix there.
Not much, except gain that 2x from a better lock.

>>
>>> And then there are spinlocks in __futex_data.queues,
>>> which get hot when applications have contended (pthread) locks â
>>> LevelDB is an example.
>> A numa aware rework of futexes has been on the todo list for years :/
> Now, we are going to get that for free with this patchset:-)
Exactly!!

>>
>>> Our initial motivation was based on an observation that kernel qspinlock is not
>>> NUMA-aware. So what, you may ask. Much like people realized in the past that
>>> global spinning is bad for performance, and they switched from ticket lock to
>>> locks with local spinning (e.g., MCS), I think everyone would agree these days that
>>> bouncing a lock (and cache lines in general) across numa nodes is similarly bad.
>>> And as CNA demonstrates, we are easily leaving 2-3x speedups on the table by
>>> doing just that with the current qspinlock.
>> Actual benchmarks with performance numbers are required. It helps
>> motivate the patches as well as gives reviewers clues on how to
>> reproduce / inspect the claims made.
>>
> I think the cover-letter does have some benchmark results listed.
To clarify on that, I _used to include benchmark results in the cover letter
for previous revisions. I stopped doing that as the changes between revisions
were rather minor â maybe that is the missing part? If so, my apologies, I can
certainly publish them again.

The point is that we have numbers for actual benchmarks, plus the kernel build
robot has sent quite a few reports on positive improvements in the performance
of AIM7 and other benchmarks due to CNA (plus ARM folks noticed improvement
in their benchmarks, although I think those were mostly microbenchmarks.
Yet, it is evident that the improvements are cross-platform.)

Regards,
â Alex