[PATCH v4 0/4] Introduce Per-CPU Work helpers (was QPW)

From: Leonardo Bras

Date: Mon May 18 2026 - 21:28:51 EST


The problem:
Some places in the kernel implement a parallel programming strategy
consisting on local_locks() for most of the work, and some rare remote
operations are scheduled on target cpu. This keeps cache bouncing low since
cacheline tends to be mostly local, and avoids the cost of locks in non-RT
kernels, even though the very few remote operations will be expensive due
to scheduling overhead.

On the other hand, for RT workloads this can represent a problem: getting
an important workload scheduled out to deal with remote requests is
sure to introduce unexpected deadline misses.

The idea:
Currently with PREEMPT_RT=y, local_locks() become per-cpu spinlocks.
In this case, instead of scheduling work on a remote cpu, it should
be safe to grab that remote cpu's per-cpu spinlock and run the required
work locally. That major cost, which is un/locking in every local function,
already happens in PREEMPT_RT.

Also, there is no need to worry about extra cache bouncing:
The cacheline invalidation already happens due to schedule_work_on().

This will avoid schedule_work_on(), and thus avoid scheduling-out an
RT workload.

Proposed solution:
A new interface called PerCPU Work (PW), which should replace
Work Queue in the above mentioned use case.

If CONFIG_PWLOCKS=n this interfaces just wraps the current
local_locks + WorkQueue behavior, so no expected change in runtime.

If CONFIG_PWLOCKS=y, and kernel boot option pwlocks=1,
pw_queue_on(cpu,...) will lock that cpu's per-cpu structure
and perform work on it locally.

v3->v4:
- Mechanism name changed from QPW to PW/PWLOCKS. Helper funcions / API,
file names and config options renamed accordingly.
- All members of the Per-CPU Work API now start with the same prefix
(Frederic Weisbecker)
- Improved style a bit, reviewed documentation

v2->v3:
- Use preempt_disable/preempt_enable on !CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT (Vlastimil Babka).
- Improve documentation to include local_qpw_lock on operations table
(Leonardo Bras).
- Enable qpw=1 automatically if CPU isolation is enabled (Vlastimil Babka).

v1->v2:
- Introduce local_qpw_lock and unlock functions, move preempt_disable/
preempt_enable to it (Leonardo Bras). This reduces performance
overhead of the patch.
- Documentation and changelog typo fixes (Leonardo Bras).
- Fix places where preempt_disable/preempt_enable was not being
correctly performed.
- Add performance measurements.

RFC->v1:

- Introduce CONFIG_QPW and qpw= kernel boot option to enable
remote spinlocking and execution even on !CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT
kernels (Leonardo Bras).
- Move buffer_head draining to separate workqueue (Marcelo Tosatti).
- Convert mlock per-CPU page lists to QPW (Marcelo Tosatti).
- Drop memcontrol convertion (as isolated CPUs are not targets
of queue_work_on anymore).
- Rebase SLUB against Vlastimil's slab/next.
- Add basic document for QPW (Waiman Long).

The performance numbers, as measured by the following test program,
are as follows (v3, mechanics not changed since then):

CONFIG_PREEMPT_DYNAMIC=y
Unpatched kernel: 60 cycles
Patched kernel, CONFIG_QPW=n: 62 cycles
Patched kernel, CONFIG_QPW=y, qpw=0: 62 cycles
Patched kernel, CONFIG_QPW=y, qpw=1: 75 cycles

CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT:
Unpatched kernel: 95 cycles
Patched kernel, CONFIG_QPW=y, qpw=0: 99 cycles
Patched kernel, CONFIG_QPW=y, qpw=1: 97 cycles

kmalloc_bench.c:
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/timex.h>
#include <linux/preempt.h>
#include <linux/irqflags.h>
#include <linux/vmalloc.h>

MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
MODULE_AUTHOR("Gemini AI");
MODULE_DESCRIPTION("A simple kmalloc performance benchmark");

static int size = 64; // Default allocation size in bytes
module_param(size, int, 0644);

static int iterations = 9000000; // Default number of iterations
module_param(iterations, int, 0644);

static int __init kmalloc_bench_init(void) {
void **ptrs;
cycles_t start, end;
uint64_t total_cycles;
int i;
pr_info("kmalloc_bench: Starting test (size=%d, iterations=%d)\n", size, iterations);

// Allocate an array to store pointers to avoid immediate kfree-reuse optimization
ptrs = vmalloc(sizeof(void *) * iterations);
if (!ptrs) {
pr_err("kmalloc_bench: Failed to allocate pointer array\n");
return -ENOMEM;
}

preempt_disable();
start = get_cycles();

for (i = 0; i < iterations; i++) {
ptrs[i] = kmalloc(size, GFP_ATOMIC);
}

end = get_cycles();

total_cycles = end - start;
preempt_enable();

pr_info("kmalloc_bench: Total cycles for %d allocs: %llu\n", iterations, total_cycles);
pr_info("kmalloc_bench: Avg cycles per kmalloc: %llu\n", total_cycles / iterations);

// Cleanup
for (i = 0; i < iterations; i++) {
kfree(ptrs[i]);
}
vfree(ptrs);

return 0;
}

static void __exit kmalloc_bench_exit(void) {
pr_info("kmalloc_bench: Module unloaded\n");
}

module_init(kmalloc_bench_init);
module_exit(kmalloc_bench_exit);

The following testcase triggers lru_add_drain_all on an isolated CPU
(that does sys_write to a file before entering its realtime
loop).

/*
* Simulates a low latency loop program that is interrupted
* due to lru_add_drain_all. To trigger lru_add_drain_all, run:
*
* blockdev --flushbufs /dev/sdX
*
*/
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <pthread.h>
#include <sched.h>
#include <unistd.h>

int cpu;

static void *run(void *arg)
{
pthread_t current_thread;
cpu_set_t cpuset;
int ret, nrloops;
struct sched_param sched_p;
pid_t pid;
int fd;
char buf[] = "xxxxxxxxxxx";

CPU_ZERO(&cpuset);
CPU_SET(cpu, &cpuset);

current_thread = pthread_self();
ret = pthread_setaffinity_np(current_thread, sizeof(cpu_set_t), &cpuset);
if (ret) {
perror("pthread_setaffinity_np failed\n");
exit(0);
}

memset(&sched_p, 0, sizeof(struct sched_param));
sched_p.sched_priority = 1;
pid = gettid();
ret = sched_setscheduler(pid, SCHED_FIFO, &sched_p);
if (ret) {
perror("sched_setscheduler");
exit(0);
}

fd = open("/tmp/tmpfile", O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC);
if (fd == -1) {
perror("open");
exit(0);
}

ret = write(fd, buf, sizeof(buf));
if (ret == -1) {
perror("write");
exit(0);
}

do {
nrloops = nrloops+2;
nrloops--;
} while (1);
}

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
int fd, ret;
pthread_t thread;
long val;
char *endptr, *str;
struct sched_param sched_p;
pid_t pid;

if (argc != 2) {
printf("usage: %s cpu-nr\n", argv[0]);
printf("where CPU number is the CPU to pin thread to\n");
exit(0);
}
str = argv[1];
cpu = strtol(str, &endptr, 10);
if (cpu < 0) {
printf("strtol returns %d\n", cpu);
exit(0);
}
printf("cpunr=%d\n", cpu);

memset(&sched_p, 0, sizeof(struct sched_param));
sched_p.sched_priority = 1;
pid = getpid();
ret = sched_setscheduler(pid, SCHED_FIFO, &sched_p);
if (ret) {
perror("sched_setscheduler");
exit(0);
}

pthread_create(&thread, NULL, run, NULL);

sleep(5000);

pthread_join(thread, NULL);
}

Leonardo Bras (3):
Introducing pw_lock() and per-cpu queue & flush work
swap: apply new pw_queue_on() interface
slub: apply new pw_queue_on() interface

Marcelo Tosatti (1):
mm/swap: move bh draining into a separate workqueue

MAINTAINERS | 7 +
.../admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt | 10 +
Documentation/locking/pwlocks.rst | 76 +++++
init/Kconfig | 35 +++
kernel/Makefile | 2 +
include/linux/pwlocks.h | 265 ++++++++++++++++++
mm/internal.h | 4 +-
kernel/pwlocks.c | 47 ++++
mm/mlock.c | 51 +++-
mm/page_alloc.c | 2 +-
mm/slub.c | 142 +++++-----
mm/swap.c | 109 ++++---
12 files changed, 624 insertions(+), 126 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 Documentation/locking/pwlocks.rst
create mode 100644 include/linux/pwlocks.h
create mode 100644 kernel/pwlocks.c


base-commit: 5200f5f493f79f14bbdc349e402a40dfb32f23c8
--
2.54.0