On Wednesday, June 26, 2013 9:30:02 PM UTC+8, Andrew Morton wrote:
>
> On Wed, 26 Jun 2013 11:22:48 +0200 Ingo Molnar <mi...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > except that on 32 TB
> > systems we don't spend ~2 hours initializing 8,589,934,592 page heads.
>
> That's about a million a second which is crazy slow - even my prehistoric desktop
> is 100x faster than that.
>
> Where's all this time actually being spent?
The complexity of a directory-lookup architecture to make the (intrinsically unscalable) cache-coherency protocol scalable gives you a ~1us roundtrip to remote NUMA nodes.
Probably a lot of time is spent in some memsets, and RMW cycles which are setting page bits, which are intrinsically synchronous, so the initialising core can't get to 12 or so outstanding memory transactions.
Since EFI memory ranges have a flag to state if they are zerod (which may be a fair assumption for memory on non-bootstrap processor NUMA nodes), we can probably collapse the RMWs to just writes.
A normal write will require a coherency cycle, then a fetch and a writeback when it's evicted from the cache. For this purpose, non-temporal writes would eliminate the cache line fetch and give a massive increase in bandwidth. We wouldn't even need a store-fence as the initialising core is the only one online.
Daniel