Re: [PATCH v3 rcu-dev] rcuperf: Measure memory footprint during kfree_rcu() test
From: Joel Fernandes
Date: Wed Jan 15 2020 - 17:45:46 EST
On Wed, Jan 15, 2020 at 02:42:51PM -0800, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> > [snip]
> > > > We can certainly refine it further but at this time I am thinking of spending
> > > > my time reviewing Lai's patches and learning some other RCU things I need to
> > > > catch up on. If you hate this patch too much, we can also defer this patch
> > > > review for a bit and I can carry it in my tree for now as it is only a patch
> > > > to test code. But honestly, in its current form I am sort of happy with it.
> > >
> > > OK, I will keep it as is for now and let's look again later on. It is not
> > > in the bucket for the upcoming merge window in any case, so we do have
> > > quite a bit of time.
> > >
> > > It is not that I hate it, but rather that I want to be able to give
> > > good answers to questions that might come up. And given that I have
> > > occasionally given certain people a hard time about their statistics,
> > > it is only reasonable to expect them to return the favor. I wouldn't
> > > want you to be caught in the crossfire. ;-)
> >
> > Since the weights were concerning, I was thinking of just using a weight of
> > (1 / N) where N is the number of samples. Essentially taking the average.
> > That could be simple enough and does not cause your concerns with weight
> > tuning. I tested it and looks good, I'll post it shortly.
>
> YES!!! ;-)
>
> Snapshot mem_begin before entering the loop. For the mean value to
> be solid, you need at least 20-30 samples, which might mean upping the
> default for kfree_loops. Have an "unsigned long long" to accumulate the
> sum, which should avoid any possibility of overflow for current systems
> and for all systems for kfree_loops less than PAGE_SIZE. At which point,
> forget the "%" stuff and just sum up the si_mem_available() on each pass
> through the loop.
>
> Do the division on exit from the loop, preferably checking for divide
> by zero.
>
> Straightforward, fast, reasonably reliable, and easy to defend.
I mostly did it along these lines. Hopefully the latest posting is reasonable
enough ;-) I sent it twice because I messed up the authorship (sorry).
thanks,
- Joel