On Thu 15-10-20 11:08:43, Jan Kara wrote:
On Thu 15-10-20 08:46:01, NeilBrown wrote:
On Wed, Oct 14 2020, Jan Kara wrote:
On Wed 14-10-20 16:47:06, kernel test robot wrote:
Greeting,
FYI, we noticed a -15.3% regression of will-it-scale.per_process_ops due
to commit:
commit: 8d92890bd6b8502d6aee4b37430ae6444ade7a8c ("mm/writeback: discard
NR_UNSTABLE_NFS, use NR_WRITEBACK instead")
https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git master
Thanks for report but it doesn't quite make sense to me. If we omit
reporting & NFS changes in that commit (which is code not excercised by
this benchmark), what remains are changes like:
nr_pages += node_page_state(pgdat, NR_FILE_DIRTY);
- nr_pages += node_page_state(pgdat, NR_UNSTABLE_NFS);
nr_pages += node_page_state(pgdat, NR_WRITEBACK);
...
- nr_reclaimable = global_node_page_state(NR_FILE_DIRTY) +
- global_node_page_state(NR_UNSTABLE_NFS);
+ nr_reclaimable = global_node_page_state(NR_FILE_DIRTY);
...
- gdtc->dirty = global_node_page_state(NR_FILE_DIRTY) +
- global_node_page_state(NR_UNSTABLE_NFS);
+ gdtc->dirty = global_node_page_state(NR_FILE_DIRTY);
So if there's any negative performance impact of these changes, they're
likely due to code alignment changes or something like that... So I don't
think there's much to do here since optimal code alignment is highly specific
to a particular CPU etc.
I agree, it seems odd.
Removing NR_UNSTABLE_NFS from enum node_stat_item would renumber all the
following value and would, I think, change NR_DIRTIED from 32 to 31.
Might that move something to a different cache line and change some
contention?
Interesting theory, it could be possible.
That would be easy enough to test: just re-add NR_UNSTABLE_NFS.
Yeah, easy enough to test. Patch for this is attached. 0-day people, can
you check whether applying this patch changes anything in your perf
numbers?
Forgot the patch. Attached now.
Honza