On Tue, Apr 12, 2022 at 05:07:56PM +0800, Guanghui Feng wrote:When doing fio test, there may be about 10-20% performance gap.
There are many changes and discussions:Do you actually have some real world use-cases where this improvement
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commit 1a8e1cef7603
commit 8424ecdde7df
commit 0a30c53573b0
commit 2687275a5843
When using DMA/DMA32 zone and crashkernel, disable rodata full and kfence,
mem_map will use non block/section mapping(for crashkernel requires to shrink
the region in page granularity). But it will degrade performance when doing
larging continuous mem access in kernel(memcpy/memmove, etc).
This patch firstly do block/section mapping at mem_map, reserve crashkernel
memory. And then walking pagetable to split block/section mapping
to non block/section mapping [only] for crashkernel mem. We will accelerate
mem access about 10-20% performance improvement, and reduce the cpu dTLB miss
conspicuously on some platform with this optimization.
matters? I don't deny that large memcpy over the kernel linear map may
be slightly faster but where does this really matter?
OK, Thanks.+static void init_crashkernel_pmd(pud_t *pudp, unsigned long addr,The architecture requires us to do a break-before-make here, so
+ unsigned long end, phys_addr_t phys,
+ pgprot_t prot,
+ phys_addr_t (*pgtable_alloc)(int), int flags)
+{
+ phys_addr_t map_offset;
+ unsigned long next;
+ pmd_t *pmdp;
+ pmdval_t pmdval;
+
+ pmdp = pmd_offset(pudp, addr);
+ do {
+ next = pmd_addr_end(addr, end);
+ if (!pmd_none(*pmdp) && pmd_sect(*pmdp)) {
+ phys_addr_t pte_phys = pgtable_alloc(PAGE_SHIFT);
+ pmd_clear(pmdp);
+ pmdval = PMD_TYPE_TABLE | PMD_TABLE_UXN;
+ if (flags & NO_EXEC_MAPPINGS)
+ pmdval |= PMD_TABLE_PXN;
+ __pmd_populate(pmdp, pte_phys, pmdval);
+ flush_tlb_kernel_range(addr, addr + PAGE_SIZE);
pmd_clear(), TLBI, __pmd_populate() - in this order. And that's where it
gets tricky, if the kernel happens to access this pmd range while it is
unmapped, you'd get a translation fault.