Re: [PATCH] mm: remove all the slab allocators

From: Jeff Xie
Date: Sun Apr 02 2023 - 01:10:35 EST


On Sat, Apr 1, 2023 at 5:47 PM Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> As the SLOB removal is on track and the SLAB removal is planned, I have
> realized - why should we stop there and not remove also SLUB? What's a
> slab allocator good for in 2023? The RAM sizes are getting larger and
> the modules cheaper [1]. The object constructor trick was perhaps
> interesting in 1994, but not with contemporary CPUs. So all the slab
> allocator does today is just adding an unnecessary layer of complexity
> over the page allocator.
>
> Thus, with this patch, all three slab allocators are removed, and only a
> layer that passes everything to the page allocator remains in the slab.h
> and mm/slab_common.c files. This will allow users to gradually
> transition away and use the page allocator directly. To summarize the
> advantages:
>
> - Less code to maintain: over 13k lines are removed by this patch, and
> more could be removed if I wast^Wspent more time on this, and later as
> users are transitioned from the legacy layer. This no longer needs a
> separate subsystem so remove it from MAINTAINERS (I hope I can keep the
> kernel.org account anyway, though).
>
> - Simplified MEMCG_KMEM accounting: while I was lazy and just marked it
> BROKEN in this patch, it should be trivial to use the page memcg
> accounting now that we use the page allocator. The per-object
> accounting went through several iterations in the past and was always
> complex and added overhead. Page accounting is much simpler by
> comparison.
>
> - Simplified KASAN and friends: also was lazy in this patch so they
> can't be enabled but should be easy to fix up and work just on the
> page level.
>
> - Simpler debugging: just use debug_pagealloc=on, no need to look up the
> exact syntax of the absurdly complex slub_debug parameter.

This really simplifies the complexity of dealing with memory problems
in the production environment,
and I hope it can be merged into the linux kernel soon.

Acked-by: Jeff Xie <xiehuan09@xxxxxxxxx>

--
Thanks,
JeffXie