Re: [RFC PATCH 6/9] mm: zswap: drop support for non-zero same-filled pages handling

From: Johannes Weiner
Date: Thu Mar 28 2024 - 15:32:06 EST


On Mon, Mar 25, 2024 at 11:50:14PM +0000, Yosry Ahmed wrote:
> The current same-filled pages handling supports pages filled with any
> repeated word-sized pattern. However, in practice, most of these should
> be zero pages anyway. Other patterns should be nearly as common.
>
> Drop the support for non-zero same-filled pages, but keep the names of
> knobs exposed to userspace as "same_filled", which isn't entirely
> inaccurate.
>
> This yields some nice code simplification and enables a following patch
> that eliminates the need to allocate struct zswap_entry for those pages
> completely.
>
> There is also a very small performance improvement observed over 50 runs
> of kernel build test (kernbench) comparing the mean build time on a
> skylake machine when building the kernel in a cgroup v1 container with a
> 3G limit:
>
> base patched % diff
> real 70.167 69.915 -0.359%
> user 2953.068 2956.147 +0.104%
> sys 2612.811 2594.718 -0.692%
>
> This probably comes from more optimized operations like memchr_inv() and
> clear_highpage(). Note that the percentage of zero-filled pages during
> this test was only around 1.5% on average, and was not affected by this
> patch. Practical workloads could have a larger proportion of such pages
> (e.g. Johannes observed around 10% [1]), so the performance improvement
> should be larger.
>
> [1]https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240320210716.GH294822@xxxxxxxxxxx/
>
> Signed-off-by: Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@xxxxxxxxxx>

This is an interesting direction to pursue, but I actually thinkg it
doesn't go far enough. Either way, I think it needs more data.

1) How frequent are non-zero-same-filled pages? Difficult to
generalize, but if you could gather some from your fleet, that
would be useful. If you can devise a portable strategy, I'd also be
more than happy to gather this on ours (although I think you have
more widespread zswap use, whereas we have more disk swap.)

2) The fact that we're doing any of this pattern analysis in zswap at
all strikes me as a bit misguided. Being efficient about repetitive
patterns is squarely in the domain of a compression algorithm. Do
we not trust e.g. zstd to handle this properly?

I'm guessing this goes back to inefficient packing from something
like zbud, which would waste half a page on one repeating byte.

But zsmalloc can do 32 byte objects. It's also a batching slab
allocator, where storing a series of small, same-sized objects is
quite fast.

Add to that the additional branches, the additional kmap, the extra
scanning of every single page for patterns - all in the fast path
of zswap, when we already know that the vast majority of incoming
pages will need to be properly compressed anyway.

Maybe it's time to get rid of the special handling entirely?