0day reported a regression on a microbenchmark which is intended to
stress the TLB flushing path:
https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220317090415.GE735@xsang-OptiPlex-9020/
It pointed at a commit from Nadav which intended to remove retpoline
overhead in the TLB flushing path by taking the 'cond'-ition in
on_each_cpu_cond_mask(), pre-calculating it, and incorporating it into
'cpumask'. That allowed the code to use a bunch of earlier direct
calls instead of later indirect calls that need a retpoline.
But, in practice, threads can go idle (and into lazy TLB mode where
they don't need to flush their TLB) between the early and late calls.
It works in this direction and not in the other because TLB-flushing
threads tend to hold mmap_lock for write. Contention on that lock
causes threads to _go_ idle right in this early/late window.
There was not any performance data in the original commit specific
to the retpoline overhead. I did a few tests on a system with
retpolines:
https://lore.kernel.org/all/[email protected]/
which showed a possible small win. But, that small win pales in
comparison with the bigger loss induced on non-retpoline systems.
Revert the patch that removed the retpolines. This was not a
clean revert, but it was self-contained enough not to be too painful.
Signed-off-by: Dave Hansen <[email protected]>
Reported-by: kernel test robot <[email protected]>
Fixes: 6035152d8eeb ("x86/mm/tlb: Open-code on_each_cpu_cond_mask() for tlb_is_not_lazy()")
Cc: Nadav Amit <[email protected]>
Cc: Ingo Molnar <[email protected]>
Cc: Andy Lutomirski <[email protected]>
Cc: Peter Zijlstra <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
---
arch/x86/mm/tlb.c | 37 +++++--------------------------------
1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 32 deletions(-)
diff --git a/arch/x86/mm/tlb.c b/arch/x86/mm/tlb.c
index 1e6513f95133..161984b44331 100644
--- a/arch/x86/mm/tlb.c
+++ b/arch/x86/mm/tlb.c
@@ -854,13 +854,11 @@ static void flush_tlb_func(void *info)
nr_invalidate);
}
-static bool tlb_is_not_lazy(int cpu)
+static bool tlb_is_not_lazy(int cpu, void *data)
{
return !per_cpu(cpu_tlbstate_shared.is_lazy, cpu);
}
-static DEFINE_PER_CPU(cpumask_t, flush_tlb_mask);
-
DEFINE_PER_CPU_SHARED_ALIGNED(struct tlb_state_shared, cpu_tlbstate_shared);
EXPORT_PER_CPU_SYMBOL(cpu_tlbstate_shared);
@@ -889,36 +887,11 @@ STATIC_NOPV void native_flush_tlb_multi(const struct cpumask *cpumask,
* up on the new contents of what used to be page tables, while
* doing a speculative memory access.
*/
- if (info->freed_tables) {
+ if (info->freed_tables)
on_each_cpu_mask(cpumask, flush_tlb_func, (void *)info, true);
- } else {
- /*
- * Although we could have used on_each_cpu_cond_mask(),
- * open-coding it has performance advantages, as it eliminates
- * the need for indirect calls or retpolines. In addition, it
- * allows to use a designated cpumask for evaluating the
- * condition, instead of allocating one.
- *
- * This code works under the assumption that there are no nested
- * TLB flushes, an assumption that is already made in
- * flush_tlb_mm_range().
- *
- * cond_cpumask is logically a stack-local variable, but it is
- * more efficient to have it off the stack and not to allocate
- * it on demand. Preemption is disabled and this code is
- * non-reentrant.
- */
- struct cpumask *cond_cpumask = this_cpu_ptr(&flush_tlb_mask);
- int cpu;
-
- cpumask_clear(cond_cpumask);
-
- for_each_cpu(cpu, cpumask) {
- if (tlb_is_not_lazy(cpu))
- __cpumask_set_cpu(cpu, cond_cpumask);
- }
- on_each_cpu_mask(cond_cpumask, flush_tlb_func, (void *)info, true);
- }
+ else
+ on_each_cpu_cond_mask(tlb_is_not_lazy, flush_tlb_func,
+ (void *)info, 1, cpumask);
}
void flush_tlb_multi(const struct cpumask *cpumask,
--
2.34.0