Re: [3/10 PATCH] inline wake_up_bit

From: Mikulas Patocka
Date: Wed Jun 25 2008 - 12:01:54 EST


And you know what? This is likely not the end yet! It's possible
spin_lock_irqXXX, __wake_up_common, waitqueue_active or bit_waitqueue
are inlines - I didn't check.
--
vda

Yes, that's 0.2% code size increase

...In just 17 callsites in entire kernel.

(or none increase, if drop
inline-__wake_up_bit.patch and apply only the other patches).

Now this is a better approach - to actually see how many
callsites are there, and inlining only where makes sense.
But in practice it's hard to do and also is changing all the time
during development. What is optimal today won't be optimal in
2.6.45 :)

Ingo's suggestion to talk to gcc people to remedy
insane call convention sounds as a more workable solution.

BTW, i386 uses regparm call convention, is similar trick
possible for sparc64?

Sparc64 has register windows: it passes arguments in registers, but it must allocate space for that registers. If the call stack is too deep (8 levels), the CPU runs out of registers and starts spilling the registers of the function 8-levels-deep to the stack.

The stack usage could be reduced to 176 bytes with little work from gcc developers and to 128 bytes with more work (ABI change). If you wanted to go below 128 bytes, you could use one register to indicate number of used registers and modify the spill/fill handlers to load only that number of registers and reduce the stack usage even more --- that would be a big code change in both gcc and linux.

Mikulas

To me it
seems crazy, how this code was refactored again and again over time, up to
8 levels of functions (including passing a pointer to a method). In 2.0.x
kernel series, it was just a single call to wake up a queue.

Yes, probably... If you can simplify it, everyone will be glad.
--
vda

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/