Re: RCU related performance regression in 3.3

From: Paul E. McKenney
Date: Tue Apr 10 2012 - 12:18:07 EST


On Fri, Apr 06, 2012 at 11:18:03AM +0200, Pascal Chapperon wrote:
> > Message du 05/04/12 16:40
> > De : "Paul E. McKenney"
> > A : "Pascal CHAPPERON"
> > Copie à : "Josh Boyer" , linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, kernel-team@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > Objet : Re: RCU related performance regression in 3.3
> >
> > On Thu, Apr 05, 2012 at 04:15:33PM +0200, Pascal CHAPPERON wrote:
> > > Hello,
> > >
> > > I didn't notice any significant slowdown while the system is up and running.
> A full kernel compilation (make -j 16) takes 14mn with both 3.2.10 and 3.3.0.

OK, good.

> > OK, so the natural approach is to disable CONFIG_RCU_FAST_NO_HZ at
> > boot time. Unfortunately, you appear to need it to remain disabled
> > through at least filesystem mounting, which if I understand correctly
> > happens long after system_state gets set to SYSTEM_RUNNING.
> >
> In fact, I need it to remain disable until all the systemd units are completed.
> Some units, such as NetworkManager can take longer time to complete with
> RCU_FAST_NO_HZ enabled.
> And i need it to be disabled at shutdown, as umounting cgroups, sysfs, etc.
> plus old-root mounting can take one plain second for each umounting.

OK...

> > If RCU has some way to find out when init is complete, I can easily
> > make it so that CONFIG_RCU_FAST_NO_HZ optimizes for speed during boot
> > and energy efficiency during runtime.
> >
> I said that I didn't noticed significant slowdown during runtime, but my
> laptop usage is basic. Some specific tasks similar to systemd may
> perhaps be impacted by this feature.
> I can test a task/program that could stress RCU_FAST_NO_HZ if any ?

One thing to try first -- could you please check boot/shutdown slowdown
with the patch below?

But yes, there are things like modifying netfilter rules and updating
security configuration that might be affected.

> > One thing I could easily do would be to provide a sysfs parameter or
> > some such that allows the boot process to enable energy-efficiency
> > mode at runtime. I would much prefer to make this automatic, though.
> >
> So the feature is disabled until you trigger a sysfs parameter, and can be
> disabled before shutdown ? It would be fair, at least for hardware like my
> own.

That is the thought, though again I would really really prefer that this
be automated.

> > Other thoughts?
> >
> Do you think that the culprit is a buggy hardware in my laptop, or the
> number of cpu/threads ?

Maybe just more filesystems to mount?

> > Thanx, Paul
> >
>
> Resent in plain text because rejected. Sorry, i forgot the rules.

No problem! Please see below for the patch.

Thanx, Paul

------------------------------------------------------------------------

rcu: Decrease RCU_FAST_NO_HZ timer interval

Use of RCU_FAST_NO_HZ reportedly significantly slowed boot time in
configurations involving lots of filesystem mounts. This commit attempts
to work around this by decreasing the RCU_FAST_NO_HZ timer interval
from 6 jiffies down to 3 jiffies.

Reported-by: Pascal Chapperon <pascal.chapperon@xxxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paul.mckenney@xxxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

diff --git a/kernel/rcutree_plugin.h b/kernel/rcutree_plugin.h
index c023464..980a4bb 100644
--- a/kernel/rcutree_plugin.h
+++ b/kernel/rcutree_plugin.h
@@ -1975,7 +1975,7 @@ static void rcu_prepare_for_idle(int cpu)
*/
#define RCU_IDLE_FLUSHES 5 /* Number of dyntick-idle tries. */
#define RCU_IDLE_OPT_FLUSHES 3 /* Optional dyntick-idle tries. */
-#define RCU_IDLE_GP_DELAY 6 /* Roughly one grace period. */
+#define RCU_IDLE_GP_DELAY 3 /* Roughly one grace period. */
#define RCU_IDLE_LAZY_GP_DELAY (6 * HZ) /* Roughly six seconds. */

static DEFINE_PER_CPU(int, rcu_dyntick_drain);

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