Re: [PATCH] perf: fix symbol processing bug and greatly improve performance

From: Waiman Long
Date: Tue May 07 2013 - 10:19:53 EST


On 05/07/2013 03:01 AM, Ingo Molnar wrote:
* Waiman Long<Waiman.Long@xxxxxx> wrote:

When "perf record" was used on a large machine with a lot of CPUs,
the perf post-processing time could take a lot of minutes and even
hours depending on how large the resulting perf.data file was.

While running AIM7 1500-user high_systime workload on a 80-core x86-64
system with a 3.9 kernel, the workload itself took about 2 minutes
to run and the perf.data file had a size of 1108.746 MB. However,
the post-processing step took more than 10 minutes.

With a gprof-profiled perf binary, the time spent by perf was as
follows:

% cumulative self self total
time seconds seconds calls s/call s/call name
96.90 822.10 822.10 192156 0.00 0.00 dsos__find
0.81 828.96 6.86 172089958 0.00 0.00 rb_next
0.41 832.44 3.48 48539289 0.00 0.00 rb_erase

So 97% (822 seconds) of the time was spent in a single dsos_find()
function. After analyzing the call-graph data below:

-----------------------------------------------
0.00 822.12 192156/192156 map__new [6]
[7] 96.9 0.00 822.12 192156 vdso__dso_findnew [7]
822.10 0.00 192156/192156 dsos__find [8]
0.01 0.00 192156/192156 dsos__add [62]
0.01 0.00 192156/192366 dso__new [61]
0.00 0.00 1/45282525 memdup [31]
0.00 0.00 192156/192230 dso__set_long_name [91]
-----------------------------------------------
822.10 0.00 192156/192156 vdso__dso_findnew [7]
[8] 96.9 822.10 0.00 192156 dsos__find [8]
-----------------------------------------------

It was found that the vdso__dso_findnew() function failed to locate
VDSO__MAP_NAME ("[vdso]") in the dso list and have to insert a new
entry at the end for 192156 times. This problem is due to the fact that
there are 2 types of name in the dso entry - short name and long name.
The initial dso__new() adds "[vdso]" to both the short and long names.
After that, vdso__dso_findnew() modifies the long name to something
like /tmp/perf-vdso.so-NoXkDj. The dsos__find() function only compares
the long name. As a result, the same vdso entry is duplicated many
time in the dso list. This bug increases memory consumption as well
as slows the symbol processing time to a crawl.

To resolve this problem, the dsos__find() function interface was
modified to enable searching either the long name or the short
name. The vdso__dso_findnew() will now search only the short name
while the other call sites search for the long name as before.

With this change, the cpu time of perf was reduced from 848.38s to
15.77s and dsos__find() only accounted for 0.06% of the total time.

0.06 15.73 0.01 192151 0.00 0.00 dsos__find
Very nice!

I noticed that you used gprof to instrument perf itself on a call graph
level.

Does this method of profiling perf via perf:

perf record -g perf report
perf report

... produce similarly useful call-graph instrumentation for you?

If not or not quite then could you describe the differences? We could use
that to further improve perf call-graph profiling.

Thank for the comment.

The slowdown that I was trying to fix was in the "perf record" part of the profiling process, not the "perf report" part. I didn't try perf-record on perf-record as the performance counters are limited resources and I don't want resource conflicts to affect the results. As the slow-down was entirely in the user space, I decided to use gprof to do the profiling.

One thing I noticed about the gprof instrumentation and perf call-graph was that inlined functions were properly identified by gprof, but not perf. This makes sense as the compiler produces additional instrumentation code and data into the binary that can be used by gprof. That is not the case for perf.

I also looked into possible performance bottleneck in the perf-report part of the process. Most of the time was spent in sorting and merging the call-chain data and there didn't seem to have low hanging fruit for performance tuning opportunity.

Please let me know what other tests or data would you like to me to gather.

Best regards,
Longman
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