Re: [RFC 0/5] CR4 handling improvements

From: Andy Lutomirski
Date: Fri Oct 24 2014 - 18:15:00 EST


On Fri, Oct 24, 2014 at 5:41 AM, Vince Weaver <vince@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Thu, 23 Oct 2014, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 01:05:49PM -0400, Vince Weaver wrote:
>
>> > There are various reasons why you might want to start events at times
>> > other than the beginning of the program. Some people don't like kernel
>> > multiplexing so they start/stop manually if they want to switch eventsets.
>>
>> I suppose you could pre-create all events and use ioctl()s to start/stop
>> them where/when desired, this should be faster I think. But yes, this is
>> not a use-case I've though much about.
>
> The scheduling step is most of what makes the perf_event start call have
> high overhead. The other annoyance is the fact that due to the NMI
> watchdog your can successfully perf_event_open() an event group but still
> have it fail at start time, so a lot of code has to be done that does
> extraneous open/start/close calls to make sure the events really fit.
>
>> MAP_POPULATE is your friend there, but yes manually prefaulting is
>> perfectly fine too, and the HPC people are quite familiar with the
>> concept, they do it for a lot of things.
>
> MAP_POPULATE actually has noticably more overhead than manually
> prefaulting. It's on my todo list to drop ftrace on there and find out
> why, but I've been stuck chasing kernel-crashing fuzzer bugs instead in my
> spare time.

Have you checked recently? IIRC Michael Lespinasse put some effort
into improving MAP_POPULATE recently.

>
> perfctr and possibly perfmon2 would automatically pre-fault the mmap page
> for you in the kernel, so there was no need for the user to do it.
>
>
> In any case I wasn't really trying to make trouble here, it's just I came
> across the people using rdpmc w/o perf_event just the other day (on USENET
> of all places). They were so happy it worked w/o patches now, that I felt
> bad breaking it to them that there were patches floating around that were
> going to make their usecase not work anymore.
>
> I guess like all things though, you can't have anything fun and useful in
> the kernel without the security people taking it away.

I'm sympathetic enough to this use case that I don't really mind
adding a bit of code to support rdpmc=2 meaning that rdpmc is always
allowed. Switching in and out of rdpmc=2 mode will be expensive
(static key and IPI to all CPUs). PeterZ, is that OK with you?

--Andy

>
> Vince



--
Andy Lutomirski
AMA Capital Management, LLC
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