Message ID | 20240311150058.1122862-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | Swap-out mTHP without splitting | expand |
Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@arm.com> writes: > Hi All, > > This series adds support for swapping out multi-size THP (mTHP) without needing > to first split the large folio via split_huge_page_to_list_to_order(). It > closely follows the approach already used to swap-out PMD-sized THP. > > There are a couple of reasons for swapping out mTHP without splitting: > > - Performance: It is expensive to split a large folio and under extreme memory > pressure some workloads regressed performance when using 64K mTHP vs 4K > small folios because of this extra cost in the swap-out path. This series > not only eliminates the regression but makes it faster to swap out 64K mTHP > vs 4K small folios. > > - Memory fragmentation avoidance: If we can avoid splitting a large folio > memory is less likely to become fragmented, making it easier to re-allocate > a large folio in future. > > - Performance: Enables a separate series [4] to swap-in whole mTHPs, which > means we won't lose the TLB-efficiency benefits of mTHP once the memory has > been through a swap cycle. > > I've done what I thought was the smallest change possible, and as a result, this > approach is only employed when the swap is backed by a non-rotating block device > (just as PMD-sized THP is supported today). Discussion against the RFC concluded > that this is sufficient. > > > Performance Testing > =================== > > I've run some swap performance tests on Ampere Altra VM (arm64) with 8 CPUs. The > VM is set up with a 35G block ram device as the swap device and the test is run > from inside a memcg limited to 40G memory. I've then run `usemem` from > vm-scalability with 70 processes, each allocating and writing 1G of memory. I've > repeated everything 6 times and taken the mean performance improvement relative > to 4K page baseline: > > | alloc size | baseline | + this series | > | | v6.6-rc4+anonfolio | | > |:-----------|--------------------:|--------------------:| > | 4K Page | 0.0% | 1.4% | > | 64K THP | -14.6% | 44.2% | > | 2M THP | 87.4% | 97.7% | > > So with this change, the 64K swap performance goes from a 15% regression to a > 44% improvement. 4K and 2M swap improves slightly too. I don't understand why the performance of 2M THP improves. The swap entry allocation becomes a little slower. Can you provide some perf-profile to root cause it? -- Best Regards, Huang, Ying > This test also acts as a good stress test for swap and, more generally mm. A > couple of existing bugs were found as a result [5] [6]. > > > --- > The series applies against mm-unstable (d7182786dd0a). Although I've > additionally been running with a couple of extra fixes to avoid the issues at > [6]. > > > Changes since v3 [3] > ==================== > > - Renamed SWAP_NEXT_NULL -> SWAP_NEXT_INVALID (per Huang, Ying) > - Simplified max offset calculation (per Huang, Ying) > - Reinstated struct percpu_cluster to contain per-cluster, per-order `next` > offset (per Huang, Ying) > - Removed swap_alloc_large() and merged its functionality into > scan_swap_map_slots() (per Huang, Ying) > - Avoid extra cost of folio ref and lock due to removal of CLUSTER_FLAG_HUGE > by freeing swap entries in batches (see patch 2) (per DavidH) > - vmscan splits folio if its partially mapped (per Barry Song, DavidH) > - Avoid splitting in MADV_PAGEOUT path (per Barry Song) > - Dropped "mm: swap: Simplify ssd behavior when scanner steals entry" patch > since it's not actually a problem for THP as I first thought. > > > Changes since v2 [2] > ==================== > > - Reuse scan_swap_map_try_ssd_cluster() between order-0 and order > 0 > allocation. This required some refactoring to make everything work nicely > (new patches 2 and 3). > - Fix bug where nr_swap_pages would say there are pages available but the > scanner would not be able to allocate them because they were reserved for the > per-cpu allocator. We now allow stealing of order-0 entries from the high > order per-cpu clusters (in addition to exisiting stealing from order-0 > per-cpu clusters). > > > Changes since v1 [1] > ==================== > > - patch 1: > - Use cluster_set_count() instead of cluster_set_count_flag() in > swap_alloc_cluster() since we no longer have any flag to set. I was unable > to kill cluster_set_count_flag() as proposed against v1 as other call > sites depend explicitly setting flags to 0. > - patch 2: > - Moved large_next[] array into percpu_cluster to make it per-cpu > (recommended by Huang, Ying). > - large_next[] array is dynamically allocated because PMD_ORDER is not > compile-time constant for powerpc (fixes build error). > > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231010142111.3997780-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ > [2] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231017161302.2518826-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ > [3] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231025144546.577640-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ > [4] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240304081348.197341-1-21cnbao@gmail.com/ > [5] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240311084426.447164-1-ying.huang@intel.com/ > [6] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/79dad067-1d26-4867-8eb1-941277b9a77b@arm.com/ > > Thanks, > Ryan > > > Ryan Roberts (6): > mm: swap: Remove CLUSTER_FLAG_HUGE from swap_cluster_info:flags > mm: swap: free_swap_and_cache_nr() as batched free_swap_and_cache() > mm: swap: Simplify struct percpu_cluster > mm: swap: Allow storage of all mTHP orders > mm: vmscan: Avoid split during shrink_folio_list() > mm: madvise: Avoid split during MADV_PAGEOUT and MADV_COLD > > include/linux/pgtable.h | 28 ++++ > include/linux/swap.h | 33 +++-- > mm/huge_memory.c | 3 - > mm/internal.h | 48 +++++++ > mm/madvise.c | 101 ++++++++------ > mm/memory.c | 13 +- > mm/swapfile.c | 298 ++++++++++++++++++++++------------------ > mm/vmscan.c | 9 +- > 8 files changed, 332 insertions(+), 201 deletions(-) > > -- > 2.25.1
On 11/03/2024 15:00, Ryan Roberts wrote: > Hi All, > > This series adds support for swapping out multi-size THP (mTHP) without needing > to first split the large folio via split_huge_page_to_list_to_order(). It > closely follows the approach already used to swap-out PMD-sized THP. > > There are a couple of reasons for swapping out mTHP without splitting: > > - Performance: It is expensive to split a large folio and under extreme memory > pressure some workloads regressed performance when using 64K mTHP vs 4K > small folios because of this extra cost in the swap-out path. This series > not only eliminates the regression but makes it faster to swap out 64K mTHP > vs 4K small folios. > > - Memory fragmentation avoidance: If we can avoid splitting a large folio > memory is less likely to become fragmented, making it easier to re-allocate > a large folio in future. > > - Performance: Enables a separate series [4] to swap-in whole mTHPs, which > means we won't lose the TLB-efficiency benefits of mTHP once the memory has > been through a swap cycle. > > I've done what I thought was the smallest change possible, and as a result, this > approach is only employed when the swap is backed by a non-rotating block device > (just as PMD-sized THP is supported today). Discussion against the RFC concluded > that this is sufficient. > > > Performance Testing > =================== > > I've run some swap performance tests on Ampere Altra VM (arm64) with 8 CPUs. The > VM is set up with a 35G block ram device as the swap device and the test is run > from inside a memcg limited to 40G memory. I've then run `usemem` from > vm-scalability with 70 processes, each allocating and writing 1G of memory. I've > repeated everything 6 times and taken the mean performance improvement relative > to 4K page baseline: > > | alloc size | baseline | + this series | > | | v6.6-rc4+anonfolio | | Oops, just noticed I failed to update these column headers. The baseline is actually mm-unstable (d7182786dd0a) which is based on v6.8-rc5 and already contains "anonfolio" - now called mTHP. > |:-----------|--------------------:|--------------------:| > | 4K Page | 0.0% | 1.4% | > | 64K THP | -14.6% | 44.2% | > | 2M THP | 87.4% | 97.7% | > > So with this change, the 64K swap performance goes from a 15% regression to a > 44% improvement. 4K and 2M swap improves slightly too. > > This test also acts as a good stress test for swap and, more generally mm. A > couple of existing bugs were found as a result [5] [6]. > > > --- > The series applies against mm-unstable (d7182786dd0a). Although I've > additionally been running with a couple of extra fixes to avoid the issues at > [6]. > > > Changes since v3 [3] > ==================== > > - Renamed SWAP_NEXT_NULL -> SWAP_NEXT_INVALID (per Huang, Ying) > - Simplified max offset calculation (per Huang, Ying) > - Reinstated struct percpu_cluster to contain per-cluster, per-order `next` > offset (per Huang, Ying) > - Removed swap_alloc_large() and merged its functionality into > scan_swap_map_slots() (per Huang, Ying) > - Avoid extra cost of folio ref and lock due to removal of CLUSTER_FLAG_HUGE > by freeing swap entries in batches (see patch 2) (per DavidH) > - vmscan splits folio if its partially mapped (per Barry Song, DavidH) > - Avoid splitting in MADV_PAGEOUT path (per Barry Song) > - Dropped "mm: swap: Simplify ssd behavior when scanner steals entry" patch > since it's not actually a problem for THP as I first thought. > > > Changes since v2 [2] > ==================== > > - Reuse scan_swap_map_try_ssd_cluster() between order-0 and order > 0 > allocation. This required some refactoring to make everything work nicely > (new patches 2 and 3). > - Fix bug where nr_swap_pages would say there are pages available but the > scanner would not be able to allocate them because they were reserved for the > per-cpu allocator. We now allow stealing of order-0 entries from the high > order per-cpu clusters (in addition to exisiting stealing from order-0 > per-cpu clusters). > > > Changes since v1 [1] > ==================== > > - patch 1: > - Use cluster_set_count() instead of cluster_set_count_flag() in > swap_alloc_cluster() since we no longer have any flag to set. I was unable > to kill cluster_set_count_flag() as proposed against v1 as other call > sites depend explicitly setting flags to 0. > - patch 2: > - Moved large_next[] array into percpu_cluster to make it per-cpu > (recommended by Huang, Ying). > - large_next[] array is dynamically allocated because PMD_ORDER is not > compile-time constant for powerpc (fixes build error). > > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231010142111.3997780-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ > [2] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231017161302.2518826-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ > [3] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231025144546.577640-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ > [4] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240304081348.197341-1-21cnbao@gmail.com/ > [5] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240311084426.447164-1-ying.huang@intel.com/ > [6] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/79dad067-1d26-4867-8eb1-941277b9a77b@arm.com/ > > Thanks, > Ryan > > > Ryan Roberts (6): > mm: swap: Remove CLUSTER_FLAG_HUGE from swap_cluster_info:flags > mm: swap: free_swap_and_cache_nr() as batched free_swap_and_cache() > mm: swap: Simplify struct percpu_cluster > mm: swap: Allow storage of all mTHP orders > mm: vmscan: Avoid split during shrink_folio_list() > mm: madvise: Avoid split during MADV_PAGEOUT and MADV_COLD > > include/linux/pgtable.h | 28 ++++ > include/linux/swap.h | 33 +++-- > mm/huge_memory.c | 3 - > mm/internal.h | 48 +++++++ > mm/madvise.c | 101 ++++++++------ > mm/memory.c | 13 +- > mm/swapfile.c | 298 ++++++++++++++++++++++------------------ > mm/vmscan.c | 9 +- > 8 files changed, 332 insertions(+), 201 deletions(-) > > -- > 2.25.1 >
On 12/03/2024 08:01, Huang, Ying wrote: > Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@arm.com> writes: > >> Hi All, >> >> This series adds support for swapping out multi-size THP (mTHP) without needing >> to first split the large folio via split_huge_page_to_list_to_order(). It >> closely follows the approach already used to swap-out PMD-sized THP. >> >> There are a couple of reasons for swapping out mTHP without splitting: >> >> - Performance: It is expensive to split a large folio and under extreme memory >> pressure some workloads regressed performance when using 64K mTHP vs 4K >> small folios because of this extra cost in the swap-out path. This series >> not only eliminates the regression but makes it faster to swap out 64K mTHP >> vs 4K small folios. >> >> - Memory fragmentation avoidance: If we can avoid splitting a large folio >> memory is less likely to become fragmented, making it easier to re-allocate >> a large folio in future. >> >> - Performance: Enables a separate series [4] to swap-in whole mTHPs, which >> means we won't lose the TLB-efficiency benefits of mTHP once the memory has >> been through a swap cycle. >> >> I've done what I thought was the smallest change possible, and as a result, this >> approach is only employed when the swap is backed by a non-rotating block device >> (just as PMD-sized THP is supported today). Discussion against the RFC concluded >> that this is sufficient. >> >> >> Performance Testing >> =================== >> >> I've run some swap performance tests on Ampere Altra VM (arm64) with 8 CPUs. The >> VM is set up with a 35G block ram device as the swap device and the test is run >> from inside a memcg limited to 40G memory. I've then run `usemem` from >> vm-scalability with 70 processes, each allocating and writing 1G of memory. I've >> repeated everything 6 times and taken the mean performance improvement relative >> to 4K page baseline: >> >> | alloc size | baseline | + this series | >> | | v6.6-rc4+anonfolio | | >> |:-----------|--------------------:|--------------------:| >> | 4K Page | 0.0% | 1.4% | >> | 64K THP | -14.6% | 44.2% | >> | 2M THP | 87.4% | 97.7% | >> >> So with this change, the 64K swap performance goes from a 15% regression to a >> 44% improvement. 4K and 2M swap improves slightly too. > > I don't understand why the performance of 2M THP improves. The swap > entry allocation becomes a little slower. Can you provide some > perf-profile to root cause it? I didn't post the stdev, which is quite large (~10%), so that may explain some of it: | kernel | mean_rel | std_rel | |:---------|-----------:|----------:| | base-4K | 0.0% | 5.5% | | base-64K | -14.6% | 3.8% | | base-2M | 87.4% | 10.6% | | v4-4K | 1.4% | 3.7% | | v4-64K | 44.2% | 11.8% | | v4-2M | 97.7% | 13.3% | Regardless, I'll do some perf profiling and post results shortly. > > -- > Best Regards, > Huang, Ying > >> This test also acts as a good stress test for swap and, more generally mm. A >> couple of existing bugs were found as a result [5] [6]. >> >> >> --- >> The series applies against mm-unstable (d7182786dd0a). Although I've >> additionally been running with a couple of extra fixes to avoid the issues at >> [6]. >> >> >> Changes since v3 [3] >> ==================== >> >> - Renamed SWAP_NEXT_NULL -> SWAP_NEXT_INVALID (per Huang, Ying) >> - Simplified max offset calculation (per Huang, Ying) >> - Reinstated struct percpu_cluster to contain per-cluster, per-order `next` >> offset (per Huang, Ying) >> - Removed swap_alloc_large() and merged its functionality into >> scan_swap_map_slots() (per Huang, Ying) >> - Avoid extra cost of folio ref and lock due to removal of CLUSTER_FLAG_HUGE >> by freeing swap entries in batches (see patch 2) (per DavidH) >> - vmscan splits folio if its partially mapped (per Barry Song, DavidH) >> - Avoid splitting in MADV_PAGEOUT path (per Barry Song) >> - Dropped "mm: swap: Simplify ssd behavior when scanner steals entry" patch >> since it's not actually a problem for THP as I first thought. >> >> >> Changes since v2 [2] >> ==================== >> >> - Reuse scan_swap_map_try_ssd_cluster() between order-0 and order > 0 >> allocation. This required some refactoring to make everything work nicely >> (new patches 2 and 3). >> - Fix bug where nr_swap_pages would say there are pages available but the >> scanner would not be able to allocate them because they were reserved for the >> per-cpu allocator. We now allow stealing of order-0 entries from the high >> order per-cpu clusters (in addition to exisiting stealing from order-0 >> per-cpu clusters). >> >> >> Changes since v1 [1] >> ==================== >> >> - patch 1: >> - Use cluster_set_count() instead of cluster_set_count_flag() in >> swap_alloc_cluster() since we no longer have any flag to set. I was unable >> to kill cluster_set_count_flag() as proposed against v1 as other call >> sites depend explicitly setting flags to 0. >> - patch 2: >> - Moved large_next[] array into percpu_cluster to make it per-cpu >> (recommended by Huang, Ying). >> - large_next[] array is dynamically allocated because PMD_ORDER is not >> compile-time constant for powerpc (fixes build error). >> >> >> [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231010142111.3997780-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ >> [2] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231017161302.2518826-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ >> [3] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231025144546.577640-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ >> [4] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240304081348.197341-1-21cnbao@gmail.com/ >> [5] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240311084426.447164-1-ying.huang@intel.com/ >> [6] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/79dad067-1d26-4867-8eb1-941277b9a77b@arm.com/ >> >> Thanks, >> Ryan >> >> >> Ryan Roberts (6): >> mm: swap: Remove CLUSTER_FLAG_HUGE from swap_cluster_info:flags >> mm: swap: free_swap_and_cache_nr() as batched free_swap_and_cache() >> mm: swap: Simplify struct percpu_cluster >> mm: swap: Allow storage of all mTHP orders >> mm: vmscan: Avoid split during shrink_folio_list() >> mm: madvise: Avoid split during MADV_PAGEOUT and MADV_COLD >> >> include/linux/pgtable.h | 28 ++++ >> include/linux/swap.h | 33 +++-- >> mm/huge_memory.c | 3 - >> mm/internal.h | 48 +++++++ >> mm/madvise.c | 101 ++++++++------ >> mm/memory.c | 13 +- >> mm/swapfile.c | 298 ++++++++++++++++++++++------------------ >> mm/vmscan.c | 9 +- >> 8 files changed, 332 insertions(+), 201 deletions(-) >> >> -- >> 2.25.1
On 12/03/2024 08:49, Ryan Roberts wrote: > On 12/03/2024 08:01, Huang, Ying wrote: >> Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@arm.com> writes: >> >>> Hi All, >>> >>> This series adds support for swapping out multi-size THP (mTHP) without needing >>> to first split the large folio via split_huge_page_to_list_to_order(). It >>> closely follows the approach already used to swap-out PMD-sized THP. >>> >>> There are a couple of reasons for swapping out mTHP without splitting: >>> >>> - Performance: It is expensive to split a large folio and under extreme memory >>> pressure some workloads regressed performance when using 64K mTHP vs 4K >>> small folios because of this extra cost in the swap-out path. This series >>> not only eliminates the regression but makes it faster to swap out 64K mTHP >>> vs 4K small folios. >>> >>> - Memory fragmentation avoidance: If we can avoid splitting a large folio >>> memory is less likely to become fragmented, making it easier to re-allocate >>> a large folio in future. >>> >>> - Performance: Enables a separate series [4] to swap-in whole mTHPs, which >>> means we won't lose the TLB-efficiency benefits of mTHP once the memory has >>> been through a swap cycle. >>> >>> I've done what I thought was the smallest change possible, and as a result, this >>> approach is only employed when the swap is backed by a non-rotating block device >>> (just as PMD-sized THP is supported today). Discussion against the RFC concluded >>> that this is sufficient. >>> >>> >>> Performance Testing >>> =================== >>> >>> I've run some swap performance tests on Ampere Altra VM (arm64) with 8 CPUs. The >>> VM is set up with a 35G block ram device as the swap device and the test is run >>> from inside a memcg limited to 40G memory. I've then run `usemem` from >>> vm-scalability with 70 processes, each allocating and writing 1G of memory. I've >>> repeated everything 6 times and taken the mean performance improvement relative >>> to 4K page baseline: >>> >>> | alloc size | baseline | + this series | >>> | | v6.6-rc4+anonfolio | | >>> |:-----------|--------------------:|--------------------:| >>> | 4K Page | 0.0% | 1.4% | >>> | 64K THP | -14.6% | 44.2% | >>> | 2M THP | 87.4% | 97.7% | >>> >>> So with this change, the 64K swap performance goes from a 15% regression to a >>> 44% improvement. 4K and 2M swap improves slightly too. >> >> I don't understand why the performance of 2M THP improves. The swap >> entry allocation becomes a little slower. Can you provide some >> perf-profile to root cause it? > > I didn't post the stdev, which is quite large (~10%), so that may explain some > of it: > > | kernel | mean_rel | std_rel | > |:---------|-----------:|----------:| > | base-4K | 0.0% | 5.5% | > | base-64K | -14.6% | 3.8% | > | base-2M | 87.4% | 10.6% | > | v4-4K | 1.4% | 3.7% | > | v4-64K | 44.2% | 11.8% | > | v4-2M | 97.7% | 13.3% | > > Regardless, I'll do some perf profiling and post results shortly. I did a lot more runs (24 for each config) and meaned them to try to remove the noise in the measurements. It's now only showing a 4% improvement for 2M. So I don't think the 2M improvement is real: | kernel | mean_rel | std_rel | |:---------|-----------:|----------:| | base-4K | 0.0% | 3.2% | | base-64K | -9.1% | 10.1% | | base-2M | 88.9% | 6.8% | | v4-4K | 0.5% | 3.1% | | v4-64K | 44.7% | 8.3% | | v4-2M | 93.3% | 7.8% | Looking at the perf data, the only thing that sticks out is that a big chunk of time is spent in during contpte_convert(), called as a result of try_to_unmap_one(). This is present in both the before and after configs. This is an arm64 function to "unfold" contpte mappings. Essentially, the PMD is being split during shrink_folio_list() with TTU_SPLIT_HUGE_PMD, meaning the THPs are PTE-mapped in contpte blocks. Then we are unmapping each pte one-by-one which means the contpte block needs to be unfolded. I think try_to_unmap_one() could potentially be optimized to batch unmap a contiguously mapped folio and avoid this unfold. But that would be an independent and separate piece of work. > >> >> -- >> Best Regards, >> Huang, Ying >> >>> This test also acts as a good stress test for swap and, more generally mm. A >>> couple of existing bugs were found as a result [5] [6]. >>> >>> >>> --- >>> The series applies against mm-unstable (d7182786dd0a). Although I've >>> additionally been running with a couple of extra fixes to avoid the issues at >>> [6]. >>> >>> >>> Changes since v3 [3] >>> ==================== >>> >>> - Renamed SWAP_NEXT_NULL -> SWAP_NEXT_INVALID (per Huang, Ying) >>> - Simplified max offset calculation (per Huang, Ying) >>> - Reinstated struct percpu_cluster to contain per-cluster, per-order `next` >>> offset (per Huang, Ying) >>> - Removed swap_alloc_large() and merged its functionality into >>> scan_swap_map_slots() (per Huang, Ying) >>> - Avoid extra cost of folio ref and lock due to removal of CLUSTER_FLAG_HUGE >>> by freeing swap entries in batches (see patch 2) (per DavidH) >>> - vmscan splits folio if its partially mapped (per Barry Song, DavidH) >>> - Avoid splitting in MADV_PAGEOUT path (per Barry Song) >>> - Dropped "mm: swap: Simplify ssd behavior when scanner steals entry" patch >>> since it's not actually a problem for THP as I first thought. >>> >>> >>> Changes since v2 [2] >>> ==================== >>> >>> - Reuse scan_swap_map_try_ssd_cluster() between order-0 and order > 0 >>> allocation. This required some refactoring to make everything work nicely >>> (new patches 2 and 3). >>> - Fix bug where nr_swap_pages would say there are pages available but the >>> scanner would not be able to allocate them because they were reserved for the >>> per-cpu allocator. We now allow stealing of order-0 entries from the high >>> order per-cpu clusters (in addition to exisiting stealing from order-0 >>> per-cpu clusters). >>> >>> >>> Changes since v1 [1] >>> ==================== >>> >>> - patch 1: >>> - Use cluster_set_count() instead of cluster_set_count_flag() in >>> swap_alloc_cluster() since we no longer have any flag to set. I was unable >>> to kill cluster_set_count_flag() as proposed against v1 as other call >>> sites depend explicitly setting flags to 0. >>> - patch 2: >>> - Moved large_next[] array into percpu_cluster to make it per-cpu >>> (recommended by Huang, Ying). >>> - large_next[] array is dynamically allocated because PMD_ORDER is not >>> compile-time constant for powerpc (fixes build error). >>> >>> >>> [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231010142111.3997780-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ >>> [2] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231017161302.2518826-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ >>> [3] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231025144546.577640-1-ryan.roberts@arm.com/ >>> [4] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240304081348.197341-1-21cnbao@gmail.com/ >>> [5] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240311084426.447164-1-ying.huang@intel.com/ >>> [6] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/79dad067-1d26-4867-8eb1-941277b9a77b@arm.com/ >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Ryan >>> >>> >>> Ryan Roberts (6): >>> mm: swap: Remove CLUSTER_FLAG_HUGE from swap_cluster_info:flags >>> mm: swap: free_swap_and_cache_nr() as batched free_swap_and_cache() >>> mm: swap: Simplify struct percpu_cluster >>> mm: swap: Allow storage of all mTHP orders >>> mm: vmscan: Avoid split during shrink_folio_list() >>> mm: madvise: Avoid split during MADV_PAGEOUT and MADV_COLD >>> >>> include/linux/pgtable.h | 28 ++++ >>> include/linux/swap.h | 33 +++-- >>> mm/huge_memory.c | 3 - >>> mm/internal.h | 48 +++++++ >>> mm/madvise.c | 101 ++++++++------ >>> mm/memory.c | 13 +- >>> mm/swapfile.c | 298 ++++++++++++++++++++++------------------ >>> mm/vmscan.c | 9 +- >>> 8 files changed, 332 insertions(+), 201 deletions(-) >>> >>> -- >>> 2.25.1 >
Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@arm.com> writes: > On 12/03/2024 08:49, Ryan Roberts wrote: >> On 12/03/2024 08:01, Huang, Ying wrote: >>> Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@arm.com> writes: >>> >>>> Hi All, >>>> >>>> This series adds support for swapping out multi-size THP (mTHP) without needing >>>> to first split the large folio via split_huge_page_to_list_to_order(). It >>>> closely follows the approach already used to swap-out PMD-sized THP. >>>> >>>> There are a couple of reasons for swapping out mTHP without splitting: >>>> >>>> - Performance: It is expensive to split a large folio and under extreme memory >>>> pressure some workloads regressed performance when using 64K mTHP vs 4K >>>> small folios because of this extra cost in the swap-out path. This series >>>> not only eliminates the regression but makes it faster to swap out 64K mTHP >>>> vs 4K small folios. >>>> >>>> - Memory fragmentation avoidance: If we can avoid splitting a large folio >>>> memory is less likely to become fragmented, making it easier to re-allocate >>>> a large folio in future. >>>> >>>> - Performance: Enables a separate series [4] to swap-in whole mTHPs, which >>>> means we won't lose the TLB-efficiency benefits of mTHP once the memory has >>>> been through a swap cycle. >>>> >>>> I've done what I thought was the smallest change possible, and as a result, this >>>> approach is only employed when the swap is backed by a non-rotating block device >>>> (just as PMD-sized THP is supported today). Discussion against the RFC concluded >>>> that this is sufficient. >>>> >>>> >>>> Performance Testing >>>> =================== >>>> >>>> I've run some swap performance tests on Ampere Altra VM (arm64) with 8 CPUs. The >>>> VM is set up with a 35G block ram device as the swap device and the test is run >>>> from inside a memcg limited to 40G memory. I've then run `usemem` from >>>> vm-scalability with 70 processes, each allocating and writing 1G of memory. I've >>>> repeated everything 6 times and taken the mean performance improvement relative >>>> to 4K page baseline: >>>> >>>> | alloc size | baseline | + this series | >>>> | | v6.6-rc4+anonfolio | | >>>> |:-----------|--------------------:|--------------------:| >>>> | 4K Page | 0.0% | 1.4% | >>>> | 64K THP | -14.6% | 44.2% | >>>> | 2M THP | 87.4% | 97.7% | >>>> >>>> So with this change, the 64K swap performance goes from a 15% regression to a >>>> 44% improvement. 4K and 2M swap improves slightly too. >>> >>> I don't understand why the performance of 2M THP improves. The swap >>> entry allocation becomes a little slower. Can you provide some >>> perf-profile to root cause it? >> >> I didn't post the stdev, which is quite large (~10%), so that may explain some >> of it: >> >> | kernel | mean_rel | std_rel | >> |:---------|-----------:|----------:| >> | base-4K | 0.0% | 5.5% | >> | base-64K | -14.6% | 3.8% | >> | base-2M | 87.4% | 10.6% | >> | v4-4K | 1.4% | 3.7% | >> | v4-64K | 44.2% | 11.8% | >> | v4-2M | 97.7% | 13.3% | >> >> Regardless, I'll do some perf profiling and post results shortly. > > I did a lot more runs (24 for each config) and meaned them to try to remove the > noise in the measurements. It's now only showing a 4% improvement for 2M. So I > don't think the 2M improvement is real: > > | kernel | mean_rel | std_rel | > |:---------|-----------:|----------:| > | base-4K | 0.0% | 3.2% | > | base-64K | -9.1% | 10.1% | > | base-2M | 88.9% | 6.8% | > | v4-4K | 0.5% | 3.1% | > | v4-64K | 44.7% | 8.3% | > | v4-2M | 93.3% | 7.8% | > > Looking at the perf data, the only thing that sticks out is that a big chunk of > time is spent in during contpte_convert(), called as a result of > try_to_unmap_one(). This is present in both the before and after configs. > > This is an arm64 function to "unfold" contpte mappings. Essentially, the PMD is > being split during shrink_folio_list() with TTU_SPLIT_HUGE_PMD, meaning the > THPs are PTE-mapped in contpte blocks. Then we are unmapping each pte one-by-one > which means the contpte block needs to be unfolded. I think try_to_unmap_one() > could potentially be optimized to batch unmap a contiguously mapped folio and > avoid this unfold. But that would be an independent and separate piece of work. Thanks for more data and detailed explanation. -- Best Regards, Huang, Ying
On 13/03/2024 01:15, Huang, Ying wrote: > Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@arm.com> writes: > >> On 12/03/2024 08:49, Ryan Roberts wrote: >>> On 12/03/2024 08:01, Huang, Ying wrote: >>>> Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@arm.com> writes: >>>> >>>>> Hi All, >>>>> >>>>> This series adds support for swapping out multi-size THP (mTHP) without needing >>>>> to first split the large folio via split_huge_page_to_list_to_order(). It >>>>> closely follows the approach already used to swap-out PMD-sized THP. >>>>> >>>>> There are a couple of reasons for swapping out mTHP without splitting: >>>>> >>>>> - Performance: It is expensive to split a large folio and under extreme memory >>>>> pressure some workloads regressed performance when using 64K mTHP vs 4K >>>>> small folios because of this extra cost in the swap-out path. This series >>>>> not only eliminates the regression but makes it faster to swap out 64K mTHP >>>>> vs 4K small folios. >>>>> >>>>> - Memory fragmentation avoidance: If we can avoid splitting a large folio >>>>> memory is less likely to become fragmented, making it easier to re-allocate >>>>> a large folio in future. >>>>> >>>>> - Performance: Enables a separate series [4] to swap-in whole mTHPs, which >>>>> means we won't lose the TLB-efficiency benefits of mTHP once the memory has >>>>> been through a swap cycle. >>>>> >>>>> I've done what I thought was the smallest change possible, and as a result, this >>>>> approach is only employed when the swap is backed by a non-rotating block device >>>>> (just as PMD-sized THP is supported today). Discussion against the RFC concluded >>>>> that this is sufficient. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Performance Testing >>>>> =================== >>>>> >>>>> I've run some swap performance tests on Ampere Altra VM (arm64) with 8 CPUs. The >>>>> VM is set up with a 35G block ram device as the swap device and the test is run >>>>> from inside a memcg limited to 40G memory. I've then run `usemem` from >>>>> vm-scalability with 70 processes, each allocating and writing 1G of memory. I've >>>>> repeated everything 6 times and taken the mean performance improvement relative >>>>> to 4K page baseline: >>>>> >>>>> | alloc size | baseline | + this series | >>>>> | | v6.6-rc4+anonfolio | | >>>>> |:-----------|--------------------:|--------------------:| >>>>> | 4K Page | 0.0% | 1.4% | >>>>> | 64K THP | -14.6% | 44.2% | >>>>> | 2M THP | 87.4% | 97.7% | >>>>> >>>>> So with this change, the 64K swap performance goes from a 15% regression to a >>>>> 44% improvement. 4K and 2M swap improves slightly too. >>>> >>>> I don't understand why the performance of 2M THP improves. The swap >>>> entry allocation becomes a little slower. Can you provide some >>>> perf-profile to root cause it? >>> >>> I didn't post the stdev, which is quite large (~10%), so that may explain some >>> of it: >>> >>> | kernel | mean_rel | std_rel | >>> |:---------|-----------:|----------:| >>> | base-4K | 0.0% | 5.5% | >>> | base-64K | -14.6% | 3.8% | >>> | base-2M | 87.4% | 10.6% | >>> | v4-4K | 1.4% | 3.7% | >>> | v4-64K | 44.2% | 11.8% | >>> | v4-2M | 97.7% | 13.3% | >>> >>> Regardless, I'll do some perf profiling and post results shortly. >> >> I did a lot more runs (24 for each config) and meaned them to try to remove the >> noise in the measurements. It's now only showing a 4% improvement for 2M. So I >> don't think the 2M improvement is real: >> >> | kernel | mean_rel | std_rel | >> |:---------|-----------:|----------:| >> | base-4K | 0.0% | 3.2% | >> | base-64K | -9.1% | 10.1% | >> | base-2M | 88.9% | 6.8% | >> | v4-4K | 0.5% | 3.1% | >> | v4-64K | 44.7% | 8.3% | >> | v4-2M | 93.3% | 7.8% | >> >> Looking at the perf data, the only thing that sticks out is that a big chunk of >> time is spent in during contpte_convert(), called as a result of >> try_to_unmap_one(). This is present in both the before and after configs. >> >> This is an arm64 function to "unfold" contpte mappings. Essentially, the PMD is >> being split during shrink_folio_list() with TTU_SPLIT_HUGE_PMD, meaning the >> THPs are PTE-mapped in contpte blocks. Then we are unmapping each pte one-by-one >> which means the contpte block needs to be unfolded. I think try_to_unmap_one() >> could potentially be optimized to batch unmap a contiguously mapped folio and >> avoid this unfold. But that would be an independent and separate piece of work. > > Thanks for more data and detailed explanation. And thanks for your review! I'll address all your comments (and any others that I get in the meantime) and repost after the merge window. It would be great if we can get this in for v6.10. > > -- > Best Regards, > Huang, Ying