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Message-ID: <20130716085502.GA31276@lge.com>
Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2013 17:55:02 +0900
From: Joonsoo Kim <iamjoonsoo.kim@....com>
To: Ingo Molnar <mingo@...nel.org>
Cc: Robin Holt <holt@....com>, Borislav Petkov <bp@...en8.de>,
Robert Richter <rric@...nel.org>,
"H. Peter Anvin" <hpa@...or.com>, Nate Zimmer <nzimmer@....com>,
Linux Kernel <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
Linux MM <linux-mm@...ck.org>, Rob Landley <rob@...dley.net>,
Mike Travis <travis@....com>,
Daniel J Blueman <daniel@...ascale-asia.com>,
Andrew Morton <akpm@...ux-foundation.org>,
Greg KH <gregkh@...uxfoundation.org>,
Yinghai Lu <yinghai@...nel.org>, Mel Gorman <mgorman@...e.de>,
Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@...llo.nl>
Subject: Re: [RFC 0/4] Transparent on-demand struct page initialization
embedded in the buddy allocator
On Fri, Jul 12, 2013 at 10:27:56AM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>
> * Robin Holt <holt@....com> wrote:
>
> > [...]
> >
> > With this patch, we did boot a 16TiB machine. Without the patches, the
> > v3.10 kernel with the same configuration took 407 seconds for
> > free_all_bootmem. With the patches and operating on 2MiB pages instead
> > of 1GiB, it took 26 seconds so performance was improved. I have no feel
> > for how the 1GiB chunk size will perform.
>
> That's pretty impressive.
>
> It's still a 15x speedup instead of a 512x speedup, so I'd say there's
> something else being the current bottleneck, besides page init
> granularity.
>
> Can you boot with just a few gigs of RAM and stuff the rest into hotplug
> memory, and then hot-add that memory? That would allow easy profiling of
> remaining overhead.
>
> Side note:
>
> Robert Richter and Boris Petkov are working on 'persistent events' support
> for perf, which will eventually allow boot time profiling - I'm not sure
> if the patches and the tooling support is ready enough yet for your
> purposes.
>
> Robert, Boris, the following workflow would be pretty intuitive:
>
> - kernel developer sets boot flag: perf=boot,freq=1khz,size=16MB
>
> - we'd get a single (cycles?) event running once the perf subsystem is up
> and running, with a sampling frequency of 1 KHz, sending profiling
> trace events to a sufficiently sized profiling buffer of 16 MB per
> CPU.
>
> - once the system reaches SYSTEM_RUNNING, profiling is stopped either
> automatically - or the user stops it via a new tooling command.
>
> - the profiling buffer is extracted into a regular perf.data via a
> special 'perf record' call or some other, new perf tooling
> solution/variant.
>
> [ Alternatively the kernel could attempt to construct a 'virtual'
> perf.data from the persistent buffer, available via /sys/debug or
> elsewhere in /sys - just like the kernel constructs a 'virtual'
> /proc/kcore, etc. That file could be copied or used directly. ]
Hello, Robert, Boris, Ingo.
How about executing a perf in usermodehelper and collecting output in
tmpfs? Using this approach, we can start a perf after rootfs
initialization, because we need a perf binary at least. But we can use
almost functionality of perf. If anyone have interest with
this approach, I will send patches implementing this idea.
Thanks.
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