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Message-ID: <901cb83e-fb6a-a7fc-a60e-e35b0c89139d@redhat.com>
Date:   Thu, 11 Jul 2019 07:30:52 -0400
From:   Nitesh Narayan Lal <nitesh@...hat.com>
To:     Alexander Duyck <alexander.duyck@...il.com>
Cc:     kvm list <kvm@...r.kernel.org>,
        LKML <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
        linux-mm <linux-mm@...ck.org>,
        Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@...hat.com>, lcapitulino@...hat.com,
        pagupta@...hat.com, wei.w.wang@...el.com,
        Yang Zhang <yang.zhang.wz@...il.com>,
        Rik van Riel <riel@...riel.com>,
        David Hildenbrand <david@...hat.com>,
        "Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@...hat.com>, dodgen@...gle.com,
        Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@...cle.com>,
        dhildenb@...hat.com, Andrea Arcangeli <aarcange@...hat.com>,
        john.starks@...rosoft.com, Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@...el.com>,
        Michal Hocko <mhocko@...e.com>
Subject: Re: [RFC][PATCH v11 0/2] mm: Support for page hinting


On 7/10/19 7:40 PM, Alexander Duyck wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 10, 2019 at 12:52 PM Nitesh Narayan Lal <nitesh@...hat.com> wrote:
>
> The results up here were redundant with what is below so I am just
> dropping them. I would suggest only including one set of results in
> any future cover page as it is confusing to duplicate it like that.
>
>> This approach tracks all freed pages of the order MAX_ORDER - 2 in bitmaps.
>> A new hook after buddy merging is used to set the bits in the bitmap.
>> Currently, the bits are only cleared when pages are hinted, not when pages are
>> re-allocated.
>>
>> Bitmaps are stored on a per-zone basis and are protected by the zone lock. A
>> workqueue asynchronously processes the bitmaps as soon as a pre-defined memory
>> threshold is met, trying to isolate and report pages that are still free.
>>
>> The isolated pages are reported via virtio-balloon, which is responsible for
>> sending batched pages to the host synchronously. Once the hypervisor processed
>> the hinting request, the isolated pages are returned back to the buddy.
>>
>> Changelog in v11:
>> * Added logic to take care of multiple NUMA nodes scenarios.
>> * Simplified the logic for reporting isolated pages to the host. (Eg. replaced
>> dynamically allocated arrays with static ones, introduced wait event instead of
>> the loop in order to wait for a response from the host)
>> * Added a mutex to prevent race condition when page hinting is enabled by
>> multiple drivers.
>> * Simplified the logic responsible for decrementing free page counter for each
>> zone.
>> * Simplified code structuring/naming.
>>
>> Known work items for the future:
>> * Test device assigned guests to ensure that hinting doesn't break it.
>> * Follow up on VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_PAGE_POISON's device-side support.
>> * Decide between MADV_DONTNEED and MADV_FREE.
>> * Look into memory hotplug, more efficient locking, better naming conventions to
>> avoid confusion with VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_FREE_PAGE_HINT support.
>> * Come up with proper/traceable error-message/logs and look into other code
>> simplifications. (If necessary).
>>
>> Benefit analysis:
>> 1. Number of 5GB guests (each touching 4GB memory) that can be launched without
>> swap usage on a system with 15GB:
>> unmodified kernel - 2, 3rd with 2.5GB
>> v11 page hinting - 6, 7th with 26MB
>> v1 bubble hinting - 6, 7th with 1.8GB
>>
>> Conclusion - In this particular testcase on using v11 page hinting and
>> v1 bubble-hinting 4 more guests could be launched without swapping compared
>> to an unmodified kernel.
>> For the 7th guest launch, v11 page hinting is slightly better than v1 Bubble
>> hinting as it touches lesser swap space.
> I'm confused by the comment. From what I can tell bubble hinting came
> up with 1.8GB of memory while page hinting only managed to achieve
> .026GB (Using the same units makes it easier to visualize the
> difference). Also your test says "can be launched without swap usage",
> yet you say the bubble hinting is touching swap which makes not sense
> to me.
I will work on the cover to improve this part.
Basically, In each case, the first number indicates the number of the
guest which are launched without touching the swap space. For instance
with bubble hinting, I was able to launch 6 guests without any swap
usage. On launching the 7th guests initially there was no swap usage,
however, as the test app starts allocating 4GB memory the swap came into
the picture. 1.8 GB is the swap usage after the completion of the test
application.
>> Setup & procedure -
>> Total NUMA Node Memory ~ 15 GB (All guests are run on a single NUMA node)
>> Guest Memory = 5GB
>> Number of CPUs in the guest = 1
>> Host swap = 4GB
>> Workload = test allocation program that allocates 4GB memory, touches it via
>> memset and exits.
>> The first guest is launched and once its console is up, the test allocation
>> program is executed with 4 GB memory request (Due to this the guest occupies
>> almost 4-5 GB of memory in the host in a system without page hinting). Once
>> this program exits at that time another guest is launched in the host and the
>> same process is followed. It is continued until the swap is not used.
>>
>> 2. Memhog execution time (For 3 guests each of 6GB on a system with 15GB):
>> unmodified kernel - Guest1:21s, Guest2:27s, Guest3:2m37s swap used = 3.7GB
>> v11 page hinting - Guest1:23s, Guest2:26s, Guest3:21s swap used = 0
>> v1 bubble hinting - Guest1:23, Guest2:11s, Guest3:26s swap used = 0
>>
>> For this particular test-case in a guest which doesn't require swap access
>> "memhog 6G" execution time lies within a range of 15-30s.
>> Conclusion -
>> In the above test case for an unmodified kernel on executing memhog in the
>> third guest execution time rises to above 2minutes due to swap access.
>> Using either page-hinting or bubble hinting brings this execution time to a
>> a normal range of 15-30s.
> So really this test doesn't add much in value. The whole reason why
> Guest3 runs so much slower is because it is going to swap. I initially
> did this to demonstrate a point, but now running this test doesn't
> prove much as it isn't really meant to be a performance test. It is
> essentially just a duplicate of the "how many guests can you run" test
> that is passing itself off as some sort of performance test.
>
> We could probably just drop this from future version of this as long
> as we verify that the memory hinting is freeing most of the memory
> back and the guest is reporting a size less than the total guest
> memory size.
>
+1, makes sense to keep just one of the above two.
>> Setup & procedure -
>> Total NUMA Node Memory ~ 15 GB (All guests are run on a single NUMA node)
>> Guest Memory = 6GB
>> Number of CPUs in the guest = 4
>> Process = 3 Guests are launched and the ‘memhog 6G’ execution time is monitored
>> one after the other in each of them.
>> Host swap = 4GB
>>
>> Performance Analysis:
>> 1. will-it-scale's page_faul1
>> Setup -
>> Guest Memory = 6GB
>> Number of cores = 24
>>
>> Unmodified kernel -
>> 0,0,100,0,100,0
>> 1,514453,95.84,519502,95.83,519502
>> 2,991485,91.67,932268,91.68,1039004
>> 3,1381237,87.36,1264214,87.64,1558506
>> 4,1789116,83.36,1597767,83.88,2078008
>> 5,2181552,79.20,1889489,80.08,2597510
>> 6,2452416,75.05,2001879,77.10,3117012
>> 7,2671047,70.90,2263866,73.22,3636514
>> 8,2930081,66.75,2333813,70.60,4156016
>> 9,3126431,62.60,2370108,68.28,4675518
>> 10,3211937,58.44,2454093,65.74,5195020
>> 11,3162172,54.32,2450822,63.21,5714522
>> 12,3154261,50.14,2272290,58.98,6234024
>> 13,3115174,46.02,2369679,57.74,6753526
>> 14,3150511,41.86,2470837,54.02,7273028
>> 15,3134158,37.71,2428129,51.98,7792530
>> 16,3143067,33.57,2340469,49.54,8312032
>> 17,3112457,29.43,2263627,44.81,8831534
>> 18,3089724,25.29,2181879,38.69,9351036
>> 19,3076878,21.15,2236505,40.01,9870538
>> 20,3091978,16.95,2266327,35.00,10390040
>> 21,3082927,12.84,2172578,28.12,10909542
>> 22,3055282,8.73,2176269,29.14,11429044
>> 23,3081144,4.56,2138442,24.87,11948546
>> 24,3075509,0.45,2173753,21.62,12468048
>>
>> page hinting -
>> 0,0,100,0,100,0
>> 1,491683,95.83,494366,95.82,494366
>> 2,988415,91.67,919660,91.68,988732
>> 3,1344829,87.52,1244608,87.69,1483098
>> 4,1797933,83.37,1625797,83.70,1977464
>> 5,2179009,79.21,1881534,80.13,2471830
>> 6,2449858,75.07,2078137,76.82,2966196
>> 7,2732122,70.90,2178105,73.75,3460562
>> 8,2910965,66.75,2340901,70.28,3954928
>> 9,3006665,62.61,2353748,67.91,4449294
>> 10,3164752,58.46,2377936,65.08,4943660
>> 11,3234846,54.32,2510149,63.14,5438026
>> 12,3165477,50.17,2412007,59.91,5932392
>> 13,3141457,46.05,2421548,57.85,6426758
>> 14,3135839,41.90,2378021,53.81,6921124
>> 15,3109113,37.75,2269290,51.76,7415490
>> 16,3093613,33.62,2346185,48.73,7909856
>> 17,3086542,29.49,2352140,46.19,8404222
>> 18,3048991,25.36,2217144,41.52,8898588
>> 19,2965500,21.18,2313614,38.18,9392954
>> 20,2928977,17.05,2175316,35.67,9887320
>> 21,2896667,12.91,2141311,28.90,10381686
>> 22,3047782,8.76,2177664,28.24,10876052
>> 23,2994503,4.58,2160976,22.97,11370418
>> 24,3038762,0.47,2053533,22.39,11864784
>>
>> bubble-hinting v1 -
>> 0,0,100,0,100,0
>> 1,515272,95.83,492355,95.81,515272
>> 2,985903,91.66,919653,91.68,1030544
>> 3,1475300,87.51,1353723,87.65,1545816
>> 4,1783938,83.36,1586307,83.78,2061088
>> 5,2093307,79.20,1867395,79.95,2576360
>> 6,2441370,75.05,2055421,76.65,3091632
>> 7,2650471,70.89,2246014,72.93,3606904
>> 8,2926782,66.75,2333601,70.41,4122176
>> 9,3107617,62.60,2383112,68.46,4637448
>> 10,3192332,58.44,2441626,65.84,5152720
>> 11,3268043,54.32,2235964,62.92,5667992
>> 12,3191105,50.18,2449045,60.49,6183264
>> 13,3145317,46.05,2377317,57.80,6698536
>> 14,3161552,41.91,2395814,53.26,7213808
>> 15,3140443,37.77,2333200,51.42,7729080
>> 16,3130866,33.65,2150967,46.11,8244352
>> 17,3112894,29.52,2372068,45.93,8759624
>> 18,3078424,25.39,2336211,39.85,9274896
>> 19,3036457,21.27,2224821,35.25,9790168
>> 20,3046330,17.13,2199755,37.43,10305440
>> 21,2981130,12.98,2214862,28.67,10820712
>> 22,3017481,8.84,2195996,29.69,11335984
>> 23,2979906,4.68,2173395,25.90,11851256
>> 24,2971170,0.52,2134311,21.89,12366528
> Okay, so this doesn't match up with the results you gave me last time
> (https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/afac6f92-74f5-4580-0303-12b7374e5011@redhat.com/),
> and actually more closely matches what I was expecting to see. The
> bubble-hinting patches are performing within a few percent of what the
> baseline kernel was doing. 
Interestingly even with an unmodified kernel with every fresh boot, I
observed a certain amount of variability in the results which I stated
below.
> I am assuming the results from before had
> some additional debugging enabled for the bubble-hinting test that
> wasn't enabled for the other ones.

Nope, I had debugging options enabled for all the cases. This time
around I disabled all the debug options.

>
>> Conclusion -
>> For an unmodified kernel, with every fresh boot, there is 3-4% delta observed
>> in the results wrt the numbers mentioned above. For both bubble-hinting and
>> page-hinting, there was no noticeable degradation observed other than the
>> expected variability mentioned earlier.
>>
>> Page hinting vs bubble hinting:
>> From the benefits and performance perspective, both solutions look quite similar
>> so far. However, unlike bubble-hinting which is more invasive, the overall core
>> mm changes required for page hinting are minimal.
>>
>> [1] https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/6/19/926
> So I think I called it out in the review of the patch but I think we
> may want to see what happens if we increase the size of the memory in
> the guest to something more like 64G or larger. My main concern is
> that as we increase the size of memory the walk through the bitmap is
> going to become more and more expensive and I am worried that at some
> point it will start impacting the results.
Ok, I can try that scenario.



-- 
Thanks
Nitesh

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