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Message-ID: <CAJD7tkbFK2DJ0e7zCeYzwQKGC6-Pa111rHV0HMQeDBho1dVWQg@mail.gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 28 Mar 2024 13:29:35 -0700
From: Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@...gle.com>
To: Johannes Weiner <hannes@...xchg.org>
Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@...ux-foundation.org>, Nhat Pham <nphamcs@...il.com>,
Chengming Zhou <chengming.zhou@...ux.dev>, linux-mm@...ck.org, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [RFC PATCH 7/9] mm: zswap: store zero-filled pages without a zswap_entry
On Thu, Mar 28, 2024 at 12:38 PM Johannes Weiner <hannes@...xchg.org> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Mar 25, 2024 at 11:50:15PM +0000, Yosry Ahmed wrote:
> > After the rbtree to xarray conversion, and dropping zswap_entry.refcount
> > and zswap_entry.value, the only members of zswap_entry utilized by
> > zero-filled pages are zswap_entry.length (always 0) and
> > zswap_entry.objcg. Store the objcg pointer directly in the xarray as a
> > tagged pointer and avoid allocating a zswap_entry completely for
> > zero-filled pages.
> >
> > This simplifies the code as we no longer need to special case
> > zero-length cases. We are also able to further separate the zero-filled
> > pages handling logic and completely isolate them within store/load
> > helpers. Handling tagged xarray pointers is handled in these two
> > helpers, as well as the newly introduced helper for freeing tree
> > elements, zswap_tree_free_element().
> >
> > There is also a small performance improvement observed over 50 runs of
> > kernel build test (kernbench) comparing the mean build time on a skylake
> > machine when building the kernel in a cgroup v1 container with a 3G
> > limit. This is on top of the improvement from dropping support for
> > non-zero same-filled pages:
> >
> > base patched % diff
> > real 69.915 69.757 -0.229%
> > user 2956.147 2955.244 -0.031%
> > sys 2594.718 2575.747 -0.731%
> >
> > This probably comes from avoiding the zswap_entry allocation and
> > cleanup/freeing for zero-filled pages. Note that the percentage of
> > zero-filled pages during this test was only around 1.5% on average.
> > Practical workloads could have a larger proportion of such pages (e.g.
> > Johannes observed around 10% [1]), so the performance improvement should
> > be larger.
> >
> > This change also saves a small amount of memory due to less allocated
> > zswap_entry's. In the kernel build test above, we save around 2M of
> > slab usage when we swap out 3G to zswap.
> >
> > [1]https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20240320210716.GH294822@cmpxchg.org/
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@...gle.com>
> > ---
> > mm/zswap.c | 137 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-----------------------
> > 1 file changed, 78 insertions(+), 59 deletions(-)
>
> Tbh, I think this makes the code worse overall. Instead of increasing
> type safety, it actually reduces it, and places that previously dealt
> with a struct zswap_entry now deal with a void *.
>
> If we go ahead with this series, I think it makes more sense to either
>
> a) do the explicit subtyping of struct zswap_entry I had proposed, or
I suspect we won't get the small performance improvements (and memory
saving) with this approach. Neither are too significant, but it'd be
nice if we could keep them.
>
> b) at least keep the specialness handling of the xarray entry as local
> as possible, so that instead of a proliferating API that operates
> on void *, you have explicit filtering only where the tree is
> accessed, and then work on struct zswap_entry as much as possible.
I was trying to go for option (b) by isolating filtering and casting
to the correct type in a few functions (zswap_tree_free_element(),
zswap_store_zero_filled(), and zswap_load_zero_filled()). If we
open-code filtering it will be repeated in a few places.
What did you have in mind?
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