Sorry for the broken threading...
On Thursday 23 February 2006 11:13:50 EST, Ray Bryant wrote:
> On Thursday 23 February 2006 06:39, Arjan van de Ven wrote:
> > On Thu, 2006-02-23 at 07:29 -0500, Jes Sorensen wrote:
> > > >>>>> "Arjan" == Arjan van de Ven <arjan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> > >
> > > Arjan> In a micro-benchmark that stresses the pagefault path, the
> > > Arjan> down_read_trylock on the mmap_sem showed up quite high on the
> > > Arjan> profile. Turns out this lock is bouncing between cpus quite a
> > > Arjan> bit and thus is cache-cold a lot. This patch prefetches the
> > > Arjan> lock (for write) as early as possible (and before some other
> > > Arjan> somewhat expensive operations). With this patch, the
> > > Arjan> down_read_trylock basically fell out of the top of profile.
> > >
> > > Out of curiousity, how big was the box used for testing? It might be
> > > worth investigating if anything can be done to reduce the number of
> > > times that lock is taken in the first place.
> > >
> > > After all, what's a pain on a 4-way tends to be an utter nightmare on
> > > a 16-way ;(
> >
> > most of it was done on a 2 way, but some tests were done on a 4-way.
>
> Could you share your microbenchmark with us (or point to the source) and we
> can give this a try on larger systems?
I would be ecstatic to share this benchmark; however I just started
working at Intel and did not realize how long it would take to open
source a program written solely by an Intel employee (me). I'm
getting the paperwork done as fast as I can.
A quick description of the benchmark is:
* Allocate memory
* Write a pattern to it
* Spawn sufficient threads to keep your cpus busy
Each thread does:
* Allocate a little more memory and copy part of memory to it
* Search for a key within its copy
* Free the memory
* Repeat
The patches Arjan submitted make a small improvement, but the big win
turns out to be in tuning malloc() parameters, which we are currently
experimenting with.
-VAL (not subscribed to l-k as yet)
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