On Wednesday 14 November 2007 12:58, David Miller wrote:
> From: Nick Piggin <[email protected]>
> Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 22:41:58 +1100
>
> > On Tuesday 13 November 2007 06:44, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > > On Sat, 10 Nov 2007, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > > > BTW. your size-2048 kmalloc cache is order-1 in the default setup,
> > > > wheras kmalloc(1024) or kmalloc(4096) will be order-0 allocations.
> > > > And SLAB also uses order-0 for size-2048. It would be nice if SLUB
> > > > did the same...
> > >
> > > You can try to see the effect that order 0 would have by booting with
> > >
> > > slub_max_order=0
> >
> > Yeah, that didn't help much, but in general I think it would give
> > more consistent and reliable behaviour from slub.
>
> Just a note that I'm not ignoring this issue, I just don't have time
> to get to it yet.
No problem. I would like to have helped more, but it's slow going given
my lack of network stack knowledge. If I get any more interesting data,
I'll send it.
> I suspect the issue is about having a huge skb->data linear area for
> TCP sends over loopback. We're likely getting a much smaller
> skb->data linear data area after the patch in question, the rest using
> the sk_buff scatterlist pages which are a little bit more expensive to
> process.
It didn't seem to be noticeable at 1 client. Unless scatterlist
processing is going to cause cacheline bouncing, I don't see why this
hurts more as you add CPUs?
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