[PATCH] mm/vmalloc: fix spinning drain_vmap_work after reading from /proc/vmcore

Uladzislau Rezki urezki at gmail.com
Wed Apr 6 02:13:17 PDT 2022


> On Tue, Apr 05, 2022 at 12:40:31PM -0700, Omar Sandoval wrote:
> > A simple way to "fix" this would be to make set_iounmap_nonlazy() set
> > vmap_lazy_nr to lazy_max_pages() instead of lazy_max_pages() + 1. But, I
> > think it'd be better to get rid of this hack of clobbering vmap_lazy_nr.
> > Instead, this fix makes __copy_oldmem_page() explicitly drain the vmap
> > areas itself.
> 
> This fixes the bug and the interface also is better than what we had
> before.  But a vmap/iounmap_eager would seem even better.  But hey,
> right now it has one caller in always built іn x86 arch code, so maybe
> it isn't worth spending more effort on this.
>
IMHO, it just makes sense to remove it. The set_iounmap_nonlazy() was
added in 2010 year:

<snip>
commit 3ee48b6af49cf534ca2f481ecc484b156a41451d
Author: Cliff Wickman <cpw at sgi.com>
Date:   Thu Sep 16 11:44:02 2010 -0500

    mm, x86: Saving vmcore with non-lazy freeing of vmas

    During the reading of /proc/vmcore the kernel is doing
    ioremap()/iounmap() repeatedly. And the buildup of un-flushed
    vm_area_struct's is causing a great deal of overhead. (rb_next()
    is chewing up most of that time).

    This solution is to provide function set_iounmap_nonlazy(). It
    causes a subsequent call to iounmap() to immediately purge the
    vma area (with try_purge_vmap_area_lazy()).

    With this patch we have seen the time for writing a 250MB
    compressed dump drop from 71 seconds to 44 seconds.

    Signed-off-by: Cliff Wickman <cpw at sgi.com>
    Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm at linux-foundation.org>
    Cc: kexec at lists.infradead.org
    Cc: <stable at kernel.org>
    LKML-Reference: <E1OwHZ4-0005WK-Tw at eag09.americas.sgi.com>
    Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo at elte.hu>
<snip>

and the reason was the "slow vmap" code, i.e. due to poor performance
they decided to drop the lazily ASAP. Now we have absolutely different
picture when it comes to performance and the vmalloc/vmap code.

Any thoughts?

--
Uladzislau Rezki



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