[PATCH 00/12] Introduce CONFIG_SLUB_TINY and deprecate SLOB

Arnd Bergmann arnd at arndb.de
Tue Nov 22 08:33:17 PST 2022


On Mon, Nov 21, 2022, at 18:11, Vlastimil Babka wrote:
>
> this continues the discussion from [1]. Reasons to remove SLOB are
> outlined there and no-one has objected so far. The last patch of this
> series therefore deprecates CONFIG_SLOB and updates all the defconfigs
> using CONFIG_SLOB=y in the tree.
>
> There is a k210 board with 8MB RAM where switching to SLUB caused issues
> [2] and the lkp bot wasn't also happy about code bloat [3]. To address
> both, this series introduces CONFIG_SLUB_TINY to perform some rather
> low-hanging fruit modifications to SLUB to reduce its memory overhead.
> This seems to have been successful at least in the k210 case [4]. I
> consider this as an acceptable tradeoff for getting rid of SLOB.

I agree that this is a great success for replacing SLOB on the
smallest machines that have 32MB or less and have to run a
a highly customized kernel, and this is probably enough to
have a drop-in replacement without making any currently working
system worse.

On the other hand, I have the feeling that we may want something
a bit less aggressive than this for machines that are slightly
less constrained, in particular when a single kernel needs to
scale from 64MB to 512MB, which can happen e.g. on OpenWRT.
I have seen a number of reports over the years that suggest
that new kernels handle fragmentation and low memory worse than
old ones, and it would be great to improve that again.

I can imagine those machines wanting to use sysfs in general
but not for the slab caches, so having a separate knob to
configure out the sysfs stuff could be useful without having
to go all the way to SLUB_TINY.

For the options that trade off performance against lower
fragmentation (MIN/MAX_PARTIAL, KMALLOC_RECLAIM, percpu
slabs), I wonder if it's possible to have a boot time
default based on the amount of RAM per CPU to have a better
tuned system on most cases, rather than having to go
to one extreme or the other at compile time.

    Arnd

https://openwrt.org/toh/views/toh_standard_all?datasrt=target&dataflt%5B0%5D=availability_%3DAvailable%202021



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