Commit dd6b3d93 authored by Andrew Morton's avatar Andrew Morton Committed by Ben Collins

[PATCH] magazine layer for slab

From: Manfred Spraul <manfred@colorfullife.com>

slab.c is not very efficient for passing objects between cpus.  Usually this
is a rare event, but with network routing and cpu-affine NICs it is possible
that nearly all allocation operations will occur on one cpu, and nearly all
free operations on another cpu.

This causes slab memory to be returned to slab's free page list rather than
being cached on behalf of the particular slab cache.

The attached patch solves that by adding an array of objects that is shared
by all cpus.  Instead of multiple linked list operations per object, object
pointers are now passed to/from the shared array (and thus between cpus) with
memcopy operations.  On uniprocessor, the default array size is 0, because
the shared array and the per-cpu head array are redundant.

Additionally, the patch exports more statistics in /proc/slabinfo and make
the array sizes tunable by writing to /proc/slabinfo.  Both changes break
backward compatibility, user space scripts must look at the slabinfo version
and act accordingly.

The size of the new shared array may be altered at runtime, by writing to
/proc/slabinfo.

The new parameters for writing to /proc/slabinfo are:

	#echo "cache-name limit batchcount shared" > /proc/slabinfo

For example "size-4096 120 60 8" improves the slab efficiency for network
routing, because the default values (24 12 8) are too small for the large
series generated due to irq mitigation.  Note that only root has write
permissions to /proc/slabinfo.

These changes provided an overall 12% speedup in Robert Olson's gigE
packet-formwarding testing on 2-way.
parent fa6ead8c
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