Pavel Tatashin, Ying Huang, and I are excited to be organizing a performance 
and scalability microconference this year at Plumbers[*], which is happening in 
Vancouver this year.  The microconference is scheduled for the morning of the 
second day (Wed, Nov 14).

We have a preliminary agenda and a list of confirmed and interested attendees 
(cc'ed), and are seeking more of both!

Some of the items on the agenda as it stands now are:

 - Promoting huge page usage:  With memory sizes becoming ever larger, huge 
pages are becoming more and more important to reduce TLB misses and the 
overhead of memory management itself--that is, to make the system scalable with 
the memory size.  But there are still some remaining gaps that prevent huge 
pages from being deployed in some situations, such as huge page allocation 
latency and memory fragmentation.

 - Reducing the number of users of mmap_sem:  This semaphore is frequently used 
throughout the kernel.  In order to facilitate scaling this longstanding 
bottleneck, these uses should be documented and unnecessary users should be 
fixed.

 - Parallelizing cpu-intensive kernel work:  Resolve problems of past 
approaches including extra threads interfering with other processes, playing 
well with power management, and proper cgroup accounting for the extra threads. 
 Bonus topic: proper accounting of workqueue threads running on behalf of 
cgroups.

 - Preserving userland during kexec with a hibernation-like mechanism.

These center around our interests, but having lots of topics to choose from 
ensures we cover what's most important to the community, so we would like to 
hear about additional topics and extensions to those listed here.  This 
includes, but is certainly not limited to, work in progress that would benefit 
from in-person discussion, real-world performance problems, and experimental 
and academic work.

If you haven't already done so, please let us know if you are interested in 
attending, or have suggestions for other attendees.

Thanks,
Daniel

[*] https://blog.linuxplumbersconf.org/2018/performance-mc/

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