On Thu, Sep 06, 2018 at 01:24:22PM +0200, Ard Biesheuvel wrote: > On 22 August 2018 at 05:07, Jia He <hejia...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Commit b92df1de5d28 ("mm: page_alloc: skip over regions of invalid pfns > > where possible") optimized the loop in memmap_init_zone(). But it causes > > possible panic bug. So Daniel Vacek reverted it later. > > > > But as suggested by Daniel Vacek, it is fine to using memblock to skip > > gaps and finding next valid frame with CONFIG_HAVE_ARCH_PFN_VALID. > > > > More from what Daniel said: > > "On arm and arm64, memblock is used by default. But generic version of > > pfn_valid() is based on mem sections and memblock_next_valid_pfn() does > > not always return the next valid one but skips more resulting in some > > valid frames to be skipped (as if they were invalid). And that's why > > kernel was eventually crashing on some !arm machines." > > > > About the performance consideration: > > As said by James in b92df1de5, > > "I have tested this patch on a virtual model of a Samurai CPU with a > > sparse memory map. The kernel boot time drops from 109 to 62 seconds." > > Thus it would be better if we remain memblock_next_valid_pfn on arm/arm64. > > > > Besides we can remain memblock_next_valid_pfn, there is still some room > > for improvement. After this set, I can see the time overhead of memmap_init > > is reduced from 27956us to 13537us in my armv8a server(QDF2400 with 96G > > memory, pagesize 64k). I believe arm server will benefit more if memory is > > larger than TBs > > > > OK so we can summarize the benefits of this series as follows: > - boot time on a virtual model of a Samurai CPU drops from 109 to 62 seconds > - boot time on a QDF2400 arm64 server with 96 GB of RAM drops by ~15 > *milliseconds* > > Google was not very helpful in figuring out what a Samurai CPU is and > why we should care about the boot time of Linux running on a virtual > model of it, and the 15 ms speedup is not that compelling either. > > Apologies to Jia that it took 11 revisions to reach this conclusion, > but in /my/ opinion, tweaking the fragile memblock/pfn handling code > for this reason is totally unjustified, and we're better off > disregarding these patches.
Oh, we're talking about a *simulator* for the significant boot time improvement here? I didn't realise that, so I agree that the premise of this patch set looks pretty questionable given how much "fun" we've had with the memmap on arm and arm64. Will