On Tue, Feb 23, 2021 at 10:02:14AM +0100, Petr Mladek wrote:
> On Thu 2021-02-11 18:37:52, John Ogness wrote:
> > If message sizes average larger than expected (more than 32
> > characters), the data_ring will wrap before the desc_ring. Once the
> > data_ring wraps, it will start invalidating descriptors. These
> > invalid descriptors hang around until they are eventually recycled
> > when the desc_ring wraps. Readers do not care about invalid
> > descriptors, but they still need to iterate past them. If the
> > average message size is much larger than 32 characters, then there
> > will be many invalid descriptors preceding the valid descriptors.
> > 
> > The function prb_first_valid_seq() always begins at the oldest
> > descriptor and searches for the first valid descriptor. This can
> > be rather expensive for the above scenario. And, in fact, because
> > of its heavy usage in /dev/kmsg, there have been reports of long
> > delays and even RCU stalls.
> > 
> > For code that does not need to search from the oldest record,
> > replace prb_first_valid_seq() usage with prb_read_valid_*()
> > functions, which provide a start sequence number to search from.
> > 
> > Fixes: 896fbe20b4e2333fb55 ("printk: use the lockless ringbuffer")
> > Reported-by: kernel test robot <oliver.s...@intel.com>
> > Reported-by: J. Avila <elav...@google.com>
> > Signed-off-by: John Ogness <john.ogn...@linutronix.de>
> 
> Could you please push this fix into the stable releases
> based on 5.10 and 5.11, please?
> 
> The patch fixes a visible performance regression. It has
> landed in the mainline as the commit
> 13791c80b0cdf54d92fc542 ("printk: avoid prb_first_valid_seq() where
> possible").
> 
> It should apply cleanly.

Already queued up, thanks.

greg k-h

Reply via email to