[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v2] x86/paravirt: Don't make vcpu_is_preempted() a callee-save function
On 02/13/2017 05:47 AM, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 12:00:43PM -0500, Waiman Long wrote: > >>>> +asm( >>>> +".pushsection .text;" >>>> +".global __raw_callee_save___kvm_vcpu_is_preempted;" >>>> +".type __raw_callee_save___kvm_vcpu_is_preempted, @function;" >>>> +"__raw_callee_save___kvm_vcpu_is_preempted:" >>>> +FRAME_BEGIN >>>> +"push %rdi;" >>>> +"push %rdx;" >>>> +"movslq %edi, %rdi;" >>>> +"movq $steal_time+16, %rax;" >>>> +"movq __per_cpu_offset(,%rdi,8), %rdx;" >>>> +"cmpb $0, (%rdx,%rax);" > Could we not put the $steal_time+16 displacement as an immediate in the > cmpb and save a whole register here? > > That way we'd end up with something like: > > asm(" > push %rdi; > movslq %edi, %rdi; > movq __per_cpu_offset(,%rdi,8), %rax; > cmpb $0, %[offset](%rax); > setne %al; > pop %rdi; > " : : [offset] "i" (((unsigned long)&steal_time) + offsetof(struct > steal_time, preempted))); > > And if we could get rid of the sign extend on edi we could avoid all the > push-pop nonsense, but I'm not sure I see how to do that (then again, > this asm foo isn't my strongest point). Yes, I think that can work. I will try to ran this patch to see how thing goes. >>>> +"setne %al;" >>>> +"pop %rdx;" >>>> +"pop %rdi;" >>>> +FRAME_END >>>> +"ret;" >>>> +".popsection"); >>>> + >>>> +#endif >>>> + >>>> /* >>>> * Setup pv_lock_ops to exploit KVM_FEATURE_PV_UNHALT if present. >>>> */ >>> That should work for now. I have done something similar for >>> __pv_queued_spin_unlock. However, this has the problem of creating a >>> dependency on the exact layout of the steal_time structure. Maybe the >>> constant 16 can be passed in as a parameter offsetof(struct >>> kvm_steal_time, preempted) to the asm call. > Yeah it should be well possible to pass that in. But ideally we'd have > GCC grow something like __attribute__((callee_saved)) or somesuch and it > would do all this for us. That will be really nice too. I am not too fond of working in assembly. >> One more thing, that will improve KVM performance, but it won't help Xen. > People still use Xen? ;-) In any case, their implementation looks very > similar and could easily crib this. In Red Hat, my focus will be on KVM performance. I do believe that there are still Xen users out there. So we still need to keep their interest into consideration. Given that, I am OK to make it work better in KVM first and then think about Xen later. >> I looked into the assembly code for rwsem_spin_on_owner, It need to save >> and restore 2 additional registers with my patch. Doing it your way, >> will transfer the save and restore overhead to the assembly code. >> However, __kvm_vcpu_is_preempted() is called multiple times per >> invocation of rwsem_spin_on_owner. That function is simple enough that >> making __kvm_vcpu_is_preempted() callee-save won't produce much compiler >> optimization opportunity. > This is because of that noinline, right? Otherwise it would've been > folded and register pressure would be much higher. Yes, I guess so. The noinline is there so that we know what the CPU time is for spinning rather than other activities within the slowpath. > >> The outer function rwsem_down_write_failed() >> does appear to be a bit bigger (from 866 bytes to 884 bytes) though. > I suspect GCC is being clever and since all this is static it plays > games with the calling convention and pushes these clobbers out. > > Cheers, Longman _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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