On Fri, Dec 11, 2020 at 1:45 PM Vijayanand Jitta <vji...@codeaurora.org> wrote: > > > > On 12/11/2020 2:06 PM, Alexander Potapenko wrote: > > On Thu, Dec 10, 2020 at 6:01 AM <vji...@codeaurora.org> wrote: > >> > >> From: Yogesh Lal <y...@codeaurora.org> > >> > >> Add a kernel parameter stack_hash_order to configure STACK_HASH_SIZE. > >> > >> Aim is to have configurable value for STACK_HASH_SIZE, so that one > >> can configure it depending on usecase there by reducing the static > >> memory overhead. > >> > >> One example is of Page Owner, default value of STACK_HASH_SIZE lead > >> stack depot to consume 8MB of static memory. Making it configurable > >> and use lower value helps to enable features like CONFIG_PAGE_OWNER > >> without any significant overhead. > > > > Can we go with a static CONFIG_ parameter instead? > > Guess most users won't bother changing the default anyway, and for > > CONFIG_PAGE_OWNER users changing the size at boot time is not strictly > > needed. > > > Thanks for review. > > One advantage of having run time parameter is we can simply set it to a > lower value at runtime if page_owner=off thereby reducing the memory > usage or use default value if we want to use page owner so, we have some > some flexibility here. This is not possible with static parameter as we > have to have some predefined value.
If we are talking about a configuration in which page_owner is the only stackdepot user in the system, then for page_owner=off it probably makes more sense to disable stackdepot completely instead of setting it to a lower value. This is a lot easier to do in terms of correctness. But if there are other users (e.g. KASAN), their stackdepot usage may actually dominate that of page_owner. > >> -static struct stack_record *stack_table[STACK_HASH_SIZE] = { > >> - [0 ... STACK_HASH_SIZE - 1] = NULL > >> +static unsigned int stack_hash_order = 20; > > > > Please initialize with MAX_STACK_HASH_ORDER instead. > > > > Sure, will update this. > > >> + > >> +static int __init init_stackdepot(void) > >> +{ > >> + size_t size = (STACK_HASH_SIZE * sizeof(struct stack_record *)); > >> + > >> + stack_table = vmalloc(size); > >> + memcpy(stack_table, stack_table_def, size); > > > > Looks like you are assuming stack_table_def already contains some data > > by this point. > > But if STACK_HASH_SIZE shrinks this memcpy() above will just copy some > > part of the table, whereas the rest will be lost. > > We'll need to: > > - either explicitly decide we can afford losing this data (no idea how > > bad this can potentially be), > > - or disallow storing anything prior to full stackdepot initialization > > (then we don't need stack_table_def), > > - or carefully move all entries to the first part of the table. > > > > Alex > > > > The hash for stack_table_def is computed using the run time parameter > stack_hash_order, though stack_table_def is a bigger array it will only > use the entries that are with in the run time configured STACK_HASH_SIZE > range. so, there will be no data loss during copy. Do we expect any data to be stored into stack_table_def before setup_stack_hash_order() is called? If the answer is no, then we could probably drop stack_table_def and allocate the table right in setup_stack_hash_order()? > Thanks, > Vijay > > -- > QUALCOMM INDIA, on behalf of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a > member of Code Aurora Forum, hosted by The Linux Foundation -- Alexander Potapenko Software Engineer Google Germany GmbH Erika-Mann-Straße, 33 80636 München Geschäftsführer: Paul Manicle, Halimah DeLaine Prado Registergericht und -nummer: Hamburg, HRB 86891 Sitz der Gesellschaft: Hamburg