SLUB: Do not pass 8k objects through to the page allocator

Increase the maximum object size in SLUB so that 8k objects are not
passed through to the page allocator anymore. The network stack uses 8k
objects for performance critical operations.

The patch is motivated by a SLAB vs. SLUB regression in the netperf
benchmark. The problem is that the kfree(skb->head) call in
skb_release_data() that is subject to page allocator pass-through as the
size passed to __alloc_skb() is larger than 4 KB in this test.

As explained by Yanmin Zhang:

  I use 2.6.29-rc2 kernel to run netperf UDP-U-4k CPU_NUM client/server
  pair loopback testing on x86-64 machines. Comparing with SLUB, SLAB's
  result is about 2.3 times of SLUB's. After applying the reverting patch,
  the result difference between SLUB and SLAB becomes 1% which we might
  consider as fluctuation.

[ penberg@cs.helsinki.fi: fix oops in kmalloc() ]
Reported-by: "Zhang, Yanmin" <yanmin_zhang@linux.intel.com>
Tested-by: "Zhang, Yanmin" <yanmin_zhang@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <cl@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Pekka Enberg <penberg@cs.helsinki.fi>
This commit is contained in:
Pekka Enberg 2009-02-20 12:21:33 +02:00
parent ffadd4d0fe
commit 51735a7ca6

View file

@ -129,9 +129,9 @@ struct kmem_cache {
* This should be dropped to PAGE_SIZE / 2 once the page allocator
* "fastpath" becomes competitive with the slab allocator fastpaths.
*/
#define SLUB_MAX_SIZE (PAGE_SIZE)
#define SLUB_MAX_SIZE (2 * PAGE_SIZE)
#define SLUB_PAGE_SHIFT (PAGE_SHIFT + 1)
#define SLUB_PAGE_SHIFT (PAGE_SHIFT + 2)
/*
* We keep the general caches in an array of slab caches that are used for