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Stop wasting time on malloc in snprintf_zstd_header #15721
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Profiling zdb -vvvvv on datasets with a lot of zstd blocks, we find ourselves spending quite a lot of time on malloc/free, because we allocate a 16M abd each call, and never free it, so we're leaking 16M per call as well. This seems sub-optimal. So let's just keep the buffer around and reuse it. Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <[email protected]>
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Sure leaks per block are bad, but why do we need a leek at all? Couldn't we allocate just as much as we need instead of 16MB and then free?
The problem is that if you allocate and free each loop, then you spend most of your time in malloc/free/the bzero equivalent. So yes, I could punt the allocation up a level and make all the callers hand in an abd to use, and refactor them all to not allocate naively, but it's not really clear to me why that's a better fit here. |
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I don't love it, but it does the job and is obviously better than before.
I did enough code read to satisfy myself that there's only gonna be one thread calling this.
If nothing else, I'm pretty sure the print output would get horrendously mangled if it were called in parallel without explicit locking. |
Profiling zdb -vvvvv on datasets with a lot of zstd blocks, we find ourselves spending quite a lot of time on malloc/free, because we allocate a 16M abd each call, and never free it, so we're leaking 16M per call as well. This seems sub-optimal. So let's just keep the buffer around and reuse it. Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <[email protected]> Closes openzfs#15721
Profiling zdb -vvvvv on datasets with a lot of zstd blocks, we find ourselves spending quite a lot of time on malloc/free, because we allocate a 16M abd each call, and never free it, so we're leaking 16M per call as well. This seems sub-optimal. So let's just keep the buffer around and reuse it. Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <[email protected]> Closes #15721
Profiling zdb -vvvvv on datasets with a lot of zstd blocks, we find ourselves spending quite a lot of time on malloc/free, because we allocate a 16M abd each call, and never free it, so we're leaking 16M per call as well. This seems sub-optimal. So let's just keep the buffer around and reuse it. Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <[email protected]> Closes openzfs#15721
Profiling zdb -vvvvv on datasets with a lot of zstd blocks, we find ourselves spending quite a lot of time on malloc/free, because we allocate a 16M abd each call, and never free it, so we're leaking 16M per call as well. This seems sub-optimal. So let's just keep the buffer around and reuse it. Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <[email protected]> Closes openzfs#15721
Profiling zdb -vvvvv on datasets with a lot of zstd blocks, we find ourselves spending quite a lot of time on malloc/free, because we allocate a 16M abd each call, and never free it, so we're leaking 16M per call as well.
This seems sub-optimal. So let's just keep the buffer around and reuse it.
Motivation and Context
Leaking 16M per zstd block seems bad, actually.
Description
It's a static allocation. That's really it.
How Has This Been Tested?
It ran and I was no longer spending all my time in malloc/free/clear_page_erms.
Types of changes
Checklist:
Signed-off-by
.