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From: Jean-Marc Valin <jmvalin@mozilla.com> To: "Christian König" <christian.koenig@amd.com>, airlied@linux.ie, alexander.deucher@amd.com, Felix.Kuehling@amd.com, labbott@redhat.com, akpm@linux-foundation.org, michel.daenzer@amd.com, dri-devel@lists.freedesktop.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Subject: Re: AMD graphics performance regression in 4.15 and later Date: Fri, 6 Apr 2018 12:42:11 -0400 [thread overview] Message-ID: <312ed341-7052-a61e-331f-d1e8fd5b477e@mozilla.com> (raw) In-Reply-To: <6cebabff-908f-5ebe-4252-760773c4cd6f@amd.com> Hi Christian, On 04/09/2018 07:48 AM, Christian König wrote: > Am 06.04.2018 um 17:30 schrieb Jean-Marc Valin: >> Hi Christian, >> >> Is there a way to turn off these huge pages at boot-time/run-time? > > Only at compile time by not setting CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE. Any reason why echo never > /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled doesn't solve the problem? Also, I assume that disabling CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE will disable them for everything and not just what your patch added, right? >> I'm not sure what you mean by "We mitigated the problem by avoiding the >> slow coherent DMA code path on almost all platforms on newer kernels". I >> tested up to 4.16 and the performance regression is just as bad as it is >> for 4.15. > > Indeed 4.16 still doesn't have that. You could use the > amd-staging-drm-next branch or wait for 4.17. Is there a way to pull just that change or is there too much interactions with other changes? > That isn't related to the GFX hardware, but to your CPU/motherboard and > whatever else you have in the system. Well, I have an nvidia GPU in the same system (normally only used for CUDA) and if I use it instead of my RX 560 then I'm not seeing any performance issue with 4.15. > Some part of your system needs SWIOTLB and that makes allocating memory > much slower. What would that part be? FTR, I have a complete description of my system at https://jmvalin.dreamwidth.org/15583.html I don't know if it's related, but I can maybe see one thing in common between my machine and the Core 2 Quad from the other bug report and that's the "NUMA part". I have a dual-socket Xeon and (AFAIK) the Core 2 Quad is made of two two-core CPUs glued together with little communication between them. > Intel doesn't use TTM because they don't have dedicated VRAM, but the > open source nvidia driver should be affected as well. I'm using the proprietary nvidia driver (because CUDA). Is that supposed to be affected as well? > We already mitigated that problem and I don't see any solution which > will arrive faster than 4.17. Is that supposed to make the slowdown unnoticeable or just slightly better? > The only quick workaround I can see is to avoid firefox, chrome for > example is reported to work perfectly fine. Or use an unaffected GPU/driver ;-) Cheers, Jean-Marc
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2018-04-06 16:42 UTC|newest] Thread overview: 27+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top 2018-04-06 0:30 AMD graphics performance regression in 4.15 and later Jean-Marc Valin 2018-04-06 8:03 ` Christian König 2018-04-06 8:10 ` Christian König 2018-04-06 15:30 ` Jean-Marc Valin 2018-04-09 11:48 ` Christian König 2018-04-06 16:42 ` Jean-Marc Valin [this message] 2018-04-06 17:20 ` Christian König 2018-04-06 22:00 ` Jean-Marc Valin 2018-04-09 9:42 ` Christian König 2018-04-09 15:17 ` Jean-Marc Valin 2018-04-10 6:48 ` Christian König 2018-04-11 4:00 ` Gabriel C 2018-04-11 5:02 ` Gabriel C 2018-06-06 11:28 ` Gabriel C 2018-06-06 11:33 ` Christian König 2018-06-06 12:08 ` Gabriel C 2018-06-06 12:19 ` Christian König 2018-04-11 9:37 ` Christian König 2018-04-11 14:26 ` Gabriel C 2018-04-11 17:21 ` Gabriel C 2018-04-11 18:35 ` Jean-Marc Valin 2018-04-11 22:20 ` Gabriel C 2018-04-12 1:47 ` Gabriel C 2018-04-20 14:47 ` Michel Dänzer 2018-04-20 19:40 ` Felix Kuehling 2018-04-23 10:23 ` Michel Dänzer 2018-07-13 2:23 ` Jean-Marc Valin
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