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crypto: xor - use ktime for template benchmarking
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Currently, we use the jiffies counter as a time source, by staring at
it until a HZ period elapses, and then staring at it again and perform
as many XOR operations as we can at the same time until another HZ
period elapses, so that we can calculate the throughput. This takes
longer than necessary, and depends on HZ, which is undesirable, since
HZ is system dependent.

Let's use the ktime interface instead, and use it to time a fixed
number of XOR operations, which can be done much faster, and makes
the time spent depend on the performance level of the system itself,
which is much more reasonable. To ensure that we have the resolution
we need even on systems with 32 kHz time sources, while not spending too
much time in the benchmark on a slow CPU, let's switch to 3 attempts of
800 repetitions each: that way, we will only misidentify algorithms that
perform within 10% of each other as the fastest if they are faster than
10 GB/s to begin with, which is not expected to occur on systems with
such coarse clocks.

On ThunderX2, I get the following results:

Before:

  [72625.956765] xor: measuring software checksum speed
  [72625.993104]    8regs     : 10169.000 MB/sec
  [72626.033099]    32regs    : 12050.000 MB/sec
  [72626.073095]    arm64_neon: 11100.000 MB/sec
  [72626.073097] xor: using function: 32regs (12050.000 MB/sec)

After:

  [72599.650216] xor: measuring software checksum speed
  [72599.651188]    8regs           : 10491 MB/sec
  [72599.652006]    32regs          : 12345 MB/sec
  [72599.652871]    arm64_neon      : 11402 MB/sec
  [72599.652873] xor: using function: 32regs (12345 MB/sec)

Link: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-crypto/20200923182230.22715-3-ardb@kernel.org/
Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ardb@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
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ardbiesheuvel authored and herbertx committed Oct 2, 2020
1 parent 524ccdb commit c055e3e
Showing 1 changed file with 16 additions and 22 deletions.
38 changes: 16 additions & 22 deletions crypto/xor.c
Expand Up @@ -76,49 +76,43 @@ static int __init register_xor_blocks(void)
}
#endif

#define BENCH_SIZE (PAGE_SIZE)
#define BENCH_SIZE 4096
#define REPS 800U

static void __init
do_xor_speed(struct xor_block_template *tmpl, void *b1, void *b2)
{
int speed;
unsigned long now, j;
int i, count, max;
int i, j, count;
ktime_t min, start, diff;

tmpl->next = template_list;
template_list = tmpl;

preempt_disable();

/*
* Count the number of XORs done during a whole jiffy, and use
* this to calculate the speed of checksumming. We use a 2-page
* allocation to have guaranteed color L1-cache layout.
*/
max = 0;
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
j = jiffies;
count = 0;
while ((now = jiffies) == j)
cpu_relax();
while (time_before(jiffies, now + 1)) {
min = (ktime_t)S64_MAX;
for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
start = ktime_get();
for (j = 0; j < REPS; j++) {
mb(); /* prevent loop optimzation */
tmpl->do_2(BENCH_SIZE, b1, b2);
mb();
count++;
mb();
}
if (count > max)
max = count;
diff = ktime_sub(ktime_get(), start);
if (diff < min)
min = diff;
}

preempt_enable();

speed = max * (HZ * BENCH_SIZE / 1024);
// bytes/ns == GB/s, multiply by 1000 to get MB/s [not MiB/s]
speed = (1000 * REPS * BENCH_SIZE) / (unsigned int)ktime_to_ns(min);
tmpl->speed = speed;

printk(KERN_INFO " %-10s: %5d.%03d MB/sec\n", tmpl->name,
speed / 1000, speed % 1000);
pr_info(" %-16s: %5d MB/sec\n", tmpl->name, speed);
}

static int __init
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -158,8 +152,8 @@ calibrate_xor_blocks(void)
if (f->speed > fastest->speed)
fastest = f;

printk(KERN_INFO "xor: using function: %s (%d.%03d MB/sec)\n",
fastest->name, fastest->speed / 1000, fastest->speed % 1000);
pr_info("xor: using function: %s (%d MB/sec)\n",
fastest->name, fastest->speed);

#undef xor_speed

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