On Wed, 12 Nov 2025 17:55:28 -0700
Jon Kohler <[email protected]> wrote:
> vhost_get_user and vhost_put_user leverage __get_user and __put_user,
> respectively, which were both added in 2016 by commit 6b1e6cc7855b
> ("vhost: new device IOTLB API"). In a heavy UDP transmit workload on a
> vhost-net backed tap device, these functions showed up as ~11.6% of
> samples in a flamegraph of the underlying vhost worker thread.
>
> Quoting Linus from [1]:
> Anyway, every single __get_user() call I looked at looked like
> historical garbage. [...] End result: I get the feeling that we
> should just do a global search-and-replace of the __get_user/
> __put_user users, replace them with plain get_user/put_user instead,
> and then fix up any fallout (eg the coco code).
>
> Switch to plain get_user/put_user in vhost, which results in a slight
> throughput speedup. get_user now about ~8.4% of samples in flamegraph.
>
> Basic iperf3 test on a Intel 5416S CPU with Ubuntu 25.10 guest:
> TX: taskset -c 2 iperf3 -c <rx_ip> -t 60 -p 5200 -b 0 -u -i 5
> RX: taskset -c 2 iperf3 -s -p 5200 -D
> Before: 6.08 Gbits/sec
> After: 6.32 Gbits/sec
>
> As to what drives the speedup, Sean's patch [2] explains:
> Use the normal, checked versions for get_user() and put_user() instead
> of
> the double-underscore versions that omit range checks, as the checked
> versions are actually measurably faster on modern CPUs (12%+ on Intel,
> 25%+ on AMD).
Is there an associated access_ok() that can also be removed?
David