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World of Software > Computing > Linux Fixes A Performance Regression In The Slab Code
Computing

Linux Fixes A Performance Regression In The Slab Code

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Last updated: 2025/12/10 at 5:42 AM
News Room Published 10 December 2025
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Linux Fixes A Performance Regression In The Slab Code
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A performance fix has been submitted to the Linux kernel for dealing with a regression in the Slab memory allocation code.

The sole patch with today’s slab pull request for Linux 6.19 and to be back-ported to Linux 6.18 LTS stable is fixing a performance regression for code involving heavy kmem_cache_destroy() usage.

The kmem_cache_destroy() calls kvfree_rcu_barrier() that ends up flushing RCU sheaves across all slab caches when a cache is destroyed. But that isn’t mnecessary with only the RCU sheaves belonging to the cache being destroy should need to be flushed. This stable fix introduces kvfree_rcu_barrier_on_cache() to be more selective about the sheaves being flushed so only the relevant ones are removed.

This new code is now faster and addresses some known performance regressions in the kernel code:

The performance benefit is evaluated on a 12 core 24 threads AMD Ryzen 5900X machine (1 socket), by loading slub_kunit module.

Before:
Total calls: 19
Average latency (us): 18127
Total time (us): 344414

After:
Total calls: 19
Average latency (us): 10066
Total time (us): 191264

Two performance regression have been reported:
– stress module loader test’s runtime increases by 50-60% (Daniel)
– internal graphics test’s runtime on Tegra23 increases by 35% (Jon)

The performance regression was introduced back in Linux 6.18-rc1 with the introduction of sheaves and persisted through the Linux 6.18 stable release. In the days ahead this patch should be back-ported to a stable Linux 6.18 point release.

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