On 08/10/2017 03:05 PM, Michal Hocko wrote:
On Tue 08-08-17 14:34:25, Wei Wang wrote:
On 08/08/2017 02:12 PM, Wei Wang wrote:
On 08/03/2017 05:11 PM, Michal Hocko wrote:
On Thu 03-08-17 14:38:18, Wei Wang wrote:
This is just too ugly and wrong actually. Never provide struct page
pointers outside of the zone->lock. What I've had in mind was to simply
walk free lists of the suitable order and call the callback for each
one.
Something as simple as
for (i = 0; i < MAX_NR_ZONES; i++) {
struct zone *zone = &pgdat->node_zones[i];
if (!populated_zone(zone))
continue;
Can we directly use for_each_populated_zone(zone) here?
yes, my example couldn't because I was still assuming per-node API
spin_lock_irqsave(&zone->lock, flags);
for (order = min_order; order < MAX_ORDER; ++order) {
This appears to be covered by for_each_migratetype_order(order, mt) below.
yes but
#define for_each_migratetype_order(order, type) \
for (order = 0; order < MAX_ORDER; order++) \
for (type = 0; type < MIGRATE_TYPES; type++)
so you would have to skip orders < min_order
Yes, that's why we have a new macro
#define for_each_migratetype_order_decend(min_order, order, type) \
for (order = MAX_ORDER - 1; order < MAX_ORDER && order >= min_order; \
order--) \
for (type = 0; type < MIGRATE_TYPES; type++)
If you don't like the macro, we can also directly use it in the code.
I think it would be better to report the larger free page block first, since
the callback has an opportunity (though just a theoretical possibility,
good to
take that into consideration if possible) to skip reporting the given
free page
block to the hypervisor as the ring gets full. Losing the small block is
better
than losing the larger one, in terms of the optimization work.
Best,
Wei