David Hildenbrand writes: > On 20.06.19 00:32, Alexander Duyck wrote: >> This series provides an asynchronous means of hinting to a hypervisor >> that a guest page is no longer in use and can have the data associated >> with it dropped. To do this I have implemented functionality that allows >> for what I am referring to as waste page treatment. >> >> I have based many of the terms and functionality off of waste water >> treatment, the idea for the similarity occurred to me after I had reached >> the point of referring to the hints as "bubbles", as the hints used the >> same approach as the balloon functionality but would disappear if they >> were touched, as a result I started to think of the virtio device as an >> aerator. The general idea with all of this is that the guest should be >> treating the unused pages so that when they end up heading "downstream" >> to either another guest, or back at the host they will not need to be >> written to swap. >> >> When the number of "dirty" pages in a given free_area exceeds our high >> water mark, which is currently 32, we will schedule the aeration task to >> start going through and scrubbing the zone. While the scrubbing is taking >> place a boundary will be defined that we use to seperate the "aerated" >> pages from the "dirty" ones. We use the ZONE_AERATION_ACTIVE bit to flag >> when these boundaries are in place. > > I still *detest* the terminology, sorry. Can't you come up with a > simpler terminology that makes more sense in the context of operating > systems and pages we want to hint to the hypervisor? (that is the only > use case you are using it for so far) FWIW, I thought the terminology made sense, in particular given the analogy with the balloon driver. Operating systems in general, and Linux in particular, already use tons of analogy-supported terminology. In particular, a "waste page treatment" terminology is not very far from the very common "garbage collection" or "scrubbing" wordings. I would find "hinting" much less specific. for example. Usually, the phrases that stick are somewhat unique while providing a useful analogy to server as a reminder of what the thing actually does. IMHO, it's the case here on both fronts, so I like it. > >> >> I am leaving a number of things hard-coded such as limiting the lowest >> order processed to PAGEBLOCK_ORDER, and have left it up to the guest to >> determine what batch size it wants to allocate to process the hints. >> >> My primary testing has just been to verify the memory is being freed after >> allocation by running memhog 32g in the guest and watching the total free >> memory via /proc/meminfo on the host. With this I have verified most of >> the memory is freed after each iteration. As far as performance I have >> been mainly focusing on the will-it-scale/page_fault1 test running with >> 16 vcpus. With that I have seen a less than 1% difference between the > > 1% throughout all benchmarks? Guess that is quite good. > >> base kernel without these patches, with the patches and virtio-balloon >> disabled, and with the patches and virtio-balloon enabled with hinting. >> >> Changes from the RFC: >> Moved aeration requested flag out of aerator and into zone->flags. >> Moved boundary out of free_area and into local variables for aeration. >> Moved aeration cycle out of interrupt and into workqueue. >> Left nr_free as total pages instead of splitting it between raw and aerated. >> Combined size and physical address values in virtio ring into one 64b value. >> Restructured the patch set to reduce patches from 11 to 6. >> > > I'm planning to look into the details, but will be on PTO for two weeks > starting this Saturday (and still have other things to finish first :/ ). > >> --- >> >> Alexander Duyck (6): >> mm: Adjust shuffle code to allow for future coalescing >> mm: Move set/get_pcppage_migratetype to mmzone.h >> mm: Use zone and order instead of free area in free_list manipulators >> mm: Introduce "aerated" pages >> mm: Add logic for separating "aerated" pages from "raw" pages >> virtio-balloon: Add support for aerating memory via hinting >> >> >> drivers/virtio/Kconfig | 1 >> drivers/virtio/virtio_balloon.c | 110 ++++++++++++++ >> include/linux/memory_aeration.h | 118 +++++++++++++++ >> include/linux/mmzone.h | 113 +++++++++------ >> include/linux/page-flags.h | 8 + >> include/uapi/linux/virtio_balloon.h | 1 >> mm/Kconfig | 5 + >> mm/Makefile | 1 >> mm/aeration.c | 270 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >> mm/page_alloc.c | 203 ++++++++++++++++++-------- >> mm/shuffle.c | 24 --- >> mm/shuffle.h | 35 +++++ >> 12 files changed, 753 insertions(+), 136 deletions(-) >> create mode 100644 include/linux/memory_aeration.h >> create mode 100644 mm/aeration.c > > Compared to > > 17 files changed, 838 insertions(+), 86 deletions(-) > create mode 100644 include/linux/memory_aeration.h > create mode 100644 mm/aeration.c > > this looks like a good improvement :) -- Cheers, Christophe de Dinechin (IRC c3d)