> > Sure, here's the Scalable Tiered Memory Control (STMC) > > > > **Background** > > > > In the era when artificial intelligence, big data analytics, and > > machine learning have become mainstream research topics and > > application scenarios, the demand for high-capacity and high- > > bandwidth memory in computers has become increasingly important. > > The emergence of CXL (Compute Express Link) provides the > > possibility of high-capacity memory. Although CXL TYPE3 devices > > can provide large memory capacities, their access speed is lower > > than traditional DRAM due to hardware architecture limitations. > > > > To enjoy the large capacity brought by CXL memory while minimizing > > the impact of high latency, Linux has introduced the Tiered Memory > > architecture. In the Tiered Memory architecture, CXL memory is > > treated as an independent, slower NUMA NODE, while DRAM is > > considered as a relatively faster NUMA NODE. Applications allocate > > memory from the local node, and Tiered Memory, leveraging memory > > reclamation and NUMA Balancing mechanisms, can transparently demote > > physical pages not recently accessed by user processes to the slower > > CXL NUMA NODE. However, when user processes re-access the demoted > > memory, the Tiered Memory mechanism will, based on certain logic, > > decide whether to promote the demoted physical pages back to the > > fast NUMA NODE. If the promotion is successful, the memory accessed > > by the user process will reside in DRAM; otherwise, it will reside in > > the CXL NODE. Through the Tiered Memory mechanism, Linux balances > > betweenlarge memory capacity and latency, striving to maintain an > > equilibrium for applications. > > > > **Problem** > > Although Tiered Memory strives to balance between large capacity and > > latency, specific scenarios can lead to the following issues: > > > > 1. In scenarios requiring massive computations, if data is heavily > > stored in CXL slow memory and Tiered Memory cannot promptly > > promote this memory to fast DRAM, it will significantly impact > > program performance. > > 2. Similar to the scenario described in point 1, if Tiered Memory > > decides to promote these physical pages to fast DRAM NODE, but > > due to limitations in the DRAM NODE promote ratio, these physical > > pages cannot be promoted. Consequently, the program will keep > > running in slow memory. > > 3. After an application finishes computing on a large block of fast > > memory, it may not immediately re-access it. Hence, this memory > > can only wait for the memory reclamation mechanism to demote it. > > 4. Similar to the scenario described in point 3, if the demotion > > speed is slow, these cold pages will occupy the promotion > > resources, preventing some eligible slow pages from being > > immediately promoted, severely affecting application efficiency. > > > > **Solution** > > We propose the **Scalable Tiered Memory Control (STMC)** mechanism, > > which delegates the authority of promoting and demoting memory to the > > application. The principle is simple, as follows: > > > > 1. When an application is preparing for computation, it can promote > > the memory it needs to use or ensure the memory resides on a fast > > NODE. > > 2. When an application will not use the memory shortly, it can > > immediately demote the memory to slow memory, freeing up valuable > > promotion resources. > > > > STMC mechanism is implemented through the madvise system call, providing > > two new advice options: MADV_DEMOTE and MADV_PROMOTE. MADV_DEMOTE > > advises demote the physical memory to the node where slow memory > > resides; this advice only fails if there is no free physical memory on > > the slow memory node. MADV_PROMOTE advises retaining the physical memory > > in the fast memory; this advice only fails if there are no promotion > > slots available on the fast memory node. Benefits brought by STMC > > include: > > > > 1. The STMC mechanism is a variant of on-demand memory management > > designed to let applications enjoy fast memory as much as possible, > > while actively demoting to slow memory when not in use, thus > > freeing up promotion slots for the NODE and allowing it to run in > > an optimized Tiered Memory environment. > > 2. The STMC mechanism better balances large capacity and latency. > > > > **Shortcomings of STMC** > > The STMC mechanism requires the caller to manage memory demotion and > > promotion. If the memory is not promptly demoting after an promotion, > > it may cause issues similar to memory leaks > Ehm, that sounds scary. Can you elaborate what's happening here and why > it is "similar to memory leaks"? > > > Can you also point out why migrate_pages() is not suitable? I would > assume demote/promote is in essence simply migrating memory between nodes. > > -- > Cheers, > > David / dhildenb > Thank you for the response. Below are my points of view. If there are any mistakes, I appreciate your understanding: 1. In a tiered memory system, fast nodes and slow nodes act as two common memory pools. The system has a certain ratio limit for promotion. For example, a NODE may stipulate that when the available memory is less than 1GB or 1/4 of the node's memory, promotion are prohibited. If we use migrate_pages at this point, it will unrestrictedly promote slow pages to fast memory, which may prevent other processes’ pages that should have been promoted from being promoted. This is what I mean by occupying promotion resources. 2. As described in point 1, if we use MADV_PROMOTE to temporarily promote a batch of pages and do not demote them immediately after usage, it will occupy many promotion resources. Other hot pages that need promote will not be able to get promote, which will impact the performance of certain processes. 3. MADV_DEMOTE and MADV_PROMOTE only rely on madvise, while migrate_pages depends on libnuma. 4. MADV_DEMOTE and MADV_PROMOTE provide a better balance between capacity and latency. They allow hot pages that need promoting to be promoted smoothly and pages that need demoting to be demoted immediately. This helps tiered memory systems to operate more rationally. :) BiscuitOS Broiler