On Wed, 2022-04-06 at 10:49 +0800, Huang, Ying wrote: > > > > If so, > > > > > > # echo A > memory.reclaim > > > > > > means > > > > > > a) "A" bytes memory are freed from the memcg, regardless demoting is > > > used or not. > > > > > > or > > > > > > b) "A" bytes memory are reclaimed from the memcg, some of them may be > > > freed, some of them may be just demoted from DRAM to PMEM. The total > > > number is "A". > > > > > > For me, a) looks more reasonable. > > > > > > > We can use a DEMOTE flag to control the demotion behavior for > > memory.reclaim. If the flag is not set (the default), then > > no_demotion of scan_control can be set to 1, similar to > > reclaim_pages(). > > If we have to use a flag to control the behavior, I think it's better to > have a separate interface (e.g. memory.demote). But do we really need b)? > > > The question is then whether we want to rename memory.reclaim to > > something more general. I think this name is fine if reclaim-based > > demotion is an accepted concept. > memory.demote will work for 2 level of memory tiers. But when we have 3 level of memory (e.g. high bandwidth memory, DRAM and PMEM), it gets ambiguous again of wheter we sould demote from high bandwidth memory or DRAM. Will something like this be more general? echo X > memory_[dram,pmem,hbm].reclaim So echo X > memory_dram.reclaim means that we want to free up X bytes from DRAM for the mem cgroup. echo demote > memory_dram.reclaim_policy This means that we prefer demotion for reclaim instead of swapping to disk. Tim