On Tue, Jan 23, 2024 at 04:35:19PM +0800, Huang, Ying wrote: > Gregory Price <gregory.price@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > On Mon, Jan 22, 2024 at 11:54:34PM -0500, Gregory Price wrote: > >> > > >> > Can the above code be simplified as something like below? > >> > > >> > resume_node = prev_node; > > --- resume_weight = 0; > > +++ resume_weight = weights[node]; > >> > for (...) { > >> > ... > >> > } > >> > > >> > >> I'll take another look at it, but this logic is annoying because of the > >> corner case: me->il_prev can be NUMA_NO_NODE or an actual numa node. > >> > > > > After a quick look, as long as no one objects to (me->il_prev) remaining > > NUMA_NO_NODE > > MAX_NUMNODES-1 ? > When setting a new policy, the il_prev gets set to NUMA_NO_NODE. It's not harmful and is just (-1), which is functionally the same as (MAX_NUMNODES-1) for the purpose of iterating the nodemask with next_node_in(). So it's fine to set (resume_node = me->il_prev) as discussed. I have a cleaned up function I'll push when i fix up a few other spots. > > while having a weight assigned to pol->wil.cur_weight, > > I think that it is OK. > > And, IIUC, pol->wil.cur_weight can be 0, as in > weighted_interleave_nodes(), if it's 0, it will be assigned to default > weight for the node. > cur_weight is different than the global weights. cur_weight tells us how many pages are remaining to allocate for the current node. (cur_weight = 0) can happen in two scenarios: - initial setting of mempolicy (NUMA_NO_NODE w/ cur_weight=0) - weighted_interleave_nodes decrements it down to 0 Now that i'm looking at it - the second condition should not exist, and we can eliminate it. The logic in weighted_interleave_nodes is actually annoyingly unclear at the moment, so I'm going to re-factor it a bit to be more explicit. ~Gregory