Re: [PATCH v4 2/7] mm: multi-gen LRU: Have secondary MMUs participate in aging

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On Wed, May 29, 2024, Yu Zhao wrote:
> On Wed, May 29, 2024 at 3:59 PM Sean Christopherson <seanjc@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > On Wed, May 29, 2024, Yu Zhao wrote:
> > > On Wed, May 29, 2024 at 12:05 PM James Houghton <jthoughton@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Secondary MMUs are currently consulted for access/age information at
> > > > eviction time, but before then, we don't get accurate age information.
> > > > That is, pages that are mostly accessed through a secondary MMU (like
> > > > guest memory, used by KVM) will always just proceed down to the oldest
> > > > generation, and then at eviction time, if KVM reports the page to be
> > > > young, the page will be activated/promoted back to the youngest
> > > > generation.
> > >
> > > Correct, and as I explained offline, this is the only reasonable
> > > behavior if we can't locklessly walk secondary MMUs.
> > >
> > > Just for the record, the (crude) analogy I used was:
> > > Imagine a large room with many bills ($1, $5, $10, ...) on the floor,
> > > but you are only allowed to pick up 10 of them (and put them in your
> > > pocket). A smart move would be to survey the room *first and then*
> > > pick up the largest ones. But if you are carrying a 500 lbs backpack,
> > > you would just want to pick up whichever that's in front of you rather
> > > than walk the entire room.
> > >
> > > MGLRU should only scan (or lookaround) secondary MMUs if it can be
> > > done lockless. Otherwise, it should just fall back to the existing
> > > approach, which existed in previous versions but is removed in this
> > > version.
> >
> > IIUC, by "existing approach" you mean completely ignore secondary MMUs that
> > don't implement a lockless walk?
> 
> No, the existing approach only checks secondary MMUs for LRU folios,
> i.e., those at the end of the LRU list. It might not find the best
> candidates (the coldest ones) on the entire list, but it doesn't pay
> as much for the locking. MGLRU can *optionally* scan MMUs (secondary
> included) to find the best candidates, but it can only be a win if the
> scanning incurs a relatively low overhead, e.g., done locklessly for
> the secondary MMU. IOW, this is a balance between the cost of
> reclaiming not-so-cold (warm) folios and that of finding the coldest
> folios.

Gotcha.

I tend to agree with Yu, driving the behavior via a Kconfig may generate simpler
_code_, but I think it increases the overall system complexity.  E.g. distros
will likely enable the Kconfig, and in my experience people using KVM with a
distro kernel usually aren't kernel experts, i.e. likely won't know that there's
even a decision to be made, let alone be able to make an informed decision.

Having an mmu_notifier hook that is conditionally implemented doesn't seem overly
complex, e.g. even if there's a runtime aspect at play, it'd be easy enough for
KVM to nullify its mmu_notifier hook during initialization.  The hardest part is
likely going to be figuring out the threshold for how much overhead is too much.





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