Hi, Dan. On Wed, Jun 02, 2010 at 08:27:48AM -0700, Dan Magenheimer wrote: > Hi Minchan -- > > > I think cleancache approach is cool. :) > > I have some suggestions and questions. > > Thanks for your interest! > > > > If a get_page is successful on a non-shared pool, the page is flushed > > (thus > > > making cleancache an "exclusive" cache). On a shared pool, the page > > > > Do you have any reason about force "exclusive" on a non-shared pool? > > To free memory on pesudo-RAM? > > I want to make it "inclusive" by some reason but unfortunately I can't > > say why I want it now. > > The main reason is to free up memory in pseudo-RAM and to > avoid unnecessary cleancache_flush calls. If you want > inclusive, the page can be put immediately following > the get. If put-after-get for inclusive becomes common, > the interface could easily be extended to add a "get_no_flush" > call. Sounds good to me. > > > While you mentioned it's "exclusive", cleancache_get_page doesn't > > flush the page at below code. > > Is it a role of user who implement cleancache_ops->get_page? > > Yes, the flush is done by the cleancache implementation. > > > If backed device is ram(ie), Could we _move_ the pages from page cache > > to cleancache? > > I mean I don't want to copy page when get/put operation. we can just > > move page in case of backed device "ram". Is it possible? > > By "move", do you mean changing the virtual mappings? Yes, > this could be done as long as the source and destination are > both directly addressable (that is, true physical RAM), but > requires TLB manipulation and has some complicated corner > cases. The copy semantics simplifies the implementation on > both the "frontend" and the "backend" and also allows the > backend to do fancy things on-the-fly like page compression > and page deduplication. Agree. But I don't mean it. If I use brd as backend, i want to do it follwing as. put_page : remove_from_page_cache(page); brd_insert_page(page); get_page : brd_lookup_page(page); add_to_page_cache(page); Of course, I know it's impossible without new metadata and modification of page cache handling and it makes front and backend's good layered design. What I want is to remove copy overhead when backend is ram and it's also part of main memory(ie, we have page descriptor). Do you have an idea? > > > You send the patches which is core of cleancache but I don't see any > > use case. > > Could you send use case patches with this series? > > It could help understand cleancache's benefit. > > Do you mean the Xen Transcendent Memory ("tmem") implementation? > If so, this is four files in the Xen source tree (common/tmem.c, > common/tmem_xen.c, include/xen/tmem.h, include/xen/tmem_xen.h). > There is also an html document in the Xen source tree, which can > be viewed here: > http://oss.oracle.com/projects/tmem/dist/documentation/internals/xen4-internals-v01.html > > Or did you mean a cleancache_ops "backend"? For tmem, there > is one file linux/drivers/xen/tmem.c and it interfaces between > the cleancache_ops calls and Xen hypercalls. It should be in > a Xenlinux pv_ops tree soon, or I can email it sooner. I mean "backend". :) > > I am also eagerly awaiting Nitin Gupta's cleancache backend > and implementation to do in-kernel page cache compression. Do Nitin say he will make backend of cleancache for page cache compression? It would be good feature. I have a interest, too. :) Thanks, Dan. > > Thanks, > Dan -- Kind regards, Minchan Kim -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxx For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>