On Sun 27-11-16 13:19:54, Mel Gorman wrote: [...] > @@ -2588,18 +2594,22 @@ struct page *buffered_rmqueue(struct zone *preferred_zone, > struct page *page; > bool cold = ((gfp_flags & __GFP_COLD) != 0); > > - if (likely(order == 0)) { > + if (likely(order <= PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER)) { > struct per_cpu_pages *pcp; > struct list_head *list; > > local_irq_save(flags); > do { > + unsigned int pindex; > + > + pindex = order_to_pindex(migratetype, order); > pcp = &this_cpu_ptr(zone->pageset)->pcp; > - list = &pcp->lists[migratetype]; > + list = &pcp->lists[pindex]; > if (list_empty(list)) { > - pcp->count += rmqueue_bulk(zone, 0, > + int nr_pages = rmqueue_bulk(zone, order, > pcp->batch, list, > migratetype, cold); > + pcp->count += (nr_pages << order); > if (unlikely(list_empty(list))) > goto failed; just a nit, we can reorder the check and the count update because nobody could have stolen pages allocated by rmqueue_bulk. I would also consider nr_pages a bit misleading because we get a number or allocated elements. Nothing to lose sleep over... > } But... Unless I am missing something this effectively means that we do not exercise high order atomic reserves. Shouldn't we fallback to the locked __rmqueue_smallest(zone, order, MIGRATE_HIGHATOMIC) for order > 0 && ALLOC_HARDER ? Or is this just hidden in some other code path which I am not seeing? Other than that the patch looks reasonable to me. Keeping some portion of !costly pages on pcp lists sounds useful from the fragmentation point of view as well AFAICS because it would be normally dissolved for order-0 requests while we push on the reclaim more right now. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>