On 2017/7/18 23:38, Jerome Glisse wrote: > On Tue, Jul 18, 2017 at 11:26:51AM +0800, Bob Liu wrote: >> On 2017/7/14 5:15, Jérôme Glisse wrote: >>> Sorry i made horrible mistake on names in v4, i completly miss- >>> understood the suggestion. So here i repost with proper naming. >>> This is the only change since v3. Again sorry about the noise >>> with v4. >>> >>> Changes since v4: >>> - s/DEVICE_HOST/DEVICE_PUBLIC >>> >>> Git tree: >>> https://cgit.freedesktop.org/~glisse/linux/log/?h=hmm-cdm-v5 >>> >>> >>> Cache coherent device memory apply to architecture with system bus >>> like CAPI or CCIX. Device connected to such system bus can expose >>> their memory to the system and allow cache coherent access to it >>> from the CPU. >>> >>> Even if for all intent and purposes device memory behave like regular >>> memory, we still want to manage it in isolation from regular memory. >>> Several reasons for that, first and foremost this memory is less >>> reliable than regular memory if the device hangs because of invalid >>> commands we can loose access to device memory. Second CPU access to >>> this memory is expected to be slower than to regular memory. Third >>> having random memory into device means that some of the bus bandwith >>> wouldn't be available to the device but would be use by CPU access. >>> >>> This is why we want to manage such memory in isolation from regular >>> memory. Kernel should not try to use this memory even as last resort >>> when running out of memory, at least for now. >>> >> >> I think set a very large node distance for "Cache Coherent Device Memory" >> may be a easier way to address these concerns. > > Such approach was discuss at length in the past see links below. Outcome > of discussion: > - CPU less node are bad > - device memory can be unreliable (device hang) no way for application > to understand that Device memory can also be more reliable if using high quality and expensive memory. > - application and driver NUMA madvise/mbind/mempolicy ... can conflict > with each other and no way the kernel can figure out which should > apply > - NUMA as it is now would not work as we need further isolation that > what a large node distance would provide > Agree, that's where we need spend time on. One drawback of HMM-CDM I'm worry about is one more extra copy. In the cache coherent case, CPU can write data to device memory directly then start fpga/GPU/other accelerators. Thanks, Bob Liu -- 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>