On Sun, Dec 16, 2018 at 4:43 AM Mike Rapoport <rppt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Dec 14, 2018 at 05:48:46PM -0800, Dan Williams wrote: > > Randomization of the page allocator improves the average utilization of > > a direct-mapped memory-side-cache. Memory side caching is a platform > > capability that Linux has been previously exposed to in HPC > > (high-performance computing) environments on specialty platforms. In > > that instance it was a smaller pool of high-bandwidth-memory relative to > > higher-capacity / lower-bandwidth DRAM. Now, this capability is going to > > be found on general purpose server platforms where DRAM is a cache in > > front of higher latency persistent memory [1]. [..] > > diff --git a/mm/memblock.c b/mm/memblock.c > > index 185bfd4e87bb..fd617928ccc1 100644 > > --- a/mm/memblock.c > > +++ b/mm/memblock.c > > @@ -834,8 +834,16 @@ int __init_memblock memblock_set_sidecache(phys_addr_t base, phys_addr_t size, > > return ret; > > > > for (i = start_rgn; i < end_rgn; i++) { > > - type->regions[i].cache_size = cache_size; > > - type->regions[i].direct_mapped = direct_mapped; > > + struct memblock_region *r = &type->regions[i]; > > + > > + r->cache_size = cache_size; > > + r->direct_mapped = direct_mapped; > > I think this change can be merged into the previous patch Ok, will do. > > + /* > > + * Enable randomization for amortizing direct-mapped > > + * memory-side-cache conflicts. > > + */ > > + if (r->size > r->cache_size && r->direct_mapped) > > + page_alloc_shuffle_enable(); > > It seems that this is the only use for ->direct_mapped in the memblock > code. Wouldn't cache_size != 0 suffice? I.e., in the code that sets the > memblock region attributes, the cache_size can be set to 0 for the non > direct mapped caches, isn't it? > The HMAT specification allows for other cache-topologies, so it's not sufficient to just look for non-zero size when a platform implements a set-associative cache. The expectation is that a set-associative cache would not need the kernel to perform memory randomization to improve the cache utilization. The check for memory size > cache-size is a sanity check for a platform BIOS or system configuration that mis-reports or mis-sizes the cache.