Re: [PATCH 2/2] mm/mempolicy: Skip walking HUGETLB vma if MPOL_MF_STRICT is specified alone

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On Fri 17-01-20 10:38:21, Li Xinhai wrote:
> On 2020-01-17 at 03:22 Mike Kravetz wrote:
> >On 1/15/20 11:59 PM, Michal Hocko wrote:
> >> On Wed 15-01-20 13:07:17, Mike Kravetz wrote:
> >>> What should we do?
> >>> ==================
> >>> 1) Nothing more than optimizations by Li Xinhai.  Behavior that could be
> >>>    seen as conflicting with man page has existed since v3.12 and I am
> >>>    not aware of any complaints.
> >>> 2) In addition to optimizations by Li Xinhai, modify code to truly ignore
> >>>    MPOL_MF_STRICT for huge page mappings.  This would be fairly easy to do
> >>>    after a failure of migrate_pages().  We could simply traverse the list
> >>>    of pages that were not migrated looking for any non-hugetlb page.
> >>> 3) Remove the statement "MPOL_MF_STRICT is ignored on huge page mappings."
> >>>    and modify code accordingly.
> >>>
> >>> My suggestion would be for 1 or 2.  Thoughts?
> >>
> >> And why do we exactly need to do anything at all? There is an
> >> inconsistency that has been there for years without anybody noticing.
> >> NUMA API is a mess on its own and unfixable at this stage, there will
> >> always be some corner cases. If there is no real workload hitting this
> >> incosistency and suffering, I would rather not touch this at all.
> >> Unless the change would clean up the code or make it more maintainable.
> >
> >That is a very valid point.  Sometimes we as developers get focused on the
> >actual code changes and fail to ask the question "does this really need to
> >be changed?" or "what value do the code changes provide?".
> >
> >Li Xinhai came up with two optimizations in how the mbind code deals with
> >hugetlb pages.  This 'sub-optimal' code has existed for more than 6 years.
> >Unless I am mistaken, nobody has actually complained or noticed this behavior.
> >I believe Li Xinhai noticed this inefficient code via code inspection.  Of
> >course, based on what we know today one could write a test program to show
> >the inefficient behavior.  However, no real users have noticed this during
> >the past 6 years.
> >
> >The proposed code changes are fairly simple.  However, I would not say that
> >they clean up the code or make it more maintainable.  They essentially add
> >or modify two checks to bail out early for hugetlb vma's if the flag which
> >is documented to not apply to hugetlb pages (MPOL_MF_STRICT) is specified.
> >If one is trying to follow the entire mbind code path for hugetlb pages,
> >these patches will make that easier follow/understand.  That is simply
> >because one can ignore downstream code/functionality.
> >
> >Based on Michal's criteria above, I now believe the code changes should not
> >be made.  Yes, they are fairly simple.  However, even simple changes have
> >the potential to break something (build breakage with v1 of patch).  We should
> >leave this code as is unless issues are reported by users. 
> 
> Acctually I am the user of this API, and when using STRICT alone to know if
> pages are misplaced and take action later, it seems don't work consistantly
> on hugepage. Initially, I assumed that I didn't use it correctly, that flag must
> use with MOVE*? After check the code, found that flag didn't been handled,
> and finally noticed that there is a NOTE about it in MAN page.

This is the first time you are mentioning an actual use case. This
should have been expressed from the very begining. Including an
explanation of what the use case is and how it is affected by the
current behavior.

> I'd like the STRICT been handled, but at present since this is not going to
> be implemented, I have to handle differently on hugetlb mapping.
> 
> At meantime, I thought that this patch can be useful and posted it, because
> for scenarios where hugetlb mapping are handled with other mappings, less
> cost for the mbind call. (although it didn't help my current case)
> 
> I think if we could provid better performance, why not do that only because
> that code has exists for 6 years?

Do you have any numbers to prove performance improvements? I believe
arguments against the patch have been already presented.
-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs





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