On Mon, 9 Mar 2020 15:32:16 -0700 Roman Gushchin <guro@xxxxxx> wrote: > Commit 944d9fec8d7a ("hugetlb: add support for gigantic page allocation > at runtime") has added the run-time allocation of gigantic pages. However > it actually works only at early stages of the system loading, when > the majority of memory is free. After some time the memory gets > fragmented by non-movable pages, so the chances to find a contiguous > 1 GB block are getting close to zero. Even dropping caches manually > doesn't help a lot. > > At large scale rebooting servers in order to allocate gigantic hugepages > is quite expensive and complex. At the same time keeping some constant > percentage of memory in reserved hugepages even if the workload isn't > using it is a big waste: not all workloads can benefit from using 1 GB > pages. > > The following solution can solve the problem: > 1) On boot time a dedicated cma area* is reserved. The size is passed > as a kernel argument. > 2) Run-time allocations of gigantic hugepages are performed using the > cma allocator and the dedicated cma area > > In this case gigantic hugepages can be allocated successfully with a > high probability, however the memory isn't completely wasted if nobody > is using 1GB hugepages: it can be used for pagecache, anon memory, > THPs, etc. > > * On a multi-node machine a per-node cma area is allocated on each node. > Following gigantic hugetlb allocation are using the first available > numa node if the mask isn't specified by a user. > > Usage: > 1) configure the kernel to allocate a cma area for hugetlb allocations: > pass hugetlb_cma=10G as a kernel argument > > 2) allocate hugetlb pages as usual, e.g. > echo 10 > /sys/kernel/mm/hugepages/hugepages-1048576kB/nr_hugepages > > If the option isn't enabled or the allocation of the cma area failed, > the current behavior of the system is preserved. > > Only x86 is covered by this patch, but it's trivial to extend it to > cover other architectures as well. > Sounds promising. I'm not seeing any dependencies on CONFIG_CMA in there. Does the code actually compile if CONFIG_CMA=n? If yes, then does it add unneeded bloat?