On Wed 25-03-20 13:53:31, Baoquan He wrote: > On 03/24/20 at 12:25pm, David Rientjes wrote: > > On Tue, 24 Mar 2020, Baoquan He wrote: > > > > > This moving makes the layout of /proc/zoneinfo more sensible. And there > > > are 4 zones at most currently, it doesn't need to scroll down much to get > > > to the 1st populated zone, even though the 1st populated zone is MOVABLE > > > zone. > > > > > > > Doesn't this introduce risk that it will break existing parsers of > > /proc/zoneinfo in subtle ways? > > > > In some cases /proc/zoneinfo is a tricky file to correctly parse because > > you have to rely on the existing order in which it is printed to determine > > which zone is being described. We need to print zones even with unmanaged > > pages, for instance, otherwise userspace may be unaware of which zones are > > supported and what order they are in. That's important to be able to > > construct the proper string to use when writing vm.lowmem_reserve_ratio. > > > > I'd prefer not changing the order of /proc/zoneinfo if it can be avoided > > just because the risk outweighs the reward that we may break some > > initscript parsers. > > Oh, I may not describe the change and result clearly. This patch doesn't > change zone order at all. I only move the per-node stats to the front of > each node, the zone order is completely kept the same, still DMA, DMA32, > NORMAL, MOVABLE. Even this can break existing parsers. Fixing that up is likely not hard and existing parsers would be mostly debugging hacks here and there but I do miss any actual justification except for you considering it more sensible. I do not remember this would be a common pain point for people parsing this file. If anything the overal structure of the file makes it hard to parse and your patches do not really address that. We are likely too late to make the output much more sensible TBH. That being said, I haven't looked more closely on your patches because I do not have spare cycles for that. Your justification for touching the code which seems to be working relatively well is quite weak IMHO, yet it adds a non zero risk for breaking existing parsers. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs