On Mon, Jun 22, 2020 at 04:23:04PM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Mon 22-06-20 11:04:39, Mel Gorman wrote: > > On Mon, Jun 22, 2020 at 06:40:20PM +0900, ????????? wrote: > > > >But more importantly, I have hard time to follow why we need both > > > >zone_watermark_fast and zone_watermark_ok now. They should be > > > >essentially the same for anything but order == 0. For order 0 the > > > >only difference between the two is that zone_watermark_ok checks for > > > >ALLOC_HIGH resp ALLOC_HARDER, ALLOC_OOM. So what is exactly fast about > > > >the former and why do we need it these days? > > > > > > > > > > I think the author, Mel, may ansewr. But I think the wmark_fast may > > > fast by 1) not checking more condition about wmark and 2) using inline > > > rather than function. According to description on commit 48ee5f3696f6, > > > it seems to bring about 4% improvement. > > > > > > > The original intent was that watermark checks were expensive as some of the > > calculations are only necessary when a zone is relatively low on memory > > and the check does not always have to be 100% accurate. This is probably > > still true given that __zone_watermark_ok() makes a number of calculations > > depending on alloc flags even if a zone is almost completely free. > > OK, so we are talking about > if (alloc_flags & ALLOC_HIGH) > min -= min / 2; > > if (unlikely((alloc_flags & (ALLOC_HARDER|ALLOC_OOM))) { > /* > * OOM victims can try even harder than normal ALLOC_HARDER > * users on the grounds that it's definitely going to be in > * the exit path shortly and free memory. Any allocation it > * makes during the free path will be small and short-lived. > */ > if (alloc_flags & ALLOC_OOM) > min -= min / 2; > else > min -= min / 4; > } > > Is this something even measurable and something that would justify a > complex code? If we really want to keep it even after these changes > which are making the two closer in the cost then can we have it > documented at least? It was originally documented as being roughly 4% for a page allocator micro-benchmark but that was 4 years ago and I do not even remember what type of machine that was on. Chances are the relative cost is different now but I haven't measured it as the microbenchmark in question doesn't even compile with recent kernels. For many allocations, the bulk of the allocation cost is zeroing the page so I have no particular objection to zone_watermark_fast being removed if it makes the code easier to read. While I have not looked recently, the cost of allocation in general and the increasing scope of the zone->lock with larger NUMA nodes for high-order allocations like THP are more of a concern than two branches and potentially two minor calculations. -- Mel Gorman SUSE Labs