On Sat, Aug 22, 2020 at 09:14:53AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Fri, Aug 21, 2020 at 4:50 PM Peter Xu <peterx@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > This accounts for wp_page_reuse() case, where we reused a page for COW. > > If we do this, wouldn't it make more sense to also count the COW case > to see how they match up? Is wp_page_reuse() only used in cow? I saw that the callers of wp_page_reuse() are: (1) finish_mkwrite_fault (2) wp_pfn_shared (3) wp_page_shared (4) do_wp_page Since (1) is only called by either (2) or (3), while (2) and (3) apply only to shared memories, so I'm kind of sure the statistic is done via the changed path in do_wp_page() that is touched in patch 1 (my program was using private anonymous pages). Maybe I missed something, though.. > > Right now we count faults and major faults. So as a result you can can > calculate minor faults trivially. > > But if you count page reuse, you can't calculate any stats on it, > because most of the minor faults will presumably be for new pages > (either zero or cached file mappings). > > So the "pgreuse" seems to be a counter without any context to it. > > IOW, I get the feeling that either we should do this properly (and > maybe count "dirty faults" and "access" faults, at which point the > reuse case becomes a subcase of the dirty ones) or we shouldn't do it > at all. Creating a counter without any way to sanely compare it to > anything seems a bit pointless. Yeah I haven't thought deep about this statistic, imho it would be something nice to have (besides helping me to verify the tests) so I still posted it instead of keeping it in the local repo. If this statistic is not liked by anyone, then we can definitely drop it. Thanks, -- Peter Xu