On Wed, Jul 28, 2021 at 02:31:03PM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote: > [Sorry for a late review] Not at all. Thank you for all your reviews and suggestions from v1 to v6! > On Mon 12-07-21 16:09:29, Feng Tang wrote: > [...] > > @@ -1887,7 +1909,8 @@ nodemask_t *policy_nodemask(gfp_t gfp, struct mempolicy *policy) > > /* Return the node id preferred by the given mempolicy, or the given id */ > > static int policy_node(gfp_t gfp, struct mempolicy *policy, int nd) > > { > > - if (policy->mode == MPOL_PREFERRED) { > > + if (policy->mode == MPOL_PREFERRED || > > + policy->mode == MPOL_PREFERRED_MANY) { > > nd = first_node(policy->nodes); > > } else { > > /* > > Do we really want to have the preferred node to be always the first node > in the node mask? Shouldn't that strive for a locality as well? Existing > callers already prefer numa_node_id() - aka local node - and I belive we > shouldn't just throw that away here. I think it's about the difference of 'local' and 'prefer/perfer-many' policy. There are different kinds of memory HW: HBM(High Bandwidth Memory), normal DRAM, PMEM (Persistent Memory), which have different price, bandwidth, speed etc. A platform may have two, or all three of these types, and there are real use case which want memory comes 'preferred' node/nodes than the local node. And good point for 'local node', if the 'prefer-many' policy's nodemask has local node set, we should pick it han this 'first_node', and the same semantic also applies to the other several places you pointed out. Or do I misunderstand you point? Thanks, Feng > > @@ -1931,6 +1954,7 @@ unsigned int mempolicy_slab_node(void) > > > > switch (policy->mode) { > > case MPOL_PREFERRED: > > + case MPOL_PREFERRED_MANY: > > return first_node(policy->nodes); > > Similarly here but I am not really familiar with the slab numa code > enough to have strong opinions here. > > > @@ -2173,10 +2198,12 @@ struct page *alloc_pages_vma(gfp_t gfp, int order, struct vm_area_struct *vma, > > * node and don't fall back to other nodes, as the cost of > > * remote accesses would likely offset THP benefits. > > * > > - * If the policy is interleave, or does not allow the current > > - * node in its nodemask, we allocate the standard way. > > + * If the policy is interleave or multiple preferred nodes, or > > + * does not allow the current node in its nodemask, we allocate > > + * the standard way. > > */ > > - if (pol->mode == MPOL_PREFERRED) > > + if ((pol->mode == MPOL_PREFERRED || > > + pol->mode == MPOL_PREFERRED_MANY)) > > hpage_node = first_node(pol->nodes); > > Same here. > > > @@ -2451,6 +2479,9 @@ int mpol_misplaced(struct page *page, struct vm_area_struct *vma, unsigned long > > break; > > > > case MPOL_PREFERRED: > > + case MPOL_PREFERRED_MANY: > > + if (node_isset(curnid, pol->nodes)) > > + goto out; > > polnid = first_node(pol->nodes); > > break; > > I do not follow what is the point of using first_node here. Either the > node is in the mask or it is misplaced. What are you trying to achieve > here? > -- > Michal Hocko > SUSE Labs