On Thu, 16 Jun 2022 09:11:24 +0800 Ying Huang <ying.huang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, 2022-06-14 at 14:56 -0400, Johannes Weiner wrote: > > On Tue, Jun 14, 2022 at 01:31:37PM +0530, Aneesh Kumar K V wrote: > > > On 6/13/22 9:20 PM, Johannes Weiner wrote: > > > > On Mon, Jun 13, 2022 at 07:53:03PM +0530, Aneesh Kumar K V wrote: > > > > > If the kernel still can't make the right decision, userspace could rearrange > > > > > them in any order using rank values. Without something like rank, if > > > > > userspace needs to fix things up, it gets hard with device > > > > > hotplugging. ie, the userspace policy could be that any new PMEM tier device > > > > > that is hotplugged, park it with a very low-rank value and hence lowest in > > > > > demotion order by default. (echo 10 > > > > > > /sys/devices/system/memtier/memtier2/rank) . After that userspace could > > > > > selectively move the new devices to the correct memory tier? > > > > > > > > I had touched on this in the other email. > > > > > > > > This doesn't work if two drivers that should have separate policies > > > > collide into the same tier - which is very likely with just 3 tiers. > > > > So it seems to me the main usecase for having a rank tunable falls > > > > apart rather quickly until tiers are spaced out more widely. And it > > > > does so at the cost of an, IMO, tricky to understand interface. > > > > > > > > > > Considering the kernel has a static map for these tiers, how can two drivers > > > end up using the same tier? If a new driver is going to manage a memory > > > device that is of different characteristics than the one managed by dax/kmem, > > > we will end up adding > > > > > > #define MEMORY_TIER_NEW_DEVICE 4 > > > > > > The new driver will never use MEMORY_TIER_PMEM > > > > > > What can happen is two devices that are managed by DAX/kmem that > > > should be in two memory tiers get assigned the same memory tier > > > because the dax/kmem driver added both the device to the same memory tier. > > > > > > In the future we would avoid that by using more device properties like HMAT > > > to create additional memory tiers with different rank values. ie, we would > > > do in the dax/kmem create_tier_from_rank() . > > > > Yes, that's the type of collision I mean. Two GPUs, two CXL-attached > > DRAMs of different speeds etc. > > > > I also like Huang's idea of using latency characteristics instead of > > abstract distances. Though I'm not quite sure how feasible this is in > > the short term, and share some concerns that Jonathan raised. But I > > think a wider possible range to begin with makes sense in any case. > > > > > > In the other email I had suggested the ability to override not just > > > > the per-device distance, but also the driver default for new devices > > > > to handle the hotplug situation. > > > > > > > > > > I understand that the driver override will be done via module parameters. > > > How will we implement device override? For example in case of dax/kmem driver > > > the device override will be per dax device? What interface will we use to set the override? > > > > > > IIUC in the above proposal the dax/kmem will do > > > > > > node_create_and_set_memory_tier(numa_node, get_device_tier_index(dev_dax)); > > > > > > get_device_tier_index(struct dev_dax *dev) > > > { > > > return dax_kmem_tier_index; // module parameter > > > } > > > > > > Are you suggesting to add a dev_dax property to override the tier defaults? > > > > I was thinking a new struct memdevice and struct memtype(?). Every > > driver implementing memory devices like this sets those up and > > registers them with generic code and preset parameters. The generic > > code creates sysfs directories and allows overriding the parameters. > > > > struct memdevice { > > struct device dev; > > unsigned long distance; > > struct list_head siblings; > > /* nid? ... */ > > }; > > > > struct memtype { > > struct device_type type; > > unsigned long default_distance; > > struct list_head devices; > > }; > > > > That forms the (tweakable) tree describing physical properties. > > In general, I think memtype is a good idea. I have suggested > something similar before. It can describe the characters of a > specific type of memory (same memory media with different interface > (e.g., CXL, or DIMM) will be different memory types). And they can > be used to provide overriding information. I'm not sure you are suggesting interface as one element of distinguishing types, or as the element - just in case it's as 'the element'. Ignore the next bit if not ;) Memory "interface" isn't going to be enough of a distinction. If you want to have a default distance it would need to be different for cases where the same 'type' of RAM has very different characteristics. Applies everywhere but given CXL 'defines' a lot of this - if we just have DRAM attached via CXL: 1. 16-lane direct attached DRAM device. (low latency - high bw) 2. 4x 16-lane direct attached DRAM interleaved (low latency - very high bw) 3. 4-lane direct attached DRAM device (low latency - low bandwidth) 4. 16-lane to single switch, 4x 4-lane devices interleaved (mid latency - high bw) 5. 4-lane to single switch, 4x 4-lane devices interleaved (mid latency, mid bw) 6. 4x 16-lane so 4 switch, each switch to 4 DRAM devices (mid latency, very high bw) (7. 16 land directed attached nvram. (midish latency, high bw - perf wise might be similarish to 4). It could be a lot more complex, but hopefully that conveys that 'type' is next to useless to characterize things unless we have a very large number of potential subtypes. If we were on current tiering proposal we'd just have the CXL subsystem manage multiple tiers to cover what is attached. > > As for memdevice, I think that we already have "node" to represent > them in sysfs. Do we really need another one? Is it sufficient to > add some links to node in the appropriate directory? For example, > make memtype class device under the physical device (e.g. CXL device), > and create links to node inside the memtype class device directory? > > > From that, the kernel then generates the ordered list of tiers. > > As Jonathan Cameron pointed, we may need the memory tier ID to be > stable if possible. I know this isn't a easy task. At least we can > make the default memory tier (CPU local DRAM) ID stable (for example > make it always 128)? That provides an anchor for users to understand. > > Best Regards, > Huang, Ying > > > > > This should be less policy than before. Driver default and per-device > > > > distances (both overridable) combined with one tunable to set the > > > > range of distances that get grouped into tiers. > > > > > > > > > > Can you elaborate more on how distance value will be used? The device/device NUMA node can have > > > different distance value from other NUMA nodes. How do we group them? > > > for ex: earlier discussion did outline three different topologies. Can you > > > ellaborate how we would end up grouping them using distance? > > > > > > For ex: in the topology below node 2 is at distance 30 from Node0 and 40 from Nodes > > > so how will we classify node 2? > > > > > > > > > Node 0 & 1 are DRAM nodes, node 2 & 3 are PMEM nodes. > > > > > > 20 > > > Node 0 (DRAM) ---- Node 1 (DRAM) > > > | \ / | > > > | 30 40 X 40 | 30 > > > | / \ | > > > Node 2 (PMEM) ---- Node 3 (PMEM) > > > 40 > > > > > > node distances: > > > node 0 1 2 3 > > > 0 10 20 30 40 > > > 1 20 10 40 30 > > > 2 30 40 10 40 > > > 3 40 30 40 10 > > > > I'm fairly confused by this example. Do all nodes have CPUs? Isn't > > this just classic NUMA, where optimizing for locality makes the most > > sense, rather than tiering? > > > > Forget the interface for a second, I have no idea how tiering on such > > a system would work. One CPU's lower tier can be another CPU's > > toptier. There is no lowest rung from which to actually *reclaim* > > pages. Would the CPUs just demote in circles? > > > > And the coldest pages on one socket would get demoted into another > > socket and displace what that socket considers hot local memory? > > > > I feel like I missing something. > > > > When we're talking about tiered memory, I'm thinking about CPUs > > utilizing more than one memory node. If those other nodes have CPUs, > > you can't reliably establish a singular tier order anymore and it > > becomes classic NUMA, no? > >