On Thu, 1 Sept 2022 at 12:01, Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu 01-09-22 11:18:19, Marco Elver wrote: > > On Thu, 1 Sept 2022 at 10:38, Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Thu 01-09-22 10:24:58, Marco Elver wrote: > > > > On Thu, Sep 01, 2022 at 06:42AM +0200, Oscar Salvador wrote: > > > [...] > > > > > diff --git a/lib/stackdepot.c b/lib/stackdepot.c > > > > > index 5ca0d086ef4a..aeb59d3557e2 100644 > > > > > --- a/lib/stackdepot.c > > > > > +++ b/lib/stackdepot.c > > > > > @@ -63,6 +63,7 @@ struct stack_record { > > > > > u32 hash; /* Hash in the hastable */ > > > > > u32 size; /* Number of frames in the stack */ > > > > > union handle_parts handle; > > > > > + refcount_t count; /* Number of the same repeated stacks */ > > > > > > > > This will increase stack_record size for every user, even if they don't > > > > care about the count. > > > > > > Couldn't this be used for garbage collection? > > > > Only if we can precisely figure out at which point a stack is no > > longer going to be needed. > > > > But more realistically, stack depot was designed to be simple. Right > > now it can allocate new stacks (from an internal pool), but giving the > > memory back to that pool isn't supported. Doing garbage collection > > would effectively be a redesign of stack depot. > > Fair argument. > > > And for the purpose > > for which stack depot was designed (debugging tools), memory has never > > been an issue (note that stack depot also has a fixed upper bound on > > memory usage). > > Is the increased size really a blocker then? I see how it sucks to > maintain a counter when it is not used by anything but page_owner but > storing that counte externally would just add more complexity AFAICS > (more allocations, more tracking etc.). Right, I think keeping it simple is better. > Maybe the counter can be conditional on the page_owner which would add > some complexity as well (variable size structure) but at least the > external allocation stuff could be avoided. Not sure it's needed - I just checked the size of stack_record on a x86-64 build, and it's 24 bytes. Because 'handle_parts' is 4 bytes, and refcount_t is 4 bytes, and the alignment of 'entries' being 8 bytes, even with the refcount_t, stack_record is still 24 bytes. :-) And for me that's good enough. Maybe mentioning this in the commit message is worthwhile. Of course 32-bit builds still suffer a little, but I think we can live with that.