> Note: Assume a big system which has many cpus, and user wants to devide > the system into containers. Current memcg's percpu caching is done > only when a task in memcg is on the cpu, running. So, it's not so dangerous > as it looks. Agree. I actually think it is pretty > But yes, if we can drop memcg's code, it's good. Then, we can remove some > amount of codes. > >> But the cons: >> >> * percpu counters have signed quantities, so this would limit us 4G. >> We can add a shift and then count pages instead of bytes, but we >> are still in the 16T area here. Maybe we really need more than that. >> > > .... > struct percpu_counter { > raw_spinlock_t lock; > s64 count; > > s64 limtes us 4G ? > Yes, I actually explicitly mentioned that. We can go to 16T if we track pages instead of bytes (I considered having the res_counter initialization code to specify a shift, so we could be generic). But I believe that if we go this route, we'll need to either: 1) Have our own internal implementation of what percpu counters does 2) create u64 acessors that would cast that to u64 in the operations. Since it is a 64 bit field anyway it should be doable. But being doable doesn't mean we should do it.... 3) Have a different percpu_counter structure, something like struct percpu_positive_counter. > >> * some of the additions here may slow down the percpu_counters for >> users that don't care about our usage. Things about min/max tracking >> enter in this category. >> > > > I think it's not very good to increase size of percpu counter. It's already > very big...Hm. How about > > struct percpu_counter_lazy { > struct percpu_counter pcp; > extra information > s64 margin; > } > ? Can work, but we need something that also solves the signedness problem. Maybe we can use a union for that, and then stuff things in the end of a different structure just for the users that want it. -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Fight unfair telecom internet charges in Canada: sign http://stopthemeter.ca/ Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>