Please, Cced linux-mm. On 06/09/2012 12:45 PM, John Stultz wrote: > On 06/07/2012 09:50 PM, KOSAKI Motohiro wrote: >> (6/7/12 11:03 PM), John Stultz wrote: >> >>> So I'm falling back to using a shrinker for now, but I think Dmitry's >>> point is an interesting one, and am interested in finding a better >>> place to trigger purging volatile ranges from the mm code. If anyone >>> has any >>> suggestions, let me know, otherwise I'll go back to trying to better >>> grok the mm code. >> >> I hate vm feature to abuse shrink_slab(). because of, it was not >> designed generic callback. >> it was designed for shrinking filesystem metadata. Therefore, vm >> keeping a balance between >> page scanning and slab scanning. then, a lot of shrink_slab misuse may >> lead to break balancing >> logic. i.e. drop icache/dcache too many and makes perfomance impact. >> >> As far as a code impact is small, I'm prefer to connect w/ vm reclaim >> code directly. > > I can see your concern about mis-using the shrinker code. Also your > other email's point about the problem of having LRU range purging > behavior on a NUMA system makes some sense too. Unfortunately I'm not > yet familiar enough with the reclaim core to sort out how to best track > and connect the volatile range purging in the vm's reclaim core yet. > > So for now, I've moved the code back to using the shrinker (along with > fixing a few bugs along the way). > Thus, currently we manage the ranges as so: > [per fs volatile range lru head] -> [volatile range] -> [volatile > range] -> [volatile range] > With the per-fs shrinker zaping the volatile ranges from the lru. > > I *think* ideally, the pages in a volatile range should be similar to > non-dirty file-backed pages. There is a cost to restore them, but > freeing them is very cheap. The trick is that volatile ranges > introduces a new relationship between pages. Since the neighboring > virtual pages in a volatile range are in effect tied together, purging > one effectively ruins the value of keeping the others, regardless of > which zone they are physically. > > So maybe the right appraoch give up the per-fs volatile range lru, and > try a varient of what DaveC and DaveH have suggested: Letting the page > based lru reclamation handle the selection on a physical page basis, but > then zapping the entirety of the neighboring range if any one page is > reclaimed. In order to try to preserve the range based LRU behavior, > activate all the pages in the range together when the range is marked You mean deactivation for fast reclaiming, not activation when memory pressure happen? > volatile. Since we assume ranges are un-touched when volatile, that > should preserve LRU purging behavior on single node systems and on > multi-node systems it will approximate fairly closely. > > My main concern with this approach is marking and unmarking volatile > ranges needs to be fast, so I'm worried about the additional overhead of > activating each of the containing pages on mark_volatile. Yes. it could be a problem if range is very large and populated already. Why can't we make new hooks? Just concept for showing my intention.. +int shrink_volatile_pages(struct zone *zone) +{ + int ret = 0; + if (zone_page_state(zone, NR_ZONE_VOLATILE)) + ret = shmem_purge_one_volatile_range(); + return ret; +} + static void shrink_zone(struct zone *zone, struct scan_control *sc) { struct mem_cgroup *root = sc->target_mem_cgroup; @@ -1827,6 +1835,18 @@ static void shrink_zone(struct zone *zone, struct scan_control *sc) .priority = sc->priority, }; struct mem_cgroup *memcg; + int ret; + + /* + * Before we dive into trouble maker, let's look at easy- + * reclaimable pages and avoid costly-reclaim if possible. + */ + do { + ret = shrink_volatile_pages(); + if (ret) + zone_watermark_ok(zone, sc->order, xxx); + return; + } while(ret) Off-topic: I want to drive low memory notification level-triggering instead of raw vmstat trigger. (It's rather long thread https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/5/1/97) level 1: out-of-easy reclaimable pages (NR_VOLATILE + NR_UNMAPPED_CLEAN_PAGE) level 2 (more sever VM pressure than level 1): level2 + reclaimable dirty pages When it is out of easy-reclaimable pages, it might be good indication for low memory notification. > > The other question I have with this approach is if we're on a system > that doesn't have swap, it *seems* (not totally sure I understand it > yet) the tmpfs file pages will be skipped over when we call > shrink_lruvec. So it seems we may need to add a new lru_list enum and > nr[] entry (maybe LRU_VOLATILE?). So then it may be that when we mark > a range as volatile, instead of just activating it, we move it to the > volatile lru, and then when we shrink from that list, we call back to > the filesystem to trigger the entire range purging. Adding new LRU idea might make very slow fallocate(VOLATILE) so I hope we can avoid that if possible. Off-topic: But I'm not sure because I might try to make new easy-reclaimable LRU list for low memory notification. That LRU list would contain non-mapped clean cache page and volatile pages if I decide adding it. Both pages has a common characteristic that recreating page is less costly. It's true for eMMC/SSD like device, at least. > > Does that sound reasonable? Any other suggested approaches? I'll think > some more about it this weekend and try to get a patch scratched out > early next week. > > thanks > -john > > > > > > > > > > > > > -- Kind regards, Minchan Kim -- 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/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>