Re: [PATCH v2] Documentation: kernel-parameters: remove slab_max_order and noaliencache

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On 11/27/23 01:26, Hyeonggon Yoo wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 24, 2023 at 8:24 PM Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > -
>> >       noalign         [KNL,ARM]
>> >
>> >       noaltinstr      [S390] Disables alternative instructions patching
>> > @@ -5887,12 +5883,6 @@
>> >                       own.
>> >                       For more information see Documentation/mm/slub.rst.
>> >
>> > -     slab_max_order= [MM, SLAB]
>> > -                     Determines the maximum allowed order for slabs.
>> > -                     A high setting may cause OOMs due to memory
>> > -                     fragmentation.  Defaults to 1 for systems with
>> > -                     more than 32MB of RAM, 0 otherwise.
>>
>> I think here we should consider the long-term plan first. It's a bit
>> unfortunate (in hindsight) SLUB brought its own prefix of parameters, even
>> if some became interchangeable aliases later (slab/slub_nomerge), some not.
> 
> Good point, thank you for pointing them out!
> 
>> I think it would be best to unify them, and consider the string "slub" an
>> implementation detail of the general "slab allocator" term going forward.
> 
> So slab_{nomerge,min_objects,min_order, ...etc} are common to the
> concept of slab so slab_$param will be appropriate.
> 
> But if we add something like slub_nocmpxchg later, it would be slub_nocmpxchg
> as it's an implementation-specific feature.

Hm but we're going to have only one implementation and I hope that won't
change again (the implementation could furter evolve, even with large
changes, but not split into separate selection again). So I'd rather use
slab_$thing even for parameters that look like implementation specific.

>> So what I'd propose is that we change all parameters to accept a
>> "slab_$param" as a primary and documented name (and the description can
>> contain just [MM] tag, no [SLAB] or [SLUB] needed), with "slub_$param" is
>> also accepted as an alias where it exists today, and there's just a note
>> that the slub_$param name is also accepted in the description of the
>> canonical parameter, not in a separate description.
> 
> No reason not to do it.
> 
>> Then maybe in a few
>> years we can mark the old names as deprecated and start issuing low-key
>> warnings (while still accepting them), and in 10 years maybe remove them
>> completely. Thoughts?
> 
> That might be the safest way to remove a kernel parameter but should
> we remove them?
> Probably 1) allowing both slub_$param and slab_$param for general
> parameters (forever)

Well we can certainly try deprecate them in few years, just to avoid cruft.
But it's not critical in case that's rejected for some reason.

> and 2) only using slub_$param for slub-specific params would be enough?
> 
>> > -
>> >       slub_debug[=options[,slabs][;[options[,slabs]]...]      [MM, SLUB]
>> >                       Enabling slub_debug allows one to determine the
>> >                       culprit if slab objects become corrupted. Enabling
>>





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