On Mon, Dec 11, 2023 at 11:41:24AM -0800, Yosry Ahmed wrote: > On Mon, Dec 11, 2023 at 6:04 AM Dan Schatzberg <schatzberg.dan@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > contains* the* > > I think this statement was only important because no keys were > supported, so I think we can remove it completely and rely on > documenting the supported keys below like other interfaces, see my > next comment. > > > + to reclaim. > > > > Example:: > > > > @@ -1304,6 +1304,17 @@ PAGE_SIZE multiple when read back. > > This means that the networking layer will not adapt based on > > reclaim induced by memory.reclaim. > > > > + This file also allows the user to specify the swappiness value > > + to be used for the reclaim. For example: > > + > > + echo "1G swappiness=60" > memory.reclaim > > + > > + The above instructs the kernel to perform the reclaim with > > + a swappiness value of 60. Note that this has the same semantics > > + as the vm.swappiness sysctl - it sets the relative IO cost of > > + reclaiming anon vs file memory but does not allow for reclaiming > > + specific amounts of anon or file memory. > > + > > Can we instead follow the same format used by other nested-keyed files > (e.g. io.max)? This usually involves a table of supported keys and > such. Thanks, both are good suggestions. Will address these. > > + while ((start = strsep(&buf, " ")) != NULL) { > > + if (!strlen(start)) > > + continue; > > + switch (match_token(start, if_tokens, args)) { > > + case MEMORY_RECLAIM_SWAPPINESS: > > + if (match_int(&args[0], &swappiness)) > > + return -EINVAL; > > + if (swappiness < 0 || swappiness > 200) > > I am not a fan of extending the hardcoded 0 and 200 values, and now > the new -1 value. Maybe it's time to create constants for the min and > max swappiness values instead of hardcoding them everywhere? This can > be a separate preparatory patch. Then, -1 (or any invalid value) can > also be added as a constant with a useful name, instead of passing -1 > to all other callers. > > This should make the code a little bit more readable and easier to extend. I'm not sure I understand the concern. This check just validates that the swappiness value inputted is between 0 and 200 (inclusive) otherwise the interface returns -EINVAL. Are you just concerned that these constants are not named explicitly so they can be reused elsewhere in the code?