On Mon, Feb 17, 2014 at 10:38 AM, Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Now we have ->fault_nonblock() to ask filesystem for a page, if it's > reachable without blocking. We request one page a time. It's not terribly > efficient and I will probably re-think the interface once again to expose > iterator or something... Hmm. Yeah, clearly this isn't working, since the real workloads all end up looking like > 115,493,976 minor-faults ( +- 0.00% ) [100.00%] > 59.686645587 seconds time elapsed ( +- 0.30% ) becomes > 47,428,068 minor-faults ( +- 0.00% ) [100.00%] > 60.241766430 seconds time elapsed ( +- 0.85% ) and > 268,039,365 minor-faults [100.00%] > 132.830612471 seconds time elapsed becomes > 193,550,437 minor-faults [100.00%] > 132.851823758 seconds time elapsed and > 4,967,540 minor-faults ( +- 0.06% ) [100.00%] > 27.215434226 seconds time elapsed ( +- 0.18% ) becomes > 2,285,563 minor-faults ( +- 0.26% ) [100.00%] > 27.292854546 seconds time elapsed ( +- 0.29% ) ie it shows a clear reduction in faults, but the added costs clearly eat up any wins and it all becomes (just _slightly_) slower. Sad. I do wonder if we really need to lock the pages we fault in. We lock them in order to test for being up-to-date and still mapped. The up-to-date check we don't really need to worry about: that we can test without locking by just reading "page->flags" atomically and verifying that it's uptodate and not locked. The other reason to lock the page is: - for anonymous pages we need the lock for rmap, so the VM generally always locks the page. But that's not an issue for file-backed pages: the "rmap" for a filebacked page is just the page mapcount and the cgroup statistics, and those don't need the page lock. - the whole truncation/unmapping thing So the complex part is racing with truncate/unmapping the page. But since we hold the page table lock, I *think* what we should be able to do is: - increment the page _mapcount (iow, do "page_add_file_rmap()" early). This guarantees that any *subsequent* unmap activity on this page will walk the file mapping lists, and become serialized by the page table lock we hold. - mb_after_atomic_inc() (this is generally free) - test that the page is still unlocked and uptodate, and the page mapping still points to our page. - if that is true, we're all good, we can use the page, otherwise we decrement the mapcount (page_remove_rmap()) and skip the page. Hmm? Doing something like this means that we would never lock the pages we prefault, and you can go back to your gang lookup rather than that "one page at a time". And the race case is basically never going to trigger. Comments? Linus -- 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>