On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 05:10:22PM +0200, Jerome Marchand wrote: > On 09/23/2014 11:17 PM, Andrew Morton wrote: > > On Tue, 23 Sep 2014 13:56:02 +0900 Minchan Kim <minchan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >>> > >>>> +#define ZRAM_FULLNESS_PERCENT 80 > >>> > >>> We've had problems in the past where 1% is just too large an increment > >>> for large systems. > >> > >> So, do you want fullness_bytes like dirty_bytes? > > > > Firstly I'd like you to think about whether we're ever likely to have > > similar granularity problems with this tunable. If not then forget > > about it. > > > > If yes then we should do something. I don't like the "bytes" thing > > much because it requires that the operator know the pool size > > beforehand, and any time that changes, the "bytes" needs hanging too. > > Ratios are nice but percent is too coarse. Maybe kernel should start > > using "ppm" for ratios, parts per million. hrm. > > An other possibility is to use decimal fractions. AFAIK, lustre fs uses > them already for its procfs entries. Looks good to me. If anyone doesn't have better idea or objection, I want to approach this way. Thanks for the hint! > > > > >>>> @@ -711,6 +732,7 @@ static void zram_reset_device(struct zram *zram, bool reset_capacity) > >>>> down_write(&zram->init_lock); > >>>> > >>>> zram->limit_pages = 0; > >>>> + atomic_set(&zram->alloc_fail, 0); > >>>> > >>>> if (!init_done(zram)) { > >>>> up_write(&zram->init_lock); > >>>> @@ -944,6 +966,34 @@ static int zram_slot_free_notify(struct block_device *bdev, > >>>> return 0; > >>>> } > >>>> > >>>> +static int zram_full(struct block_device *bdev, void *arg) > >>> > >>> This could return a bool. That implies that zram_swap_hint should > >>> return bool too, but as we haven't been told what the zram_swap_hint > >>> return value does, I'm a bit stumped. > >> > >> Hmm, currently, SWAP_FREE doesn't use return and SWAP_FULL uses return > >> as bool so in the end, we can change it as bool but I want to remain it > >> as int for the future. At least, we might use it as propagating error > >> in future. Instead, I will use *arg to return the result instead of > >> return val. But I'm not strong so if you want to remove return val, > >> I will do it. For clarifictaion, please tell me again if you want. > > > > I'm easy, as long as it makes sense, is understandable by people other > > than he-who-wrote-it and doesn't use argument names such as "arg". > > > > > > -- 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>