* Pekka Enberg <penberg@xxxxxxxxxx> [2011-07-06 12:01:45]: > On Wed, Jul 6, 2011 at 11:45 AM, Pekka Enberg <penberg@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hi Ankita, > > > > [ I don't really know anything about memory power management but > > here's my two cents since you asked for it. ] > > > > On Wed, Jun 29, 2011 at 4:00 PM, Ankita Garg <ankita@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> I) Dynamic Power Transition > >> > >> The goal here is to ensure that as much as possible, on an idle system, > >> the memory references do not get spread across the entire RAM, a problem > >> similar to memory fragmentation. The proposed approach is as below: > >> > >> 1) One of the first things is to ensure that the memory allocations do > >> not spill over to more number of regions. Thus the allocator needs to > >> be aware of the address boundary of the different regions. > > > > Why does the allocator need to know about address boundaries? Why > > isn't it enough to make the page allocator and reclaim policies favor using > > memory from lower addresses as aggressively as possible? That'd mean > > we'd favor the first memory banks and could keep the remaining ones > > powered off as much as possible. > > > > IOW, why do we need to support scenarios such as this: > > > > bank 0 bank 1 bank 2 bank3 > > | online | offline | online | offline | > > > > instead of using memory compaction and possibly something like the > > SLUB defragmentation patches to turn the memory map into this: > > > > bank 0 bank 1 bank 2 bank3 > > | online | online | offline | offline | > > > >> 2) At the time of allocation, before spilling over allocations to the > >> next logical region, the allocator needs to make a best attempt to > >> reclaim some memory from within the existing region itself first. The > >> reclaim here needs to be in LRU order within the region. However, if > >> it is ascertained that the reclaim would take a lot of time, like there > >> are quite a fe write-backs needed, then we can spill over to the next > >> memory region (just like our NUMA node allocation policy now). > > > > I think a much more important question is what happens _after_ we've > > allocated and free'd tons of memory few times. AFAICT, memory > > regions don't help with that kind of fragmentation that will eventually > > happen anyway. > > Btw, I'd also decouple the 'memory map' required for PASR from > memory region data structure and use page allocator hooks for letting > the PASR driver know about allocated and unallocated memory. That > way the PASR driver could automatically detect if full banks are > unused and power them off. That'd make memory power management > transparent to the VM regardless of whether we're using hardware or > software poweroff. Having a 'memory map' to track blocks of memory for the purpose of exploiting PASR is a good alternative. However having the notion of regions allows us to free more such banks and probably reclaim last few pages in a block and mark it free. A method to keep allocations within a block and also reclaim all pages from certain blocks will improve PASR usage apart from aiding other use cases. Without affecting allocation and reclaim, the tracking part can be implemented in a less intrusive way, but it will be great to design a less intrusive method to bias the allocations and reclaims as well. --Vaidy _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm