On Mon, Feb 07, 2022 at 05:59:58PM +0800, Tony Lu wrote: > On Mon, Jan 31, 2022 at 09:20:52AM +0200, Leon Romanovsky wrote: > > On Mon, Jan 31, 2022 at 03:03:00AM +0800, Tony Lu wrote: > > > Currently, pages are allocated in the process context, for its NUMA node > > > isn't equal to ibdev's, which is not the best policy for performance. > > > > > > Applications will generally perform best when the processes are > > > accessing memory on the same NUMA node. When numa_balancing enabled > > > (which is enabled by most of OS distributions), it moves tasks closer to > > > the memory of sndbuf or rmb and ibdev, meanwhile, the IRQs of ibdev bind > > > to the same node usually. This reduces the latency when accessing remote > > > memory. > > > > It is very subjective per-specific test. I would expect that > > application will control NUMA memory policies (set_mempolicy(), ...) > > by itself without kernel setting NUMA node. > > > > Various *_alloc_node() APIs are applicable for in-kernel allocations > > where user can't control memory policy. > > > > I don't know SMC-R enough, but if I judge from your description, this > > allocation is controlled by the application. > > The original design of SMC doesn't handle the memory allocation of > different NUMA node, and the application can't control the NUMA policy > in SMC. > > It allocates memory according to the NUMA node based on the process > context, which is determined by the scheduler. If application process > runs on NUMA node 0, SMC allocates on node 0 and so on, it all depends > on the scheduler. If RDMA device is attached to node 1, the process runs > on node 0, it allocates memory on node 0. > > This patch tries to allocate memory on the same NUMA node of RDMA > device. Applications can't know the current node of RDMA device. The > scheduler knows the node of memory, and can let applications run on the > same node of memory and RDMA device. I don't know, everything explained above is controlled through memory policy, where application needs to run on same node as ibdev. Thanks > > Thanks, > Tony Lu