On Tue, 2015-12-22 at 16:34 +1100, NeilBrown wrote: > On Sat, Dec 05 2015, Verma, Vishal L wrote: > > > On Fri, 2015-12-04 at 15:30 -0800, James Bottomley wrote: > > [...] > > > > +ssize_t badblocks_store(struct badblocks *bb, const char *page, > > > > size_t len, > > > > + int unack) > > > [...] > > > > +int badblocks_init(struct badblocks *bb, int enable) > > > > +{ > > > > + bb->count = 0; > > > > + if (enable) > > > > + bb->shift = 0; > > > > + else > > > > + bb->shift = -1; > > > > + bb->page = kmalloc(PAGE_SIZE, GFP_KERNEL); > > > > > > Why not __get_free_page(GFP_KERNEL)? The problem with kmalloc of > > > an > > > exactly known page sized quantity is that the slab tracker for > > > this > > > requires two contiguous pages for each page because of the > > > overhead. > > > > Cool, I didn't know about __get_free_page - I can fix this up too. > > > > I was reminded of this just recently I thought I should clear up the > misunderstanding. > > kmalloc(PAGE_SIZE) does *not* incur significant overhead and certainly > does not require two contiguous free pages. > If you "grep kmalloc-4096 /proc/slabinfo" you will note that both > objperslab and pagesperslab are 1. So one page is used to store each > 4096 byte allocation. > > To quote the email from Linus which reminded me about this > > > If you > > want to allocate a page, and get a pointer, just use "kmalloc()". > > Boom, done! > > https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/12/21/605 > > There probably is a small CPU overhead from using kmalloc, but no > memory > overhead. Thanks Neil. I just read the rest of that thread - and I'm wondering if we should change back to kzalloc here. The one thing __get_free_page gets us is PAGE_SIZE-aligned memory. Do you think that would be better for this use? (I can't think of any). If not, I can send out a new version reverting back to kzalloc. -Vishal
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