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Message-ID: <20150729144539.GU8100@esperanza>
Date: Wed, 29 Jul 2015 17:45:39 +0300
From: Vladimir Davydov <vdavydov@...allels.com>
To: Michel Lespinasse <walken@...gle.com>
CC: Michal Hocko <mhocko@...nel.org>,
Andrew Morton <akpm@...ux-foundation.org>,
Andres Lagar-Cavilla <andreslc@...gle.com>,
Minchan Kim <minchan@...nel.org>,
Raghavendra K T <raghavendra.kt@...ux.vnet.ibm.com>,
Johannes Weiner <hannes@...xchg.org>,
Greg Thelen <gthelen@...gle.com>,
David Rientjes <rientjes@...gle.com>,
"Pavel Emelyanov" <xemul@...allels.com>,
Cyrill Gorcunov <gorcunov@...nvz.org>,
Jonathan Corbet <corbet@....net>, <linux-api@...r.kernel.org>,
<linux-doc@...r.kernel.org>, <linux-mm@...ck.org>,
<cgroups@...r.kernel.org>, <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH -mm v9 0/8] idle memory tracking
On Wed, Jul 29, 2015 at 07:12:13AM -0700, Michel Lespinasse wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 29, 2015 at 6:59 AM, Vladimir Davydov <vdavydov@...allels.com>
> wrote:
> >> I guess the primary reason to rely on the pfn rather than the LRU walk,
> >> which would be more targeted (especially for memcg cases), is that we
> >> cannot hold lru lock for the whole LRU walk and we cannot continue
> >> walking after the lock is dropped. Maybe we can try to address that
> >> instead? I do not think this is easy to achieve but have you considered
> >> that as an option?
> >
> > Yes, I have, and I've come to a conclusion it's not doable, because LRU
> > lists can be constantly rotating at an arbitrary rate. If you have an
> > idea in mind how this could be done, please share.
> >
> > Speaking of LRU-vs-PFN walk, iterating over PFNs has its own advantages:
> > - You can distribute a walk in time to avoid CPU bursts.
> > - You are free to parallelize the scanner as you wish to decrease the
> > scan time.
>
> There is a third way: one could go through every MM in the system and scan
> their page tables. Doing things that way turns out to be generally faster
> than scanning by physical address, because you don't have to go through
> RMAP for every page. But, you end up needing to take the mmap_sem lock of
> every MM (in turn) while scanning them, and that degrades quickly under
> memory load, which is exactly when you most need this feature. So, scan by
> address is still what we use here.
Page table scan approach has the inherent problem - it ignores unmapped
page cache. If a workload does a lot of read/write or map-access-unmap
operations, we won't be able to even roughly estimate its wss.
Thanks,
Vladimir
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