[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Xen balloon driver improvement (version 1)
On Thu, Oct 23, 2014 at 04:30:24PM +0200, Roger Pau Monné wrote: > El 22/10/14 a les 18.29, Wei Liu ha escrit: > > Hi all > > > > This is my initial design to improve Xen balloon driver. > > > > PDF version with graphs can be found at > > > > http://xenbits.xen.org/people/liuw/xen-balloon-driver-improvement.pdf > > > > % Xen Balloon Driver Improvement > > % Wei Liu <<wei.liu2@xxxxxxxxxx>> > > > > ------------------------------------------- > > Version Date Changes > > ------- ---- ------------------ > > 1 22/10/2014 Initial version. > > ------------------------------------------- > > > > ## Motives > > > > 1. Balloon pages fragments guest physical address space. > > 1. Balloon compaction infrastructure can migrate ballooned pages from > > start of zone to end of zone, hence creating contiguous guest physical > > address space. > > 1. Having contiguous guest physical address enables some options to > > improve performance. > > > > ## Goal of improvement > > > > Balloon driver makes use of as many huge pages as possible, > > defragmenting both guest address space and Xen pages. This should be > > achieved without any particular hypervisor side feature. > > > > ## Design and implementation > > > > When balloon driver is asked to increase / decrease reservation, it > > will always start with huge page. However, due to resource > > availability in both hypervisor and guest, it's not always possible to > > get hold of a huge page. In that case the driver will fall back to use > > normal size page. Balloon driver later will try to coalesce small size > > pages into huge page. As time goes by, both Xen and guest should use > > more and more huge pages. > > All this looks quite complicated IMHO, it's adding a lot of logic to the > balloon driver. Can't you just ask the memory subsystem to allocate a > page (or pages) from a specific physical range, and force it to page > out/move what's there at allocation time? > > For example I know FreeBSD has contigmalloc(9)[1] which I think could be > used to achieve this. You could start asking for pages starting at > maxpfn and go down from there, keeping fragmentation at a minimum. > > [1] > https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=contigmalloc&apropos=0&sektion=0&manpath=FreeBSD+10.1-RELEASE&arch=default&format=html > Good point. Just that Linux doesn't have a counterpart, not that I know of. Memblock infrastructure looks similar but it's supposed to be used when initialising kernel. Even if Linux has similar API, it's still less desirable because to satisfy a contiguous PA allocation, the system needs to be relative quiet (if NO_WAIT / ATOMIC is set), or the API needs to sleep for indefinite period (wait for memory subsystem to squeeze out pages). Wei. > Roger. _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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