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Re: [PATCH RFC 0/4] mm: place pages to the freelist tail when onling and undoing isolation
- To: Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@xxxxxxx>, osalvador@xxxxxxx
- From: David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 24 Sep 2020 16:29:50 +0200
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- Cc: linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, linux-mm@xxxxxxxxx, linux-hyperv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, linux-acpi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Alexander Duyck <alexander.h.duyck@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@xxxxxxxxx>, Haiyang Zhang <haiyangz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "K. Y. Srinivasan" <kys@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Mel Gorman <mgorman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Michael Ellerman <mpe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxxxx>, Mike Rapoport <rppt@xxxxxxxxxx>, Scott Cheloha <cheloha@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Stephen Hemminger <sthemmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Wei Liu <wei.liu@xxxxxxxxxx>, Wei Yang <richard.weiyang@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Delivery-date: Thu, 24 Sep 2020 14:30:32 +0000
- List-id: Xen developer discussion <xen-devel.lists.xenproject.org>
>> If that would ever change, the optimization here would be lost and we
>> would have to think of something else. Nothing would actually break -
>> and it's all kept directly in page_alloc.c
>
> Sure, but then it can become a pointless code churn.
Indeed, and if there are valid concerns that this will happen in the
near future (e.g., < 1 year), I agree that we should look into
alternatives right from the start. Otherwise it's good enough until some
of the other things I mentioned below become real (which could also take
a while ...).
>
>> I'd like to stress that what I propose here is both simple and powerful.
>>
>>> possible I think, such as preparing a larger MIGRATE_UNMOVABLE area in the
>>> existing memory before we allocate those long-term management structures. Or
>>> onlining a bunch of blocks as zone_movable first and only later convert to
>>> zone_normal in a controlled way when existing normal zone becomes depeted?
>>
>> I see the following (more or less complicated) alternatives
>>
>> 1) Having a larger MIGRATE_UNMOVABLE area
>>
>> a) Sizing it is difficult. I mean you would have to plan ahead for all
>> memory you might eventually hotplug later - and that could even be
>
> Yeah, hence my worry about existing interfaces that work on 128MB blocks
> individually without a larger strategy.
Yes, in the works :)
>
>> impossible if you hotplug quite a lot of memory to a smaller machine.
>> (I've seen people in the vm/container world trying to hotplug 128GB
>> DIMMs to 2GB VMs ... and failing for obvious reasons)
>
> Some planning should still be possible to maximize the contiguous area without
> unmovable allocations.
Indeed, optimizing that is very high on my list of things to look into ...
>>
>> we would, once again, never be able to allocate a gigantic page because
>> all [N] would contain a memmap.
>
> The second approach should work, if you know how much you are going to online,
> and plan the size the N group accordingly, and if the onlined amount is
> several
> gigabytes, then only the first one (or first X) will be unusable for a
> gigantic
> page, but the rest would be? Can't get much better than that.
Indeed, it's the optimal case (assuming one can come up with a safe zone
balance - which is usually possible, but unfortunately, there are
exceptions one at least has to identify).
[...]
>
> I've reviewed the series and I won't block it - yes it's an optimistic
> approach
> that can break and leave us with code churn. But at least it's not that much
Thanks.
I'll try to document somewhere that the behavior of FOP_TO_TAIL is a
pure optimization and might change in the future - along with the case
it tried to optimize (so people know what the use case was).
> code and the extra test in __free_one_page() shouldn't make this hotpath too
I assume the compiler is able to completely propagate constants and
optimize that out - I haven't checked, though.
> worse. But I still hope we can achieve a more robust solution one day.
I definitely agree. I'd also prefer some kind of guarantees, but I
learned that things always sound easier than they actually are when it
comes to memory management in Linux ... and they take a lot of time (for
example, Michal's/Oscar's attempts to implement vmemmap on hotadded memory).
--
Thanks,
David / dhildenb
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