1. 22 1月, 2014 1 次提交
    • A
      mm: tail page refcounting optimization for slab and hugetlbfs · 44518d2b
      Andrea Arcangeli 提交于
      This skips the _mapcount mangling for slab and hugetlbfs pages.
      
      The main trouble in doing this is to guarantee that PageSlab and
      PageHeadHuge remains constant for all get_page/put_page run on the tail
      of slab or hugetlbfs compound pages.  Otherwise if they're set during
      get_page but not set during put_page, the _mapcount of the tail page
      would underflow.
      
      PageHeadHuge will remain true until the compound page is released and
      enters the buddy allocator so it won't risk to change even if the tail
      page is the last reference left on the page.
      
      PG_slab instead is cleared before the slab frees the head page with
      put_page, so if the tail pin is released after the slab freed the page,
      we would have a problem.  But in the slab case the tail pin cannot be
      the last reference left on the page.  This is because the slab code is
      free to reuse the compound page after a kfree/kmem_cache_free without
      having to check if there's any tail pin left.  In turn all tail pins
      must be always released while the head is still pinned by the slab code
      and so we know PG_slab will be still set too.
      Signed-off-by: NAndrea Arcangeli <aarcange@redhat.com>
      Reviewed-by: NKhalid Aziz <khalid.aziz@oracle.com>
      Cc: Pravin Shelar <pshelar@nicira.com>
      Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
      Cc: Ben Hutchings <bhutchings@solarflare.com>
      Cc: Christoph Lameter <cl@linux.com>
      Cc: Johannes Weiner <jweiner@redhat.com>
      Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Cc: Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
      Cc: Andi Kleen <andi@firstfloor.org>
      Cc: Minchan Kim <minchan@kernel.org>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      44518d2b
  2. 12 9月, 2013 1 次提交
    • L
      mm: vmscan: fix do_try_to_free_pages() livelock · 6e543d57
      Lisa Du 提交于
      This patch is based on KOSAKI's work and I add a little more description,
      please refer https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/6/14/74.
      
      Currently, I found system can enter a state that there are lots of free
      pages in a zone but only order-0 and order-1 pages which means the zone is
      heavily fragmented, then high order allocation could make direct reclaim
      path's long stall(ex, 60 seconds) especially in no swap and no compaciton
      enviroment.  This problem happened on v3.4, but it seems issue still lives
      in current tree, the reason is do_try_to_free_pages enter live lock:
      
      kswapd will go to sleep if the zones have been fully scanned and are still
      not balanced.  As kswapd thinks there's little point trying all over again
      to avoid infinite loop.  Instead it changes order from high-order to
      0-order because kswapd think order-0 is the most important.  Look at
      73ce02e9 in detail.  If watermarks are ok, kswapd will go back to sleep
      and may leave zone->all_unreclaimable =3D 0.  It assume high-order users
      can still perform direct reclaim if they wish.
      
      Direct reclaim continue to reclaim for a high order which is not a
      COSTLY_ORDER without oom-killer until kswapd turn on
      zone->all_unreclaimble= .  This is because to avoid too early oom-kill.
      So it means direct_reclaim depends on kswapd to break this loop.
      
      In worst case, direct-reclaim may continue to page reclaim forever when
      kswapd sleeps forever until someone like watchdog detect and finally kill
      the process.  As described in:
      http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel.mm/103737
      
      We can't turn on zone->all_unreclaimable from direct reclaim path because
      direct reclaim path don't take any lock and this way is racy.  Thus this
      patch removes zone->all_unreclaimable field completely and recalculates
      zone reclaimable state every time.
      
      Note: we can't take the idea that direct-reclaim see zone->pages_scanned
      directly and kswapd continue to use zone->all_unreclaimable.  Because, it
      is racy.  commit 929bea7c (vmscan: all_unreclaimable() use
      zone->all_unreclaimable as a name) describes the detail.
      
      [akpm@linux-foundation.org: uninline zone_reclaimable_pages() and zone_reclaimable()]
      Cc: Aaditya Kumar <aaditya.kumar.30@gmail.com>
      Cc: Ying Han <yinghan@google.com>
      Cc: Nick Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com>
      Acked-by: NRik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
      Cc: Mel Gorman <mel@csn.ul.ie>
      Cc: KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@jp.fujitsu.com>
      Cc: Christoph Lameter <cl@linux.com>
      Cc: Bob Liu <lliubbo@gmail.com>
      Cc: Neil Zhang <zhangwm@marvell.com>
      Cc: Russell King - ARM Linux <linux@arm.linux.org.uk>
      Reviewed-by: NMichal Hocko <mhocko@suse.cz>
      Acked-by: NMinchan Kim <minchan@kernel.org>
      Acked-by: NJohannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
      Signed-off-by: NKOSAKI Motohiro <kosaki.motohiro@jp.fujitsu.com>
      Signed-off-by: NLisa Du <cldu@marvell.com>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      6e543d57
  3. 10 7月, 2013 1 次提交
  4. 28 2月, 2013 1 次提交
  5. 24 2月, 2013 1 次提交
  6. 12 1月, 2013 2 次提交
    • M
      mm: compaction: partially revert capture of suitable high-order page · 8fb74b9f
      Mel Gorman 提交于
      Eric Wong reported on 3.7 and 3.8-rc2 that ppoll() got stuck when
      waiting for POLLIN on a local TCP socket.  It was easier to trigger if
      there was disk IO and dirty pages at the same time and he bisected it to
      commit 1fb3f8ca ("mm: compaction: capture a suitable high-order page
      immediately when it is made available").
      
      The intention of that patch was to improve high-order allocations under
      memory pressure after changes made to reclaim in 3.6 drastically hurt
      THP allocations but the approach was flawed.  For Eric, the problem was
      that page->pfmemalloc was not being cleared for captured pages leading
      to a poor interaction with swap-over-NFS support causing the packets to
      be dropped.  However, I identified a few more problems with the patch
      including the fact that it can increase contention on zone->lock in some
      cases which could result in async direct compaction being aborted early.
      
      In retrospect the capture patch took the wrong approach.  What it should
      have done is mark the pageblock being migrated as MIGRATE_ISOLATE if it
      was allocating for THP and avoided races that way.  While the patch was
      showing to improve allocation success rates at the time, the benefit is
      marginal given the relative complexity and it should be revisited from
      scratch in the context of the other reclaim-related changes that have
      taken place since the patch was first written and tested.  This patch
      partially reverts commit 1fb3f8ca ("mm: compaction: capture a
      suitable high-order page immediately when it is made available").
      Reported-and-tested-by: NEric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
      Tested-by: NEric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@gmail.com>
      Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org>
      Signed-off-by: NMel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Cc: David Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      8fb74b9f
    • M
      mm: compaction: Partially revert capture of suitable high-order page · 47ecfcb7
      Mel Gorman 提交于
      Eric Wong reported on 3.7 and 3.8-rc2 that ppoll() got stuck when
      waiting for POLLIN on a local TCP socket.  It was easier to trigger if
      there was disk IO and dirty pages at the same time and he bisected it to
      commit 1fb3f8ca ("mm: compaction: capture a suitable high-order page
      immediately when it is made available").
      
      The intention of that patch was to improve high-order allocations under
      memory pressure after changes made to reclaim in 3.6 drastically hurt
      THP allocations but the approach was flawed.  For Eric, the problem was
      that page->pfmemalloc was not being cleared for captured pages leading
      to a poor interaction with swap-over-NFS support causing the packets to
      be dropped.  However, I identified a few more problems with the patch
      including the fact that it can increase contention on zone->lock in some
      cases which could result in async direct compaction being aborted early.
      
      In retrospect the capture patch took the wrong approach.  What it should
      have done is mark the pageblock being migrated as MIGRATE_ISOLATE if it
      was allocating for THP and avoided races that way.  While the patch was
      showing to improve allocation success rates at the time, the benefit is
      marginal given the relative complexity and it should be revisited from
      scratch in the context of the other reclaim-related changes that have
      taken place since the patch was first written and tested.  This patch
      partially reverts commit 1fb3f8ca "mm: compaction: capture a suitable
      high-order page immediately when it is made available".
      Reported-and-tested-by: NEric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
      Tested-by: NEric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@gmail.com>
      Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
      Signed-off-by: NMel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      47ecfcb7
  7. 12 12月, 2012 1 次提交
  8. 11 12月, 2012 1 次提交
    • M
      mm: numa: Add THP migration for the NUMA working set scanning fault case. · b32967ff
      Mel Gorman 提交于
      Note: This is very heavily based on a patch from Peter Zijlstra with
      	fixes from Ingo Molnar, Hugh Dickins and Johannes Weiner.  That patch
      	put a lot of migration logic into mm/huge_memory.c where it does
      	not belong. This version puts tries to share some of the migration
      	logic with migrate_misplaced_page.  However, it should be noted
      	that now migrate.c is doing more with the pagetable manipulation
      	than is preferred. The end result is barely recognisable so as
      	before, the signed-offs had to be removed but will be re-added if
      	the original authors are ok with it.
      
      Add THP migration for the NUMA working set scanning fault case.
      
      It uses the page lock to serialize. No migration pte dance is
      necessary because the pte is already unmapped when we decide
      to migrate.
      
      [dhillf@gmail.com: Fix memory leak on isolation failure]
      [dhillf@gmail.com: Fix transfer of last_nid information]
      Signed-off-by: NMel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      b32967ff
  9. 09 10月, 2012 12 次提交
  10. 22 8月, 2012 1 次提交
    • M
      mm: compaction: Abort async compaction if locks are contended or taking too long · c67fe375
      Mel Gorman 提交于
      Jim Schutt reported a problem that pointed at compaction contending
      heavily on locks.  The workload is straight-forward and in his own words;
      
      	The systems in question have 24 SAS drives spread across 3 HBAs,
      	running 24 Ceph OSD instances, one per drive.  FWIW these servers
      	are dual-socket Intel 5675 Xeons w/48 GB memory.  I've got ~160
      	Ceph Linux clients doing dd simultaneously to a Ceph file system
      	backed by 12 of these servers.
      
      Early in the test everything looks fine
      
        procs -------------------memory------------------ ---swap-- -----io---- --system-- -----cpu-------
         r  b       swpd       free       buff      cache   si   so    bi    bo   in   cs  us sy  id wa st
        31 15          0     287216        576   38606628    0    0     2  1158    2   14   1  3  95  0  0
        27 15          0     225288        576   38583384    0    0    18 2222016 203357 134876  11 56  17 15  0
        28 17          0     219256        576   38544736    0    0    11 2305932 203141 146296  11 49  23 17  0
         6 18          0     215596        576   38552872    0    0     7 2363207 215264 166502  12 45  22 20  0
        22 18          0     226984        576   38596404    0    0     3 2445741 223114 179527  12 43  23 22  0
      
      and then it goes to pot
      
        procs -------------------memory------------------ ---swap-- -----io---- --system-- -----cpu-------
         r  b       swpd       free       buff      cache   si   so    bi    bo   in   cs  us sy  id wa st
        163  8          0     464308        576   36791368    0    0    11 22210  866  536   3 13  79  4  0
        207 14          0     917752        576   36181928    0    0   712 1345376 134598 47367   7 90   1  2  0
        123 12          0     685516        576   36296148    0    0   429 1386615 158494 60077   8 84   5  3  0
        123 12          0     598572        576   36333728    0    0  1107 1233281 147542 62351   7 84   5  4  0
        622  7          0     660768        576   36118264    0    0   557 1345548 151394 59353   7 85   4  3  0
        223 11          0     283960        576   36463868    0    0    46 1107160 121846 33006   6 93   1  1  0
      
      Note that system CPU usage is very high blocks being written out has
      dropped by 42%. He analysed this with perf and found
      
        perf record -g -a sleep 10
        perf report --sort symbol --call-graph fractal,5
          34.63%  [k] _raw_spin_lock_irqsave
                  |
                  |--97.30%-- isolate_freepages
                  |          compaction_alloc
                  |          unmap_and_move
                  |          migrate_pages
                  |          compact_zone
                  |          compact_zone_order
                  |          try_to_compact_pages
                  |          __alloc_pages_direct_compact
                  |          __alloc_pages_slowpath
                  |          __alloc_pages_nodemask
                  |          alloc_pages_vma
                  |          do_huge_pmd_anonymous_page
                  |          handle_mm_fault
                  |          do_page_fault
                  |          page_fault
                  |          |
                  |          |--87.39%-- skb_copy_datagram_iovec
                  |          |          tcp_recvmsg
                  |          |          inet_recvmsg
                  |          |          sock_recvmsg
                  |          |          sys_recvfrom
                  |          |          system_call
                  |          |          __recv
                  |          |          |
                  |          |           --100.00%-- (nil)
                  |          |
                  |           --12.61%-- memcpy
                   --2.70%-- [...]
      
      There was other data but primarily it is all showing that compaction is
      contended heavily on the zone->lock and zone->lru_lock.
      
      commit [b2eef8c0: mm: compaction: minimise the time IRQs are disabled
      while isolating pages for migration] noted that it was possible for
      migration to hold the lru_lock for an excessive amount of time. Very
      broadly speaking this patch expands the concept.
      
      This patch introduces compact_checklock_irqsave() to check if a lock
      is contended or the process needs to be scheduled. If either condition
      is true then async compaction is aborted and the caller is informed.
      The page allocator will fail a THP allocation if compaction failed due
      to contention. This patch also introduces compact_trylock_irqsave()
      which will acquire the lock only if it is not contended and the process
      does not need to schedule.
      Reported-by: NJim Schutt <jaschut@sandia.gov>
      Tested-by: NJim Schutt <jaschut@sandia.gov>
      Signed-off-by: NMel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      c67fe375
  11. 01 8月, 2012 4 次提交
    • M
      netvm: allow skb allocation to use PFMEMALLOC reserves · c93bdd0e
      Mel Gorman 提交于
      Change the skb allocation API to indicate RX usage and use this to fall
      back to the PFMEMALLOC reserve when needed.  SKBs allocated from the
      reserve are tagged in skb->pfmemalloc.  If an SKB is allocated from the
      reserve and the socket is later found to be unrelated to page reclaim, the
      packet is dropped so that the memory remains available for page reclaim.
      Network protocols are expected to recover from this packet loss.
      
      [a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl: Ideas taken from various patches]
      [davem@davemloft.net: Use static branches, coding style corrections]
      [sebastian@breakpoint.cc: Avoid unnecessary cast, fix !CONFIG_NET build]
      Signed-off-by: NMel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Acked-by: NDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
      Cc: Neil Brown <neilb@suse.de>
      Cc: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl>
      Cc: Mike Christie <michaelc@cs.wisc.edu>
      Cc: Eric B Munson <emunson@mgebm.net>
      Cc: Eric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@gmail.com>
      Cc: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <sebastian@breakpoint.cc>
      Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Cc: Christoph Lameter <cl@linux.com>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      c93bdd0e
    • M
      mm: sl[au]b: add knowledge of PFMEMALLOC reserve pages · 072bb0aa
      Mel Gorman 提交于
      When a user or administrator requires swap for their application, they
      create a swap partition and file, format it with mkswap and activate it
      with swapon.  Swap over the network is considered as an option in diskless
      systems.  The two likely scenarios are when blade servers are used as part
      of a cluster where the form factor or maintenance costs do not allow the
      use of disks and thin clients.
      
      The Linux Terminal Server Project recommends the use of the Network Block
      Device (NBD) for swap according to the manual at
      https://sourceforge.net/projects/ltsp/files/Docs-Admin-Guide/LTSPManual.pdf/download
      There is also documentation and tutorials on how to setup swap over NBD at
      places like https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuLTSP/EnableNBDSWAP The
      nbd-client also documents the use of NBD as swap.  Despite this, the fact
      is that a machine using NBD for swap can deadlock within minutes if swap
      is used intensively.  This patch series addresses the problem.
      
      The core issue is that network block devices do not use mempools like
      normal block devices do.  As the host cannot control where they receive
      packets from, they cannot reliably work out in advance how much memory
      they might need.  Some years ago, Peter Zijlstra developed a series of
      patches that supported swap over an NFS that at least one distribution is
      carrying within their kernels.  This patch series borrows very heavily
      from Peter's work to support swapping over NBD as a pre-requisite to
      supporting swap-over-NFS.  The bulk of the complexity is concerned with
      preserving memory that is allocated from the PFMEMALLOC reserves for use
      by the network layer which is needed for both NBD and NFS.
      
      Patch 1 adds knowledge of the PFMEMALLOC reserves to SLAB and SLUB to
      	preserve access to pages allocated under low memory situations
      	to callers that are freeing memory.
      
      Patch 2 optimises the SLUB fast path to avoid pfmemalloc checks
      
      Patch 3 introduces __GFP_MEMALLOC to allow access to the PFMEMALLOC
      	reserves without setting PFMEMALLOC.
      
      Patch 4 opens the possibility for softirqs to use PFMEMALLOC reserves
      	for later use by network packet processing.
      
      Patch 5 only sets page->pfmemalloc when ALLOC_NO_WATERMARKS was required
      
      Patch 6 ignores memory policies when ALLOC_NO_WATERMARKS is set.
      
      Patches 7-12 allows network processing to use PFMEMALLOC reserves when
      	the socket has been marked as being used by the VM to clean pages. If
      	packets are received and stored in pages that were allocated under
      	low-memory situations and are unrelated to the VM, the packets
      	are dropped.
      
      	Patch 11 reintroduces __skb_alloc_page which the networking
      	folk may object to but is needed in some cases to propogate
      	pfmemalloc from a newly allocated page to an skb. If there is a
      	strong objection, this patch can be dropped with the impact being
      	that swap-over-network will be slower in some cases but it should
      	not fail.
      
      Patch 13 is a micro-optimisation to avoid a function call in the
      	common case.
      
      Patch 14 tags NBD sockets as being SOCK_MEMALLOC so they can use
      	PFMEMALLOC if necessary.
      
      Patch 15 notes that it is still possible for the PFMEMALLOC reserve
      	to be depleted. To prevent this, direct reclaimers get throttled on
      	a waitqueue if 50% of the PFMEMALLOC reserves are depleted.  It is
      	expected that kswapd and the direct reclaimers already running
      	will clean enough pages for the low watermark to be reached and
      	the throttled processes are woken up.
      
      Patch 16 adds a statistic to track how often processes get throttled
      
      Some basic performance testing was run using kernel builds, netperf on
      loopback for UDP and TCP, hackbench (pipes and sockets), iozone and
      sysbench.  Each of them were expected to use the sl*b allocators
      reasonably heavily but there did not appear to be significant performance
      variances.
      
      For testing swap-over-NBD, a machine was booted with 2G of RAM with a
      swapfile backed by NBD.  8*NUM_CPU processes were started that create
      anonymous memory mappings and read them linearly in a loop.  The total
      size of the mappings were 4*PHYSICAL_MEMORY to use swap heavily under
      memory pressure.
      
      Without the patches and using SLUB, the machine locks up within minutes
      and runs to completion with them applied.  With SLAB, the story is
      different as an unpatched kernel run to completion.  However, the patched
      kernel completed the test 45% faster.
      
      MICRO
                                               3.5.0-rc2 3.5.0-rc2
      					 vanilla     swapnbd
      Unrecognised test vmscan-anon-mmap-write
      MMTests Statistics: duration
      Sys Time Running Test (seconds)             197.80    173.07
      User+Sys Time Running Test (seconds)        206.96    182.03
      Total Elapsed Time (seconds)               3240.70   1762.09
      
      This patch: mm: sl[au]b: add knowledge of PFMEMALLOC reserve pages
      
      Allocations of pages below the min watermark run a risk of the machine
      hanging due to a lack of memory.  To prevent this, only callers who have
      PF_MEMALLOC or TIF_MEMDIE set and are not processing an interrupt are
      allowed to allocate with ALLOC_NO_WATERMARKS.  Once they are allocated to
      a slab though, nothing prevents other callers consuming free objects
      within those slabs.  This patch limits access to slab pages that were
      alloced from the PFMEMALLOC reserves.
      
      When this patch is applied, pages allocated from below the low watermark
      are returned with page->pfmemalloc set and it is up to the caller to
      determine how the page should be protected.  SLAB restricts access to any
      page with page->pfmemalloc set to callers which are known to able to
      access the PFMEMALLOC reserve.  If one is not available, an attempt is
      made to allocate a new page rather than use a reserve.  SLUB is a bit more
      relaxed in that it only records if the current per-CPU page was allocated
      from PFMEMALLOC reserve and uses another partial slab if the caller does
      not have the necessary GFP or process flags.  This was found to be
      sufficient in tests to avoid hangs due to SLUB generally maintaining
      smaller lists than SLAB.
      
      In low-memory conditions it does mean that !PFMEMALLOC allocators can fail
      a slab allocation even though free objects are available because they are
      being preserved for callers that are freeing pages.
      
      [a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl: Original implementation]
      [sebastian@breakpoint.cc: Correct order of page flag clearing]
      Signed-off-by: NMel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Cc: David Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
      Cc: Neil Brown <neilb@suse.de>
      Cc: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl>
      Cc: Mike Christie <michaelc@cs.wisc.edu>
      Cc: Eric B Munson <emunson@mgebm.net>
      Cc: Eric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@gmail.com>
      Cc: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <sebastian@breakpoint.cc>
      Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Cc: Christoph Lameter <cl@linux.com>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      072bb0aa
    • X
      mm: setup pageblock_order before it's used by sparsemem · ca57df79
      Xishi Qiu 提交于
      On architectures with CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_VARIABLE set, such as
      Itanium, pageblock_order is a variable with default value of 0.  It's set
      to the right value by set_pageblock_order() in function
      free_area_init_core().
      
      But pageblock_order may be used by sparse_init() before free_area_init_core()
      is called along path:
      sparse_init()
          ->sparse_early_usemaps_alloc_node()
      	->usemap_size()
      	    ->SECTION_BLOCKFLAGS_BITS
      		->((1UL << (PFN_SECTION_SHIFT - pageblock_order)) *
      NR_PAGEBLOCK_BITS)
      
      The uninitialized pageblock_size will cause memory wasting because
      usemap_size() returns a much bigger value then it's really needed.
      
      For example, on an Itanium platform,
      sparse_init() pageblock_order=0 usemap_size=24576
      free_area_init_core() before pageblock_order=0, usemap_size=24576
      free_area_init_core() after pageblock_order=12, usemap_size=8
      
      That means 24K memory has been wasted for each section, so fix it by calling
      set_pageblock_order() from sparse_init().
      Signed-off-by: NXishi Qiu <qiuxishi@huawei.com>
      Signed-off-by: NJiang Liu <liuj97@gmail.com>
      Cc: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
      Cc: Yinghai Lu <yinghai@kernel.org>
      Cc: KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@jp.fujitsu.com>
      Cc: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org>
      Cc: KOSAKI Motohiro <kosaki.motohiro@jp.fujitsu.com>
      Cc: David Rientjes <rientjes@google.com>
      Cc: Keping Chen <chenkeping@huawei.com>
      Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      ca57df79
    • R
      mm: have order > 0 compaction start off where it left · 7db8889a
      Rik van Riel 提交于
      Order > 0 compaction stops when enough free pages of the correct page
      order have been coalesced.  When doing subsequent higher order
      allocations, it is possible for compaction to be invoked many times.
      
      However, the compaction code always starts out looking for things to
      compact at the start of the zone, and for free pages to compact things to
      at the end of the zone.
      
      This can cause quadratic behaviour, with isolate_freepages starting at the
      end of the zone each time, even though previous invocations of the
      compaction code already filled up all free memory on that end of the zone.
      
      This can cause isolate_freepages to take enormous amounts of CPU with
      certain workloads on larger memory systems.
      
      The obvious solution is to have isolate_freepages remember where it left
      off last time, and continue at that point the next time it gets invoked
      for an order > 0 compaction.  This could cause compaction to fail if
      cc->free_pfn and cc->migrate_pfn are close together initially, in that
      case we restart from the end of the zone and try once more.
      
      Forced full (order == -1) compactions are left alone.
      
      [akpm@linux-foundation.org: checkpatch fixes]
      [akpm@linux-foundation.org: s/laste/last/, use 80 cols]
      Signed-off-by: NRik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
      Reported-by: NJim Schutt <jaschut@sandia.gov>
      Tested-by: NJim Schutt <jaschut@sandia.gov>
      Cc: Minchan Kim <minchan.kim@gmail.com>
      Reviewed-by: NKAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@jp.fujitsu.com>
      Acked-by: NMel Gorman <mel@csn.ul.ie>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      7db8889a
  12. 04 6月, 2012 1 次提交
  13. 01 6月, 2012 1 次提交
  14. 30 5月, 2012 2 次提交
    • B
      mm: compaction: handle incorrect MIGRATE_UNMOVABLE type pageblocks · 5ceb9ce6
      Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz 提交于
      When MIGRATE_UNMOVABLE pages are freed from MIGRATE_UNMOVABLE type
      pageblock (and some MIGRATE_MOVABLE pages are left in it) waiting until an
      allocation takes ownership of the block may take too long.  The type of
      the pageblock remains unchanged so the pageblock cannot be used as a
      migration target during compaction.
      
      Fix it by:
      
      * Adding enum compact_mode (COMPACT_ASYNC_[MOVABLE,UNMOVABLE], and
        COMPACT_SYNC) and then converting sync field in struct compact_control
        to use it.
      
      * Adding nr_pageblocks_skipped field to struct compact_control and
        tracking how many destination pageblocks were of MIGRATE_UNMOVABLE type.
         If COMPACT_ASYNC_MOVABLE mode compaction ran fully in
        try_to_compact_pages() (COMPACT_COMPLETE) it implies that there is not a
        suitable page for allocation.  In this case then check how if there were
        enough MIGRATE_UNMOVABLE pageblocks to try a second pass in
        COMPACT_ASYNC_UNMOVABLE mode.
      
      * Scanning the MIGRATE_UNMOVABLE pageblocks (during COMPACT_SYNC and
        COMPACT_ASYNC_UNMOVABLE compaction modes) and building a count based on
        finding PageBuddy pages, page_count(page) == 0 or PageLRU pages.  If all
        pages within the MIGRATE_UNMOVABLE pageblock are in one of those three
        sets change the whole pageblock type to MIGRATE_MOVABLE.
      
      My particular test case (on a ARM EXYNOS4 device with 512 MiB, which means
      131072 standard 4KiB pages in 'Normal' zone) is to:
      
      - allocate 120000 pages for kernel's usage
      - free every second page (60000 pages) of memory just allocated
      - allocate and use 60000 pages from user space
      - free remaining 60000 pages of kernel memory
        (now we have fragmented memory occupied mostly by user space pages)
      - try to allocate 100 order-9 (2048 KiB) pages for kernel's usage
      
      The results:
      - with compaction disabled I get 11 successful allocations
      - with compaction enabled - 14 successful allocations
      - with this patch I'm able to get all 100 successful allocations
      
      NOTE: If we can make kswapd aware of order-0 request during compaction, we
      can enhance kswapd with changing mode to COMPACT_ASYNC_FULL
      (COMPACT_ASYNC_MOVABLE + COMPACT_ASYNC_UNMOVABLE).  Please see the
      following thread:
      
      	http://marc.info/?l=linux-mm&m=133552069417068&w=2
      
      [minchan@kernel.org: minor cleanups]
      Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Cc: Minchan Kim <minchan@kernel.org>
      Cc: Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
      Cc: Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@samsung.com>
      Signed-off-by: NBartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <b.zolnierkie@samsung.com>
      Signed-off-by: NKyungmin Park <kyungmin.park@samsung.com>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      5ceb9ce6
    • Y
      mm: rename is_mlocked_vma() to mlocked_vma_newpage() · 096a7cf4
      Ying Han 提交于
      Andrew pointed out that the is_mlocked_vma() is misnamed.  A function
      with name like that would expect bool return and no side-effects.
      
      Since it is called on the fault path for new page, rename it in this
      patch.
      Signed-off-by: NYing Han <yinghan@google.com>
      Reviewed-by: NRik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
      Acked-by: NKOSAKI Motohiro <kosaki.motohiro@jp.fujitsu.com>
      Acked-by: NKAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@jp.fujtisu.com>
      Reviewed-by: NMinchan Kim <minchan@kernel.org>
      [akpm@linux-foundation.org: s/mlock_vma_newpage/mlock_vma_newpage/, per Minchan]
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      096a7cf4
  15. 21 5月, 2012 1 次提交
  16. 03 11月, 2011 1 次提交
    • A
      mm: thp: tail page refcounting fix · 70b50f94
      Andrea Arcangeli 提交于
      Michel while working on the working set estimation code, noticed that
      calling get_page_unless_zero() on a random pfn_to_page(random_pfn)
      wasn't safe, if the pfn ended up being a tail page of a transparent
      hugepage under splitting by __split_huge_page_refcount().
      
      He then found the problem could also theoretically materialize with
      page_cache_get_speculative() during the speculative radix tree lookups
      that uses get_page_unless_zero() in SMP if the radix tree page is freed
      and reallocated and get_user_pages is called on it before
      page_cache_get_speculative has a chance to call get_page_unless_zero().
      
      So the best way to fix the problem is to keep page_tail->_count zero at
      all times.  This will guarantee that get_page_unless_zero() can never
      succeed on any tail page.  page_tail->_mapcount is guaranteed zero and
      is unused for all tail pages of a compound page, so we can simply
      account the tail page references there and transfer them to
      tail_page->_count in __split_huge_page_refcount() (in addition to the
      head_page->_mapcount).
      
      While debugging this s/_count/_mapcount/ change I also noticed get_page is
      called by direct-io.c on pages returned by get_user_pages.  That wasn't
      entirely safe because the two atomic_inc in get_page weren't atomic.  As
      opposed to other get_user_page users like secondary-MMU page fault to
      establish the shadow pagetables would never call any superflous get_page
      after get_user_page returns.  It's safer to make get_page universally safe
      for tail pages and to use get_page_foll() within follow_page (inside
      get_user_pages()).  get_page_foll() is safe to do the refcounting for tail
      pages without taking any locks because it is run within PT lock protected
      critical sections (PT lock for pte and page_table_lock for
      pmd_trans_huge).
      
      The standard get_page() as invoked by direct-io instead will now take
      the compound_lock but still only for tail pages.  The direct-io paths
      are usually I/O bound and the compound_lock is per THP so very
      finegrined, so there's no risk of scalability issues with it.  A simple
      direct-io benchmarks with all lockdep prove locking and spinlock
      debugging infrastructure enabled shows identical performance and no
      overhead.  So it's worth it.  Ideally direct-io should stop calling
      get_page() on pages returned by get_user_pages().  The spinlock in
      get_page() is already optimized away for no-THP builds but doing
      get_page() on tail pages returned by GUP is generally a rare operation
      and usually only run in I/O paths.
      
      This new refcounting on page_tail->_mapcount in addition to avoiding new
      RCU critical sections will also allow the working set estimation code to
      work without any further complexity associated to the tail page
      refcounting with THP.
      Signed-off-by: NAndrea Arcangeli <aarcange@redhat.com>
      Reported-by: NMichel Lespinasse <walken@google.com>
      Reviewed-by: NMichel Lespinasse <walken@google.com>
      Reviewed-by: NMinchan Kim <minchan.kim@gmail.com>
      Cc: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl>
      Cc: Hugh Dickins <hughd@google.com>
      Cc: Johannes Weiner <jweiner@redhat.com>
      Cc: Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
      Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
      Cc: KOSAKI Motohiro <kosaki.motohiro@jp.fujitsu.com>
      Cc: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org>
      Cc: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
      Cc: <stable@kernel.org>
      Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      70b50f94
  17. 25 5月, 2011 1 次提交
    • N
      mm: nommu: sort mm->mmap list properly · 6038def0
      Namhyung Kim 提交于
      When I was reading nommu code, I found that it handles the vma list/tree
      in an unusual way.  IIUC, because there can be more than one
      identical/overrapped vmas in the list/tree, it sorts the tree more
      strictly and does a linear search on the tree.  But it doesn't applied to
      the list (i.e.  the list could be constructed in a different order than
      the tree so that we can't use the list when finding the first vma in that
      order).
      
      Since inserting/sorting a vma in the tree and link is done at the same
      time, we can easily construct both of them in the same order.  And linear
      searching on the tree could be more costly than doing it on the list, it
      can be converted to use the list.
      
      Also, after the commit 297c5eee ("mm: make the vma list be doubly
      linked") made the list be doubly linked, there were a couple of code need
      to be fixed to construct the list properly.
      
      Patch 1/6 is a preparation.  It maintains the list sorted same as the tree
      and construct doubly-linked list properly.  Patch 2/6 is a simple
      optimization for the vma deletion.  Patch 3/6 and 4/6 convert tree
      traversal to list traversal and the rest are simple fixes and cleanups.
      
      This patch:
      
      @vma added into @mm should be sorted by start addr, end addr and VMA
      struct addr in that order because we may get identical VMAs in the @mm.
      However this was true only for the rbtree, not for the list.
      
      This patch fixes this by remembering 'rb_prev' during the tree traversal
      like find_vma_prepare() does and linking the @vma via __vma_link_list().
      After this patch, we can iterate the whole VMAs in correct order simply by
      using @mm->mmap list.
      
      [akpm@linux-foundation.org: avoid duplicating __vma_link_list()]
      Signed-off-by: NNamhyung Kim <namhyung@gmail.com>
      Acked-by: NGreg Ungerer <gerg@uclinux.org>
      Cc: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
      Cc: Paul Mundt <lethal@linux-sh.org>
      Cc: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      6038def0
  18. 31 3月, 2011 1 次提交
  19. 18 3月, 2011 1 次提交
    • H
      mm: export __get_user_pages · 0014bd99
      Huang Ying 提交于
      In most cases, get_user_pages and get_user_pages_fast should be used
      to pin user pages in memory.  But sometimes, some special flags except
      FOLL_GET, FOLL_WRITE and FOLL_FORCE are needed, for example in
      following patch, KVM needs FOLL_HWPOISON.  To support these users,
      __get_user_pages is exported directly.
      
      There are some symbol name conflicts in infiniband driver, fixed them too.
      Signed-off-by: NHuang Ying <ying.huang@intel.com>
      CC: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      CC: Michel Lespinasse <walken@google.com>
      CC: Roland Dreier <roland@kernel.org>
      CC: Ralph Campbell <infinipath@qlogic.com>
      Signed-off-by: NMarcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com>
      0014bd99
  20. 18 1月, 2011 1 次提交
  21. 14 1月, 2011 3 次提交
    • S
      mm: batch activate_page() to reduce lock contention · 744ed144
      Shaohua Li 提交于
      The zone->lru_lock is heavily contented in workload where activate_page()
      is frequently used.  We could do batch activate_page() to reduce the lock
      contention.  The batched pages will be added into zone list when the pool
      is full or page reclaim is trying to drain them.
      
      For example, in a 4 socket 64 CPU system, create a sparse file and 64
      processes, processes shared map to the file.  Each process read access the
      whole file and then exit.  The process exit will do unmap_vmas() and cause
      a lot of activate_page() call.  In such workload, we saw about 58% total
      time reduction with below patch.  Other workloads with a lot of
      activate_page also benefits a lot too.
      
      I tested some microbenchmarks:
      case-anon-cow-rand-mt		0.58%
      case-anon-cow-rand		-3.30%
      case-anon-cow-seq-mt		-0.51%
      case-anon-cow-seq		-5.68%
      case-anon-r-rand-mt		0.23%
      case-anon-r-rand		0.81%
      case-anon-r-seq-mt		-0.71%
      case-anon-r-seq			-1.99%
      case-anon-rx-rand-mt		2.11%
      case-anon-rx-seq-mt		3.46%
      case-anon-w-rand-mt		-0.03%
      case-anon-w-rand		-0.50%
      case-anon-w-seq-mt		-1.08%
      case-anon-w-seq			-0.12%
      case-anon-wx-rand-mt		-5.02%
      case-anon-wx-seq-mt		-1.43%
      case-fork			1.65%
      case-fork-sleep			-0.07%
      case-fork-withmem		1.39%
      case-hugetlb			-0.59%
      case-lru-file-mmap-read-mt	-0.54%
      case-lru-file-mmap-read		0.61%
      case-lru-file-mmap-read-rand	-2.24%
      case-lru-file-readonce		-0.64%
      case-lru-file-readtwice		-11.69%
      case-lru-memcg			-1.35%
      case-mmap-pread-rand-mt		1.88%
      case-mmap-pread-rand		-15.26%
      case-mmap-pread-seq-mt		0.89%
      case-mmap-pread-seq		-69.72%
      case-mmap-xread-rand-mt		0.71%
      case-mmap-xread-seq-mt		0.38%
      
      The most significent are:
      case-lru-file-readtwice		-11.69%
      case-mmap-pread-rand		-15.26%
      case-mmap-pread-seq		-69.72%
      
      which use activate_page a lot.  others are basically variations because
      each run has slightly difference.
      
      [akpm@linux-foundation.org: coding-style fixes]
      Signed-off-by: NShaohua Li <shaohua.li@intel.com>
      Cc: Andi Kleen <andi@firstfloor.org>
      Cc: Minchan Kim <minchan.kim@gmail.com>
      Cc: KOSAKI Motohiro <kosaki.motohiro@jp.fujitsu.com>
      Cc: Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      744ed144
    • A
      thp: transparent hugepage core · 71e3aac0
      Andrea Arcangeli 提交于
      Lately I've been working to make KVM use hugepages transparently without
      the usual restrictions of hugetlbfs.  Some of the restrictions I'd like to
      see removed:
      
      1) hugepages have to be swappable or the guest physical memory remains
         locked in RAM and can't be paged out to swap
      
      2) if a hugepage allocation fails, regular pages should be allocated
         instead and mixed in the same vma without any failure and without
         userland noticing
      
      3) if some task quits and more hugepages become available in the
         buddy, guest physical memory backed by regular pages should be
         relocated on hugepages automatically in regions under
         madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) (ideally event driven by waking up the
         kernel deamon if the order=HPAGE_PMD_SHIFT-PAGE_SHIFT list becomes
         not null)
      
      4) avoidance of reservation and maximization of use of hugepages whenever
         possible. Reservation (needed to avoid runtime fatal faliures) may be ok for
         1 machine with 1 database with 1 database cache with 1 database cache size
         known at boot time. It's definitely not feasible with a virtualization
         hypervisor usage like RHEV-H that runs an unknown number of virtual machines
         with an unknown size of each virtual machine with an unknown amount of
         pagecache that could be potentially useful in the host for guest not using
         O_DIRECT (aka cache=off).
      
      hugepages in the virtualization hypervisor (and also in the guest!) are
      much more important than in a regular host not using virtualization,
      becasue with NPT/EPT they decrease the tlb-miss cacheline accesses from 24
      to 19 in case only the hypervisor uses transparent hugepages, and they
      decrease the tlb-miss cacheline accesses from 19 to 15 in case both the
      linux hypervisor and the linux guest both uses this patch (though the
      guest will limit the addition speedup to anonymous regions only for
      now...).  Even more important is that the tlb miss handler is much slower
      on a NPT/EPT guest than for a regular shadow paging or no-virtualization
      scenario.  So maximizing the amount of virtual memory cached by the TLB
      pays off significantly more with NPT/EPT than without (even if there would
      be no significant speedup in the tlb-miss runtime).
      
      The first (and more tedious) part of this work requires allowing the VM to
      handle anonymous hugepages mixed with regular pages transparently on
      regular anonymous vmas.  This is what this patch tries to achieve in the
      least intrusive possible way.  We want hugepages and hugetlb to be used in
      a way so that all applications can benefit without changes (as usual we
      leverage the KVM virtualization design: by improving the Linux VM at
      large, KVM gets the performance boost too).
      
      The most important design choice is: always fallback to 4k allocation if
      the hugepage allocation fails!  This is the _very_ opposite of some large
      pagecache patches that failed with -EIO back then if a 64k (or similar)
      allocation failed...
      
      Second important decision (to reduce the impact of the feature on the
      existing pagetable handling code) is that at any time we can split an
      hugepage into 512 regular pages and it has to be done with an operation
      that can't fail.  This way the reliability of the swapping isn't decreased
      (no need to allocate memory when we are short on memory to swap) and it's
      trivial to plug a split_huge_page* one-liner where needed without
      polluting the VM.  Over time we can teach mprotect, mremap and friends to
      handle pmd_trans_huge natively without calling split_huge_page*.  The fact
      it can't fail isn't just for swap: if split_huge_page would return -ENOMEM
      (instead of the current void) we'd need to rollback the mprotect from the
      middle of it (ideally including undoing the split_vma) which would be a
      big change and in the very wrong direction (it'd likely be simpler not to
      call split_huge_page at all and to teach mprotect and friends to handle
      hugepages instead of rolling them back from the middle).  In short the
      very value of split_huge_page is that it can't fail.
      
      The collapsing and madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) part will remain separated and
      incremental and it'll just be an "harmless" addition later if this initial
      part is agreed upon.  It also should be noted that locking-wise replacing
      regular pages with hugepages is going to be very easy if compared to what
      I'm doing below in split_huge_page, as it will only happen when
      page_count(page) matches page_mapcount(page) if we can take the PG_lock
      and mmap_sem in write mode.  collapse_huge_page will be a "best effort"
      that (unlike split_huge_page) can fail at the minimal sign of trouble and
      we can try again later.  collapse_huge_page will be similar to how KSM
      works and the madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) will work similar to
      madvise(MADV_MERGEABLE).
      
      The default I like is that transparent hugepages are used at page fault
      time.  This can be changed with
      /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled.  The control knob can be set
      to three values "always", "madvise", "never" which mean respectively that
      hugepages are always used, or only inside madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) regions,
      or never used.  /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/defrag instead
      controls if the hugepage allocation should defrag memory aggressively
      "always", only inside "madvise" regions, or "never".
      
      The pmd_trans_splitting/pmd_trans_huge locking is very solid.  The
      put_page (from get_user_page users that can't use mmu notifier like
      O_DIRECT) that runs against a __split_huge_page_refcount instead was a
      pain to serialize in a way that would result always in a coherent page
      count for both tail and head.  I think my locking solution with a
      compound_lock taken only after the page_first is valid and is still a
      PageHead should be safe but it surely needs review from SMP race point of
      view.  In short there is no current existing way to serialize the O_DIRECT
      final put_page against split_huge_page_refcount so I had to invent a new
      one (O_DIRECT loses knowledge on the mapping status by the time gup_fast
      returns so...).  And I didn't want to impact all gup/gup_fast users for
      now, maybe if we change the gup interface substantially we can avoid this
      locking, I admit I didn't think too much about it because changing the gup
      unpinning interface would be invasive.
      
      If we ignored O_DIRECT we could stick to the existing compound refcounting
      code, by simply adding a get_user_pages_fast_flags(foll_flags) where KVM
      (and any other mmu notifier user) would call it without FOLL_GET (and if
      FOLL_GET isn't set we'd just BUG_ON if nobody registered itself in the
      current task mmu notifier list yet).  But O_DIRECT is fundamental for
      decent performance of virtualized I/O on fast storage so we can't avoid it
      to solve the race of put_page against split_huge_page_refcount to achieve
      a complete hugepage feature for KVM.
      
      Swap and oom works fine (well just like with regular pages ;).  MMU
      notifier is handled transparently too, with the exception of the young bit
      on the pmd, that didn't have a range check but I think KVM will be fine
      because the whole point of hugepages is that EPT/NPT will also use a huge
      pmd when they notice gup returns pages with PageCompound set, so they
      won't care of a range and there's just the pmd young bit to check in that
      case.
      
      NOTE: in some cases if the L2 cache is small, this may slowdown and waste
      memory during COWs because 4M of memory are accessed in a single fault
      instead of 8k (the payoff is that after COW the program can run faster).
      So we might want to switch the copy_huge_page (and clear_huge_page too) to
      not temporal stores.  I also extensively researched ways to avoid this
      cache trashing with a full prefault logic that would cow in 8k/16k/32k/64k
      up to 1M (I can send those patches that fully implemented prefault) but I
      concluded they're not worth it and they add an huge additional complexity
      and they remove all tlb benefits until the full hugepage has been faulted
      in, to save a little bit of memory and some cache during app startup, but
      they still don't improve substantially the cache-trashing during startup
      if the prefault happens in >4k chunks.  One reason is that those 4k pte
      entries copied are still mapped on a perfectly cache-colored hugepage, so
      the trashing is the worst one can generate in those copies (cow of 4k page
      copies aren't so well colored so they trashes less, but again this results
      in software running faster after the page fault).  Those prefault patches
      allowed things like a pte where post-cow pages were local 4k regular anon
      pages and the not-yet-cowed pte entries were pointing in the middle of
      some hugepage mapped read-only.  If it doesn't payoff substantially with
      todays hardware it will payoff even less in the future with larger l2
      caches, and the prefault logic would blot the VM a lot.  If one is
      emebdded transparent_hugepage can be disabled during boot with sysfs or
      with the boot commandline parameter transparent_hugepage=0 (or
      transparent_hugepage=2 to restrict hugepages inside madvise regions) that
      will ensure not a single hugepage is allocated at boot time.  It is simple
      enough to just disable transparent hugepage globally and let transparent
      hugepages be allocated selectively by applications in the MADV_HUGEPAGE
      region (both at page fault time, and if enabled with the
      collapse_huge_page too through the kernel daemon).
      
      This patch supports only hugepages mapped in the pmd, archs that have
      smaller hugepages will not fit in this patch alone.  Also some archs like
      power have certain tlb limits that prevents mixing different page size in
      the same regions so they will not fit in this framework that requires
      "graceful fallback" to basic PAGE_SIZE in case of physical memory
      fragmentation.  hugetlbfs remains a perfect fit for those because its
      software limits happen to match the hardware limits.  hugetlbfs also
      remains a perfect fit for hugepage sizes like 1GByte that cannot be hoped
      to be found not fragmented after a certain system uptime and that would be
      very expensive to defragment with relocation, so requiring reservation.
      hugetlbfs is the "reservation way", the point of transparent hugepages is
      not to have any reservation at all and maximizing the use of cache and
      hugepages at all times automatically.
      
      Some performance result:
      
      vmx andrea # LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib64/libhugetlbfs.so HUGETLB_MORECORE=yes HUGETLB_PATH=/mnt/huge/ ./largep
      ages3
      memset page fault 1566023
      memset tlb miss 453854
      memset second tlb miss 453321
      random access tlb miss 41635
      random access second tlb miss 41658
      vmx andrea # LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib64/libhugetlbfs.so HUGETLB_MORECORE=yes HUGETLB_PATH=/mnt/huge/ ./largepages3
      memset page fault 1566471
      memset tlb miss 453375
      memset second tlb miss 453320
      random access tlb miss 41636
      random access second tlb miss 41637
      vmx andrea # ./largepages3
      memset page fault 1566642
      memset tlb miss 453417
      memset second tlb miss 453313
      random access tlb miss 41630
      random access second tlb miss 41647
      vmx andrea # ./largepages3
      memset page fault 1566872
      memset tlb miss 453418
      memset second tlb miss 453315
      random access tlb miss 41618
      random access second tlb miss 41659
      vmx andrea # echo 0 > /proc/sys/vm/transparent_hugepage
      vmx andrea # ./largepages3
      memset page fault 2182476
      memset tlb miss 460305
      memset second tlb miss 460179
      random access tlb miss 44483
      random access second tlb miss 44186
      vmx andrea # ./largepages3
      memset page fault 2182791
      memset tlb miss 460742
      memset second tlb miss 459962
      random access tlb miss 43981
      random access second tlb miss 43988
      
      ============
      #include <stdio.h>
      #include <stdlib.h>
      #include <string.h>
      #include <sys/time.h>
      
      #define SIZE (3UL*1024*1024*1024)
      
      int main()
      {
      	char *p = malloc(SIZE), *p2;
      	struct timeval before, after;
      
      	gettimeofday(&before, NULL);
      	memset(p, 0, SIZE);
      	gettimeofday(&after, NULL);
      	printf("memset page fault %Lu\n",
      	       (after.tv_sec-before.tv_sec)*1000000UL +
      	       after.tv_usec-before.tv_usec);
      
      	gettimeofday(&before, NULL);
      	memset(p, 0, SIZE);
      	gettimeofday(&after, NULL);
      	printf("memset tlb miss %Lu\n",
      	       (after.tv_sec-before.tv_sec)*1000000UL +
      	       after.tv_usec-before.tv_usec);
      
      	gettimeofday(&before, NULL);
      	memset(p, 0, SIZE);
      	gettimeofday(&after, NULL);
      	printf("memset second tlb miss %Lu\n",
      	       (after.tv_sec-before.tv_sec)*1000000UL +
      	       after.tv_usec-before.tv_usec);
      
      	gettimeofday(&before, NULL);
      	for (p2 = p; p2 < p+SIZE; p2 += 4096)
      		*p2 = 0;
      	gettimeofday(&after, NULL);
      	printf("random access tlb miss %Lu\n",
      	       (after.tv_sec-before.tv_sec)*1000000UL +
      	       after.tv_usec-before.tv_usec);
      
      	gettimeofday(&before, NULL);
      	for (p2 = p; p2 < p+SIZE; p2 += 4096)
      		*p2 = 0;
      	gettimeofday(&after, NULL);
      	printf("random access second tlb miss %Lu\n",
      	       (after.tv_sec-before.tv_sec)*1000000UL +
      	       after.tv_usec-before.tv_usec);
      
      	return 0;
      }
      ============
      Signed-off-by: NAndrea Arcangeli <aarcange@redhat.com>
      Acked-by: NRik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
      Signed-off-by: NJohannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      71e3aac0
    • M
      mlock: do not hold mmap_sem for extended periods of time · 53a7706d
      Michel Lespinasse 提交于
      __get_user_pages gets a new 'nonblocking' parameter to signal that the
      caller is prepared to re-acquire mmap_sem and retry the operation if
      needed.  This is used to split off long operations if they are going to
      block on a disk transfer, or when we detect contention on the mmap_sem.
      
      [akpm@linux-foundation.org: remove ref to rwsem_is_contended()]
      Signed-off-by: NMichel Lespinasse <walken@google.com>
      Cc: Hugh Dickins <hughd@google.com>
      Cc: Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
      Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
      Cc: Nick Piggin <npiggin@kernel.dk>
      Cc: KOSAKI Motohiro <kosaki.motohiro@jp.fujitsu.com>
      Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu>
      Cc: "H. Peter Anvin" <hpa@zytor.com>
      Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
      Cc: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
      Signed-off-by: NAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
      Signed-off-by: NLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      53a7706d
  22. 27 10月, 2010 1 次提交