On Wed, 23 Nov 2005, Rohit Seth wrote:
> On Tue, 2005-11-22 at 21:36 -0800, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > Rohit Seth <[email protected]> wrote:
> > >
> > > Andrew, Linus,
> > >
> > > [PATCH]: This patch free pages (pcp->batch from each list at a time) from
> > > local pcp lists when a higher order allocation request is not able to
> > > get serviced from global free_list.
> > >
> > > This should help fix some of the earlier failures seen with order 1 allocations.
> > >
> > > I will send separate patches for:
> > >
> > > 1- Reducing the remote cpus pcp
> > > 2- Clean up page_alloc.c for CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU to use this code appropiately
> > >
> > > +static int
> > > +reduce_cpu_pcp(void )
> > >
> > This significantly duplicates the existing drain_local_pages().
>
> Yes. The main change in this new function is I'm only freeing batch
> number of pages from each pcp rather than draining out all of them (even
> under a little memory pressure). IMO, we should be more opportunistic
> here in alloc_pages in moving pages back to global page pool list.
> Thoughts?
>
I doubt you gain a whole lot by releasing them in batches. There is no way
to determine if freeing a few will result in contiguous blocks or not and
the overhead of been cautious will likely exceed the cost of simply
refilling them on the next order-0 allocation. Your worst case is where
the buddies you need are in different per-cpu caches.
As it's easy to refill a per-cpu cache, it would be easier, clearer and
probably faster to just purge the per-cpu cache and have it refilled on
the next order-0 allocation. The release-in-batch approach would only be
worthwhile if you expect an order-1 allocation to be very rare.
> As said earlier, I will be cleaning up the existing drain_local_pages in
> next follow up patch.
>
> >
> > >
> > > + if (order > 0)
> > > + while (reduce_cpu_pcp()) {
> > > + if (get_page_from_freelist(gfp_mask, order, zonelist, alloc_flags))
> >
> > This forgot to assign to local variable `page'! It'll return NULL and will
> > leak memory.
> >
> My bad. Will fix it.
>
> > The `while' loop worries me for some reason, so I wimped out and just tried
> > the remote drain once.
> >
> Even after direct reclaim it probably does make sense to see how
> minimally we can service a higher order request.
>
After direct reclaim, things are already very slow. The cost of refilling
a per-cpu cache is nowhere near the same as a direct-reclaim.
> > > + goto got_pg;
> > > + }
> > > + /* FIXME: Add the support for reducing/draining the remote pcps.
> >
> > This is easy enough to do.
> >
>
> The couple of options that I wanted to think little more were (before
> attempting to do this part):
>
> 1- Whether use the IPI to get the remote CPUs to free pages from pcp or
> do it lazily (using work_pending or such). As at this point in
> execution we can definitely afford to get scheduled out.
>
In 005_drainpercpu.patch from the last version of the anti-defrag, I used
the smp_call_function() and it did not seem to slow up the system.
Certainly, by the time it was called, the system was already low on
memory and trashing a bit so it just wasn't noticable.
> 2- Do we drain the whole pcp on remote processors or again follow the
> stepped approach (but may be with a steeper slope).
>
I would say do the same on the remote case as you do locally to keep
things consistent.
>
> > We need to verify that this patch actually does something useful.
> >
> >
> I'm working on this. Will let you know later today if I can come with
> some workload easily hitting this additional logic.
>
I found it hard to generate reliable workloads which hit these sort of
situations although a fork-heavy workload with 8k stacks will put pressure
on order-1 allocations. You can artifically force high order allocations
using vmregress by doing something like this;
./configure --with-linux=/usr/src/linux-yourtree
make
insmod kernel_src/core/vmregress_core.ko
insmod kernel_src/core/buddyinfo.ko
insmod kernel_src/test/highalloc.ko
echo 1 100 > /proc/vmregress/test_highalloc
That will allocate 1 order-1 page every tenth of a second until it has
tried 100 allocations. When it completes, the success/failure report can
be read by catting /proc/vmregress/test_highalloc. Obviously, this is very
artifical.
--
Mel Gorman
Part-time Phd Student Java Applications Developer
University of Limerick IBM Dublin Software Lab
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