Re: Packing data in kernel memory

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On Tue, 13 Jun 2006 16:54:26 -0400 John Richard Moser wrote:

> Randy.Dunlap wrote:
> > On Tue, 13 Jun 2006 22:18:55 +0200 (MEST) Jan Engelhardt wrote:
> > 
> >>> Subject: Packing data in kernel memory
> >>>
> >> Can't you just use mlock(), if you want to keep it in RAM?
> >>
> >> Or do you need it in kernel memory, because you need it in the lowmem area? 
> >> Or for interaction with other kernel code?
> >>
> >>> Is there a way to pack and store arbitrary data in the kernel, or do I
> >>> need to roll my own?
> > 
> > Sounds a bit like a slab cache to me.
> > 
> 
> OK cool, can I make that non-swappable?

kernel (allocated) memory is non-swappable.

> I'm going to be trying to do
> this between where kernel swaps a page out and swapped page actually is
> written to disk.  The result will be a "Swap Zone," in-memory storage of
> pages that the rest of the kernel thinks have been swapped to disk.
> (Code here will use the swap interface, so the rest of the kernel thinks
> it's just swapping; I'll handle whether to pull it out of memory or off
> disk behind that)
> 
> The need for packing pages comes because eventually (using above
> infrastructure) I'll be taking sets of 32KiB of data and compressing it;
> I don't want to pad up to 4095 excess unused bytes if that stuff
> compresses to 28KiB+1 :)  (more likely 16KiB+1 +/-8KiB)
> 
> This is all, of course, assuming I ever figure out how the heck to get
> in the middle of the swapping process.  I'm looking at mm/page_io.c
> swap_writepage() and friends and scratching my head.  I have no idea wtf...
> 
> 
> >> Write a device driver, kmalloc some buffer, and copy data via a write 
> >> function from userspace to that buffer. Should be trivial.
> >>
> >>> 1 excess pages, 4 units wasted memory.
> >> Of course, kmalloc only works up to some boundary AFIACS.
> > 
> > 128 KB on some arches.  More on a few IIRC.

---
~Randy
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