On Sat, Jun 09, 2007 at 11:47:23AM +0200, Andi Kleen wrote:
>
> > > Now there is a anon dirty limit since a few releases, but I'm not
> > > fully convinced it solves the problem completely.
> >
> > A gut feeling or is there more?
>
> Lots of other subsystem can allocate a lot of memory
> and they usually don't cooperate and have similar dirty limit concepts.
> So you could run out of usable memory anyways and then have a similar
> issue.
>
> For example a flood of network packets could always steal your
> GFP_ATOMIC pools very quickly in the background (gigabit or 10gig
> can transfer a lot of data very quickly) >
> Also iirc try_to_free_pages() is not completely fair and might fail
> under extreme load for some requesters.
>
> Not requiring memory allocation for any IO would be certainly safer.
>
> Anyways, it's a theoretic question because you can't sleep in
> there anyways unless something drastic changes in the driver interfaces.
Agree, that the ideal thing would be to make such changes in the driver
interfaces where in dma_map_{singe|sg} API's are not called in the
interrupt context and/or spinlock held, there by IOMMU drivers are
free to block when memory is not available. This seems to be a
noble goal invloving huge changes and testing beyond the scope of the
current IOMMU driver. I guess it would be ideal if this gets discussed
and resolved at kernel summit.
Assuming that we may have to live with the above limitations for a
while, what is the best way to allocate memory in the
dma_map_{single|sg} API's for the IOMMU drivers? (these memory
are required to setup internal IOMMU pagetables etc.)
In the first implementation of ours, we had used mempools api's to
allocate memory and we were told that mempools with GFP_ATOMIC is
useless and hence in the second implementation we came up with
resource pools ( which is preallocate pools) and again as I understand
the argument is why create another when we have slab allocation which
is similar to this resource pools.
Hence, can I assume that the conclusion of this
discussion is to use kmem_cache_alloc() functions
to allocate memory in dma_map_{single|sg} API's?
Again, if dma_map_{single|sg} API's fails due to
failure to allocate memory, the only thing that can
be done is to panic as this is what few of the other
IOMMU implementation is doing today.
Please advice.
Thanks,
Anil
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