On 07/28/2007 01:21 PM, Alan Cox wrote:
It is. Prefetched pages can be dropped on the floor without additional
I/O.
Which is essentially free for most cases. In addition your disk access
may well have been in idle time (and should be for this sort of stuff)
Yes. The swap-prefetch patch ensures that the machine (well, the VM) is very
idle before it allows itself to kick in.
and if it was in the same chunk as something nearby was effectively free
anyway.
Actual physical disk ops are precious resource and anything that mostly
reduces the number will be a win - not to stay swap prefetch is the right
answer but accidentally or otherwise there are good reasons it may
happen to help.
Bigger more linear chunks of writeout/readin is much more important I
suspect than swap prefetching.
Yes, I believe this might be an important point. Earlier I posted a dumb
little VM thrasher:
http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/7/25/85
Contrived thing and all, but what it does do is show exactly how bad seeking
all over swap-space is. If you push it out before hitting enter, the time it
takes easily grows past 10 minutes (with my 768M) versus sub-second (!) when
it's all in to start with.
What are the tradeoffs here? What wants small chunks? Also, as far as I'm
aware Linux does not do things like up the granularity when it notices it's
swapping in heavily? That sounds sort of promising...
good overview of exactly how broken -mm can be at times. How many -mm users
use it anyway? He himself said he's not convinced of usefulness having not
I've been using it for months with no noticed problem. I turn it on
because it might as well get tested. I've not done comparison tests so I
can't comment on if its worth it.
Lots of -mm testers turn *everything* on because its a test kernel.
Okay.
Rene.
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