Paul Menage wrote:
> On 8/29/07, Balbir Singh <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Change the interface to use kilobytes instead of pages. Page sizes can vary
>> across platforms and configurations. A new strategy routine has been added
>> to the resource counters infrastructure to format the data as desired.
>>
>> Suggested by David Rientjes, Andrew Morton and Herbert Poetzl
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Balbir Singh <[email protected]>
>> ---
>>
>> Documentation/controllers/memory.txt | 7 +++--
>> include/linux/res_counter.h | 6 ++--
>> kernel/res_counter.c | 24 +++++++++++++----
>> mm/memcontrol.c | 47 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------
>> 4 files changed, 64 insertions(+), 20 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff -puN mm/memcontrol.c~mem-control-make-ui-use-kilobytes mm/memcontrol.c
>> --- linux-2.6.23-rc3/mm/memcontrol.c~mem-control-make-ui-use-kilobytes 2007-08-28 13:20:44.000000000 +0530
>> +++ linux-2.6.23-rc3-balbir/mm/memcontrol.c 2007-08-29 14:36:07.000000000 +0530
>> @@ -32,6 +32,7 @@
>>
>> struct container_subsys mem_container_subsys;
>> static const int MEM_CONTAINER_RECLAIM_RETRIES = 5;
>> +static const int MEM_CONTAINER_CHARGE_KB = (PAGE_SIZE >> 10);
>>
>> /*
>> * The memory controller data structure. The memory controller controls both
>> @@ -312,7 +313,7 @@ int mem_container_charge(struct page *pa
>> * If we created the page_container, we should free it on exceeding
>> * the container limit.
>> */
>> - while (res_counter_charge(&mem->res, 1)) {
>> + while (res_counter_charge(&mem->res, MEM_CONTAINER_CHARGE_KB)) {
>> if (try_to_free_mem_container_pages(mem))
>> continue;
>>
>> @@ -352,7 +353,7 @@ int mem_container_charge(struct page *pa
>> kfree(pc);
>> pc = race_pc;
>> atomic_inc(&pc->ref_cnt);
>> - res_counter_uncharge(&mem->res, 1);
>> + res_counter_uncharge(&mem->res, MEM_CONTAINER_CHARGE_KB);
>> css_put(&mem->css);
>> goto done;
>> }
>> @@ -417,7 +418,7 @@ void mem_container_uncharge(struct page_
>> css_put(&mem->css);
>> page_assign_page_container(page, NULL);
>> unlock_page_container(page);
>> - res_counter_uncharge(&mem->res, 1);
>> + res_counter_uncharge(&mem->res, MEM_CONTAINER_CHARGE_KB);
>>
>> spin_lock_irqsave(&mem->lru_lock, flags);
>> list_del_init(&pc->lru);
>> @@ -426,12 +427,37 @@ void mem_container_uncharge(struct page_
>> }
>> }
>>
>> -static ssize_t mem_container_read(struct container *cont, struct cftype *cft,
>> - struct file *file, char __user *userbuf, size_t nbytes,
>> - loff_t *ppos)
>> +int mem_container_read_strategy(unsigned long val, char *buf)
>> +{
>> + return sprintf(buf, "%lu (kB)\n", val);
>> +}
>> +
>> +int mem_container_write_strategy(char *buf, unsigned long *tmp)
>> +{
>> + *tmp = memparse(buf, &buf);
>> + if (*buf != '\0')
>> + return -EINVAL;
>> +
>> + *tmp = *tmp >> 10; /* convert to kilobytes */
>> + return 0;
>> +}
>
> This seems a bit inconsistent - if you write a value to a limit file,
> then the value that you read back is reduced by a factor of 1024?
> Having the "(kB)" suffix isn't really a big help to automated
> middleware.
>
Why is that? Is it because you could write 4M and see it show up
as 4096 kilobytes? We'll that can be fixed with another variant
of the memparse() utility.
> I'd still be in favour of just reading/writing 64-bit values
> representing bytes - simple, and unambiguous for programmatic use, and
> not really any less user-friendly than kilobytes for manual use
> (since the numbers involved are going to be unwieldly for manual use
> whether they're in bytes or kB).
>
64 bit might be an overkill for 32 bit machines. 32 bit machines with
PAE cannot use 32 bit values, they need 64 bits. I think KiloBytes
is an acceptable metric these days, everybody understands them.
> Paul
> _______________________________________________
> Containers mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/containers
--
Warm Regards,
Balbir Singh
Linux Technology Center
IBM, ISTL
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