On Wed, 2007-08-29 at 09:29 -0400, Daniel Drake wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've spent some time trying to understand why swapoff is such a slow
> operation.
>
> My experiments show that when there is not much free physical memory,
> swapoff moves pages out of swap at a rate of approximately 5mb/sec. When
> there is a lot of free physical memory, it is faster but still a slow
> CPU-intensive operation, purging swap at about 20mb/sec.
>
> I've read into the swap code and I have some understanding that this is
> an expensive operation (and has to be). This page was very helpful and
> also agrees:
> http://kernel.org/doc/gorman/html/understand/understand014.html
>
> After reading that, I have an idea for a possible optimization. If we
> were to create a system call to disable ALL swap partitions (or modify
> the existing one to accept NULL for that purpose), could this process be
> signficantly less complex?
>
> I'm thinking we could do something like this:
> 1. Prevent any more pages from being swapped out from this point
> 2. Iterate through all process page tables, paging all swapped
> pages back into physical memory and updating PTEs
> 3. Clear all swap tables and caches
>
> Due to only iterating through process page tables once, does this sound
> like it would increase performance non-trivially? Is it feasible?
>
> I'm happy to spend a few more hours looking into implementing this but
> would greatly appreciate any advice from those in-the-know on if my
> ideas are broken to start with...
Daniel:
in a response, Juergen Beisert asked if you'd tried mlock() [mlockall()
would probably be a better choice] to lock your application into memory.
That would require modifying the application. Don't know if you want to
do that.
Back in Feb'07, I posted an RFC regarding [optionally] inheriting
mlockall() semantics across fork and exec. The original posting is
here:
http://marc.info/?l=linux-mm&m=117217855508612&w=4
The patch is quite stale now [against 20-rc<something>], but shouldn't
be too much work to rebase to something more recent. The patch
description points to an ad hoc mlock "prefix command" that would allow
you to:
mlock <some application>
and run the application as if it had called "mlockall(MCL_CURRENT|
MCL_FUTURE)", without having to modify the application--if that's
something you can't or don't want to do.
Maybe this would help?
Lee
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