Re: [Lhms-devel] [PATCH 0/7] Fragmentation Avoidance V19
From: Linus Torvalds
Date: Thu Nov 03 2005 - 10:51:44 EST
On Thu, 3 Nov 2005, Arjan van de Ven wrote:
> On Thu, 2005-11-03 at 07:36 -0800, Martin J. Bligh wrote:
> > >> Can we quit coming up with specialist hacks for hotplug, and try to solve
> > >> the generic problem please? hotplug is NOT the only issue here. Fragmentation
> > >> in general is.
> > >>
> > >
> > > Not really it isn't. There have been a few cases (e1000 being the main
> > > one, and is fixed upstream) where fragmentation in general is a problem.
> > > But mostly it is not.
> >
> > Sigh. OK, tell me how you're going to fix kernel stacks > 4K please.
>
> with CONFIG_4KSTACKS :)
2-page allocations are _not_ a problem.
Especially not for fork()/clone(). If you don't even have 2-page
contiguous areas, you are doing something _wrong_, or you're so low on
memory that there's no point in forking any more.
Don't confuse "fragmentation" with "perfectly spread out page
allocations".
Fragmentation means that it gets _exponentially_ more unlikely that you
can allocate big contiguous areas. But contiguous areas of order 1 are
very very likely indeed. It's only the _big_ areas that aren't going to
happen.
This is why fragmentation avoidance has always been totally useless. It is
- only useful for big areas
- very hard for big areas
(Corollary: when it's easy and possible, it's not useful).
Don't do it. We've never done it, and we've been fine. Claiming that
fork() is a reason to do fragmentation avoidance is invalid.
Linus
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/