Re: [RFC/T/D][PATCH 2/2] Linux/Guest cooperative unmapped page cachecontrol
From: Avi Kivity
Date: Mon Jun 14 2010 - 11:35:09 EST
On 06/14/2010 06:12 PM, Dave Hansen wrote:
On Mon, 2010-06-14 at 14:18 +0530, Balbir Singh wrote:
1. A slab page will not be freed until the entire page is free (all
slabs have been kfree'd so to speak). Normal reclaim will definitely
free this page, but a lot of it depends on how frequently we are
scanning the LRU list and when this page got added.
You don't have to be freeing entire slab pages for the reclaim to have
been useful. You could just be making space so that _future_
allocations fill in the slab holes you just created. You may not be
freeing pages, but you're reducing future system pressure.
Depends. If you've evicted something that will be referenced soon,
you're increasing system pressure.
If unmapped page cache is the easiest thing to evict, then it should be
the first thing that goes when a balloon request comes in, which is the
case this patch is trying to handle. If it isn't the easiest thing to
evict, then we _shouldn't_ evict it.
Easy to evict is just one measure. There's benefit (size of data
evicted), cost to refill (seeks, cpu), and likelihood that the cost to
refill will be incurred (recency).
It's all very complicated. We need better information to make these
decisions. For one thing, I'd like to see age information tied to
objects. We may have two pages that were referenced in wildly different
times be next to each other in LRU order. We have many LRUs, but no
idea of the relative recency of the tails of those LRUs.
If each page or object had an age, we could scale those ages by the
benefit from reclaim and cost to refill and make a better decision as to
what to evict first. But of course page->age means increasing sizeof
struct page, and we can only approximate its value by scanning the
accessed bit, not determine it accurately (unlike the other objects
managed by the cache).
--
error compiling committee.c: too many arguments to function
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