[PATCH v2 0/3] promote zcache from staging
From: Seth Jennings
Date: Tue Sep 04 2012 - 16:03:59 EST
zcache is the remaining piece of code required to support in-kernel
memory compression. The other two features, cleancache and frontswap,
have been promoted to mainline in 3.0 and 3.5 respectively. This
patchset promotes zcache from the staging tree to mainline.
Based on the level of activity and contributions we're seeing from a
diverse set of people and interests, I think zcache has matured to the
point where it makes sense to promote this out of staging.
Overview
========
zcache is a backend to frontswap and cleancache that accepts pages from
those mechanisms and compresses them, leading to reduced I/O caused by
swap and file re-reads. This is very valuable in shared storage situations
to reduce load on things like SANs. Also, in the case of slow backing/swap
devices, zcache can also yield a performance gain.
In-Kernel Memory Compression Overview:
swap subsystem page cache
+ +
frontswap cleancache
+ +
zcache frontswap glue zcache cleancache glue
+ +
+---------+------------+
+
zcache/tmem core
+
+---------+------------+
+ +
zsmalloc zbud
Everything below the frontswap/cleancache layer is current inside the
zcache driver expect for zsmalloc which is a shared between zcache and
another memory compression driver, zram.
Since zcache is dependent on zsmalloc, it is also being promoted by this
patchset.
For information on zsmalloc and the rationale behind it's design and use
cases verses already existing allocators in the kernel:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/1/9/386
zsmalloc is the allocator used by zcache to store persistent pages that
comes from frontswap, as opposed to zbud which is the (internal) allocator
used for ephemeral pages from cleancache.
zsmalloc uses many fields of the page struct to create it's conceptual
high-order page called a zspage. Exactly which fields are used and for
what purpose is documented at the top of the zsmalloc .c file. Because
zsmalloc uses struct page extensively, Andrew advised that the
promotion location be mm/:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/1/20/308
Some benchmarking numbers demonstrating the I/O saving that can be had
with zcache:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/3/22/383
Dan's presentation at LSF/MM this year on zcache:
http://oss.oracle.com/projects/tmem/dist/documentation/presentations/LSFMM12-zcache-final.pdf
There was a recent thread about cleancache memory corruption that is
resolved by this patch that should be making it into linux-next via
Greg very soon:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/8/29/253
Changlog:
v2:
* rebased to next-20120904
* removed already accepted patch from patchset
Seth Jennings (3):
zsmalloc: promote to mm/
drivers: add memory management driver class
zcache: promote to drivers/mm/
drivers/Kconfig | 2 ++
drivers/Makefile | 1 +
drivers/mm/Kconfig | 13 +++++++++++++
drivers/mm/Makefile | 1 +
drivers/{staging => mm}/zcache/Makefile | 0
drivers/{staging => mm}/zcache/tmem.c | 0
drivers/{staging => mm}/zcache/tmem.h | 0
drivers/{staging => mm}/zcache/zcache-main.c | 4 ++--
drivers/staging/Kconfig | 4 ----
drivers/staging/Makefile | 2 --
drivers/staging/zcache/Kconfig | 11 -----------
drivers/staging/zram/zram_drv.h | 3 +--
drivers/staging/zsmalloc/Kconfig | 10 ----------
drivers/staging/zsmalloc/Makefile | 3 ---
.../staging/zsmalloc => include/linux}/zsmalloc.h | 0
mm/Kconfig | 18 ++++++++++++++++++
mm/Makefile | 1 +
.../zsmalloc/zsmalloc-main.c => mm/zsmalloc.c | 3 +--
18 files changed, 40 insertions(+), 36 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 drivers/mm/Kconfig
create mode 100644 drivers/mm/Makefile
rename drivers/{staging => mm}/zcache/Makefile (100%)
rename drivers/{staging => mm}/zcache/tmem.c (100%)
rename drivers/{staging => mm}/zcache/tmem.h (100%)
rename drivers/{staging => mm}/zcache/zcache-main.c (99%)
delete mode 100644 drivers/staging/zcache/Kconfig
delete mode 100644 drivers/staging/zsmalloc/Kconfig
delete mode 100644 drivers/staging/zsmalloc/Makefile
rename {drivers/staging/zsmalloc => include/linux}/zsmalloc.h (100%)
rename drivers/staging/zsmalloc/zsmalloc-main.c => mm/zsmalloc.c (99%)
--
1.7.9.5
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