Re: [RFC 2/2] x86_64, mm: Reinsert the absent memory
From: Mike Travis
Date: Tue Jun 25 2013 - 14:52:12 EST
On 6/25/2013 11:43 AM, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
> On 06/25/2013 10:22 AM, Mike Travis wrote:
>>
>> On 6/25/2013 12:38 AM, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>>>
>>> * Nathan Zimmer <nzimmer@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Sun, Jun 23, 2013 at 11:28:40AM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> That's 4.5 GB/sec initialization speed - that feels a bit slow and the
>>>>> boot time effect should be felt on smaller 'a couple of gigabytes'
>>>>> desktop boxes as well. Do we know exactly where the 2 hours of boot
>>>>> time on a 32 TB system is spent?
>>>>
>>>> There are other several spots that could be improved on a large system
>>>> but memory initialization is by far the biggest.
>>>
>>> My feeling is that deferred/on-demand initialization triggered from the
>>> buddy allocator is the better long term solution.
>>
>> I haven't caught up with all of Nathan's changes yet (just
>> got back from vacation), but there was an option to either
>> start the memory insertion on boot, or trigger it later
>> using the /sys/.../memory interface. There is also a monitor
>> program that calculates the memory insertion rate. This was
>> extremely useful to determine how changes in the kernel
>> affected the rate.
>>
>
> Sorry, I *totally* did not follow that comment. It seemed like a
> complete non-sequitur?
>
> -hpa
It was I who was not following the question. I'm still reverting
back to "work mode".
[There is more code in a separate patch that Nate has not sent
yet that instructs the kernel to start adding memory as early
as possible, or not. That way you can start the insertion process
later and monitor it's progress to determine how changes in the
kernel affect that process. It is controlled by a separate
CONFIG option.]
>
>
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