Re: [RFC 0/6] mm: support madvise(MADV_FREE)
From: Zhang Yanfei
Date: Fri Mar 14 2014 - 03:38:27 EST
Hello Minchan
On 03/14/2014 02:37 PM, Minchan Kim wrote:
> This patch is an attempt to support MADV_FREE for Linux.
>
> Rationale is following as.
>
> Allocators call munmap(2) when user call free(3) if ptr is
> in mmaped area. But munmap isn't cheap because it have to clean up
> all pte entries, unlinking a vma and returns free pages to buddy
> so overhead would be increased linearly by mmaped area's size.
> So they like madvise_dontneed rather than munmap.
>
> "dontneed" holds read-side lock of mmap_sem so other threads
> of the process could go with concurrent page faults so it is
> better than munmap if it's not lack of address space.
> But the problem is that most of allocator reuses that address
> space soonish so applications see page fault, page allocation,
> page zeroing if allocator already called madvise_dontneed
> on the address space.
>
> For avoidng that overheads, other OS have supported MADV_FREE.
> The idea is just mark pages as lazyfree when madvise called
> and purge them if memory pressure happens. Otherwise, VM doesn't
> detach pages on the address space so application could use
> that memory space without above overheads.
I didn't look into the code. Does this mean we just keep the vma,
the pte entries, and page itself for later possible reuse? If so,
how can we reuse the vma? The kernel would mark the vma kinds of
special so that it can be reused other than unmapped? Do you have
an example about this reuse?
Another thing is when I search MADV_FREE in the internet, I see that
Rik posted the similar patch in 2007 but that patch didn't
go into the upstream kernel. And some explanation from Andrew:
------------------------------------------------------
lazy-freeing-of-memory-through-madv_free.patch
lazy-freeing-of-memory-through-madv_free-vs-mm-madvise-avoid-exclusive-mmap_sem.patch
restore-madv_dontneed-to-its-original-linux-behaviour.patch
I think the MADV_FREE changes need more work:
We need crystal-clear statements regarding the present functionality, the new
functionality and how these relate to the spec and to implmentations in other
OS'es. Once we have that info we are in a position to work out whether the
code can be merged as-is, or if additional changes are needed.
Because right now, I don't know where we are with respect to these things and
I doubt if many of our users know either. How can Michael write a manpage for
this is we don't tell him what it all does?
------------------------------------------------------
Thanks
Zhang Yanfei
>
> I tweaked jamalloc to use MADV_FREE for the testing.
>
> diff --git a/src/chunk_mmap.c b/src/chunk_mmap.c
> index 8a42e75..20e31af 100644
> --- a/src/chunk_mmap.c
> +++ b/src/chunk_mmap.c
> @@ -131,7 +131,7 @@ pages_purge(void *addr, size_t length)
> # else
> # error "No method defined for purging unused dirty pages."
> # endif
> - int err = madvise(addr, length, JEMALLOC_MADV_PURGE);
> + int err = madvise(addr, length, 5);
> unzeroed = (JEMALLOC_MADV_ZEROS == false || err != 0);
> # undef JEMALLOC_MADV_PURGE
> # undef JEMALLOC_MADV_ZEROS
>
>
> RAM 2G, CPU 4, ebizzy benchmark(./ebizzy -S 30 -n 512)
>
> (1.1) stands for 1 process and 1 thread so for exmaple,
> (1.4) is 1 process and 4 thread.
>
> vanilla jemalloc patched jemalloc
>
> 1.1 1.1
> records: 5 records: 5
> avg: 7404.60 avg: 14059.80
> std: 116.67(1.58%) std: 93.92(0.67%)
> max: 7564.00 max: 14152.00
> min: 7288.00 min: 13893.00
> 1.4 1.4
> records: 5 records: 5
> avg: 16160.80 avg: 30173.00
> std: 509.80(3.15%) std: 3050.72(10.11%)
> max: 16728.00 max: 33989.00
> min: 15216.00 min: 25173.00
> 1.8 1.8
> records: 5 records: 5
> avg: 16003.00 avg: 30080.20
> std: 290.40(1.81%) std: 2063.57(6.86%)
> max: 16537.00 max: 32735.00
> min: 15727.00 min: 27381.00
> 4.1 4.1
> records: 5 records: 5
> avg: 4003.60 avg: 8064.80
> std: 65.33(1.63%) std: 143.89(1.78%)
> max: 4118.00 max: 8319.00
> min: 3921.00 min: 7888.00
> 4.4 4.4
> records: 5 records: 5
> avg: 3907.40 avg: 7199.80
> std: 48.68(1.25%) std: 80.21(1.11%)
> max: 3997.00 max: 7320.00
> min: 3863.00 min: 7113.00
> 4.8 4.8
> records: 5 records: 5
> avg: 3893.00 avg: 7195.20
> std: 19.11(0.49%) std: 101.55(1.41%)
> max: 3927.00 max: 7309.00
> min: 3869.00 min: 7012.00
> 8.1 8.1
> records: 5 records: 5
> avg: 1942.00 avg: 3602.80
> std: 34.60(1.78%) std: 22.97(0.64%)
> max: 2010.00 max: 3632.00
> min: 1913.00 min: 3563.00
> 8.4 8.4
> records: 5 records: 5
> avg: 1938.00 avg: 3405.60
> std: 32.77(1.69%) std: 36.25(1.06%)
> max: 1998.00 max: 3468.00
> min: 1905.00 min: 3374.00
> 8.8 8.8
> records: 5 records: 5
> avg: 1977.80 avg: 3434.20
> std: 25.75(1.30%) std: 57.95(1.69%)
> max: 2011.00 max: 3533.00
> min: 1937.00 min: 3363.00
>
> So, MADV_FREE is 2 time faster than MADV_DONTNEED for
> every cases.
>
> I didn't test a lot but it's enough to show the concept and
> direction before LSF/MM.
>
> Patchset is based on 3.14-rc6.
>
> Welcome any comment!
>
> Minchan Kim (6):
> mm: clean up PAGE_MAPPING_FLAGS
> mm: work deactivate_page with anon pages
> mm: support madvise(MADV_FREE)
> mm: add stat about lazyfree pages
> mm: reclaim lazyfree pages in swapless system
> mm: ksm: don't merge lazyfree page
>
> include/asm-generic/tlb.h | 9 ++++++++
> include/linux/mm.h | 39 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
> include/linux/mm_inline.h | 9 ++++++++
> include/linux/mmzone.h | 1 +
> include/linux/rmap.h | 1 +
> include/linux/swap.h | 15 +++++++++++++
> include/linux/vm_event_item.h | 1 +
> include/uapi/asm-generic/mman-common.h | 1 +
> mm/ksm.c | 18 +++++++++++-----
> mm/madvise.c | 17 +++++++++++++--
> mm/memory.c | 12 ++++++++++-
> mm/page_alloc.c | 5 ++++-
> mm/rmap.c | 25 ++++++++++++++++++----
> mm/swap.c | 20 ++++++++---------
> mm/swap_state.c | 38 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
> mm/vmscan.c | 32 +++++++++++++++++++++++++---
> mm/vmstat.c | 2 ++
> 17 files changed, 217 insertions(+), 28 deletions(-)
>
--
Thanks.
Zhang Yanfei
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