On Fri 04-10-19 16:32:39, Konstantin Khlebnikov wrote:
On 04/10/2019 16.12, Michal Hocko wrote:
On Fri 04-10-19 16:09:22, Konstantin Khlebnikov wrote:
This is very slow operation. There is no reason to do it again if somebody
else already drained all per-cpu vectors while we waited for lock.
Piggyback on drain started and finished while we waited for lock:
all pages pended at the time of our enter were drained from vectors.
Callers like POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED retry their operations once after
draining per-cpu vectors when pages have unexpected references.
This describes why we need to wait for preexisted pages on the pvecs but
the changelog doesn't say anything about improvements this leads to.
In other words what kind of workloads benefit from it?
Right now POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED is top user because it have to freeze page
reference when removes it from cache. invalidate_bdev calls it for same reason.
Both are triggered from userspace, so it's easy to generate storm.
mlock/mlockall no longer calls lru_add_drain_all - I've seen here
serious slowdown on older kernel.
There are some less obvious paths in memory migration/CMA/offlining
which shouldn't be called frequently.
Can you back those claims by any numbers?