Re: [RFC PATCH V1 0/3] mm/damon: Add CMA minotor support
From: David Hildenbrand
Date: Fri Mar 18 2022 - 04:29:39 EST
On 18.03.22 06:13, xhao@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
>
> On 3/18/22 12:42 AM, David Hildenbrand wrote:
>> On 17.03.22 08:03, Xin Hao wrote:
>>> Hi David,
>>>
>>> On 3/16/22 11:09 PM, David Hildenbrand wrote:
>>>> On 15.03.22 17:37, Xin Hao wrote:
>>>>
>>>> s/minotor/monitor/
>>> Thanks, i will fix it.
>>>>> The purpose of these patches is to add CMA memory monitoring function.
>>>>> In some memory tight scenarios, it will be a good choice to release more
>>>>> memory by monitoring the CMA memory.
>>>> I'm sorry, but it's hard to figure out what the target use case should
>>>> be. Who will release CMA memory and how? Who will monitor that? What are
>>>> the "some memory tight scenarios"? What's the overall design goal?
>>> I may not be describing exactly what i mean,My intention is to find out
>>> how much of the reserved CMA space is actually used and which is unused,
>>> For those that are not used, I understand that they can be released by
>>> cma_release(). Of course, This is just a little personal thought that I
>>> think is helpful for saving memory.
>> Hm, not quite. We can place movable allocations on cma areas, to be
>> migrated away once required for allocations via CMA. So just looking at
>> the pages allocated within a CMA area doesn't really tell you what's
>> actually going on.
>
> I don't think so, the damon not looking at the pages allocate, It is
> constantly monitoring who is using CMA area pages through tracking page
> access bit
>
> in the kernel via the kdamond.x thread, So through damon, it can tell us
> about the hot and cold distribution of CMA memory.
I'm not sure I follow. With random movable pages being placed on the CMA
area, the mentioned use case of "cma_release()" to release pages doesn't
make sense to me.
I assume I'm missing the big picture -- and that should be properly
documented in the patch description. We don't add stuff just because it
could be used somehow, there should be a clear motivation how it can
actually be used.
--
Thanks,
David / dhildenb