On Wed,  6 Aug 2008 17:20:46 +0900 (JST)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (YAMAMOTO Takashi) wrote:

> hi,
> 
> > On Fri, 11 Jul 2008 17:34:46 +0900 (JST)
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (YAMAMOTO Takashi) wrote:
> > 
> > > hi,
> > > 
> > > > > my patch penalizes heavy-writer cgroups as task_dirty_limit does
> > > > > for heavy-writer tasks.  i don't think that it's necessary to be
> > > > > tied to the memory subsystem because i merely want to group writers.
> > > > > 
> > > > Hmm, maybe what I need is different from this ;)
> > > > Does not seem to be a help for memory reclaim under memcg.
> > > 
> > > to implement what you need, i think that we need to keep track of
> > > the numbers of dirty-pages in each memory cgroups as a first step.
> > > do you agree?
> > > 
> > yes, I think so, now.
> > 
> > may be not difficult but will add extra overhead ;( Sigh..
> 
> the following is a patch to add the overhead. :)
> any comments?
> 
Do you have some numbers ? ;) 
I like this because this seems very straightforward. thank you.


> @@ -485,7 +502,10 @@ unsigned long mem_cgroup_isolate_pages(unsigned long 
> nr_to_scan,
>               if (PageUnevictable(page) ||
>                   (PageActive(page) && !active) ||
>                   (!PageActive(page) && active)) {
> -                     __mem_cgroup_move_lists(pc, page_lru(page));
> +                     if (try_lock_page_cgroup(page)) {
> +                             __mem_cgroup_move_lists(pc, page_lru(page));
> +                             unlock_page_cgroup(page);
> +                     }
>                       continue;
>               }
>  

Hmm..ok, there will be new race between Dirty Bit and LRU bits.


> @@ -772,6 +792,38 @@ void mem_cgroup_end_migration(struct page *newpage)
>               mem_cgroup_uncharge_page(newpage);
>  }
>  
> +void mem_cgroup_set_page_dirty(struct page *pg)
> +{
> +     struct page_cgroup *pc;
> +
> +     lock_page_cgroup(pg);
> +     pc = page_get_page_cgroup(pg);
> +     if (pc != NULL && (pc->flags & PAGE_CGROUP_FLAG_DIRTY) == 0) {
> +             struct mem_cgroup *mem = pc->mem_cgroup;
> +             struct mem_cgroup_stat *stat = &mem->stat;
> +
> +             pc->flags |= PAGE_CGROUP_FLAG_DIRTY;
> +             __mem_cgroup_stat_add(stat, MEM_CGROUP_STAT_DIRTY, 1);
> +     }
> +     unlock_page_cgroup(pg);
> +}
> +
> +void mem_cgroup_clear_page_dirty(struct page *pg)
> +{
> +     struct page_cgroup *pc;
> +
> +     lock_page_cgroup(pg);
> +     pc = page_get_page_cgroup(pg);
> +     if (pc != NULL && (pc->flags & PAGE_CGROUP_FLAG_DIRTY) != 0) {
> +             struct mem_cgroup *mem = pc->mem_cgroup;
> +             struct mem_cgroup_stat *stat = &mem->stat;
> +
> +             pc->flags &= ~PAGE_CGROUP_FLAG_DIRTY;
> +             __mem_cgroup_stat_add(stat, MEM_CGROUP_STAT_DIRTY, -1);
> +     }
> +     unlock_page_cgroup(pg);
> +}
> +

How about changing these to be

==
void mem_cgroup_test_set_page_dirty()
{
        if (try_lock_page_cgroup(pg)) {
                pc = page_get_page_cgroup(pg);
                if (pc ......) {
                }
                unlock_page_cgroup(pg)
        }
}
==


Off-topic: I wonder we can delete this "lock" in future.

Because page->page_cgroup is
 1. attached at first use.(Obiously no race with set_dirty)
 2. deleted at removal. (force_empty is problematic here..)

But, now, we need this lock.

Thanks,
-Kame

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