在 2020/6/10 下午1:23, Joonsoo Kim 写道:
> 2020년 6월 9일 (화) 오후 11:46, Johannes Weiner <han...@cmpxchg.org>님이 작성:
>>
>> On Tue, Jun 09, 2020 at 05:15:33PM +0800, Alex Shi wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> 在 2020/6/4 上午7:03, Andrew Morton 写道:
>>>>
>>>> +   /* XXX: Move to lru_cache_add() when it supports new vs putback */
>>>
>>> Hi Hannes,
>>>
>>> Sorry for a bit lost, would you like to explain a bit more of your idea 
>>> here?
>>>
>>>> +   spin_lock_irq(&page_pgdat(page)->lru_lock);
>>>> +   lru_note_cost(page);
>>>> +   spin_unlock_irq(&page_pgdat(page)->lru_lock);
>>>> +
>>>
>>>
>>> What could we see here w/o the lru_lock?

Why I want to know the lru_lock protection here is that currently we have 5 lru 
lists
but only guarded by one lock, that would cause much contention when different 
apps
active on a server.

I guess originally we have only one lru_lock, since 5 locks would cause 
cacheline bouncing
if we put them together, or a bit cacheline waste to separate them in 
cacheline. But
after we have qspinlock, each of cpu will just loop lock on their cacheline, no 
interfer 
to others. It would much much relief the performance drop by cacheline bounce.

And we could use page.mapping bits to store the using lru list index for the 
page.
As a quick thought, I guess, except the 5 locks for 5 lists, we still need 1 
more lock for
common lruvec data or for others which relay on lru_lock now, like mlock, 
hpage_nr_pages..
That's the reason I want to know everything under lru_lock. :)

Any comments for this idea? :)

Thanks
Alex


>>
>> It'll just be part of the existing LRU locking in
>> pagevec_lru_move_fn(), when the new pages are added to the LRU in
>> batch. See this older patch for example:
>>
>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20160606194836.3624-6-han...@cmpxchg.org/
>>
>> I didn't include it in this series to reduce conflict with Joonsoo's
>> WIP series that also operates in this area and does something similar:
> 
> Thanks!
> 
>> https://lkml.org/lkml/2020/4/3/63
> 
> I haven't completed the rebase of my series but I guess that referenced patch
> "https://lkml.org/lkml/2020/4/3/63"; would be removed in the next version.

Thanks a lot for the info, Johannes&Joonsoo! A long history for a interesting 
idea. :)

> 
> Before the I/O cost model, a new anonymous page contributes to the LRU reclaim
> balance. But, now, a new anonymous page doesn't contributes to the I/O cost
> so this adjusting patch would not be needed anymore.
> 
> If anyone wants to change this part,
> "/* XXX: Move to lru_cache_add() when it supports new vs putback */", feel 
> free
> to do it.

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