On 03/16/2015 09:43 PM, Joonsoo Kim wrote: > On Mon, Mar 16, 2015 at 07:06:55PM +0300, Stefan Strogin wrote: >> > Hi all. >> > >> > Here is the fourth version of a patch set that adds some debugging >> > facility for >> > CMA. >> > >> > This patch set is based on next-20150316. >> > It is also available on git: >> > git://github.com/stefanstrogin/linux -b cmainfo-v4 >> > >> > We want an interface to see a list of currently allocated CMA buffers and >> > some >> > useful information about them (like /proc/vmallocinfo but for physically >> > contiguous buffers allocated with CMA). >> > >> > For example. We want a big (megabytes) CMA buffer to be allocated in >> > runtime >> > in default CMA region. If someone already uses CMA then the big allocation >> > could fail. If it happened then with such an interface we could find who >> > used >> > CMA at the moment of failure, who caused fragmentation and so on. Ftrace >> > also >> > would be helpful here, but with ftrace we can see the whole history of >> > allocations and releases, whereas with this patch set we can see a >> > snapshot of >> > CMA region with actual information about its allocations. > Hello, > > Hmm... I still don't think that this is really helpful to find root > cause of fragmentation. Think about following example. > > Assume 1024 MB CMA region. > > 128 MB allocation * 4 > 1 MB allocation > 128 MB allocation > 128 MB release * 4 (first 4) > try 512 MB allocation > > With above sequences, fragmentation happens and 512 MB allocation would > be failed. We can get information about 1 MB allocation and 128 MB one > from the buffer list as you suggested, but, fragmentation are related > to whole sequence of allocation/free history, not snapshot of allocation.
This is solvable by dumping task->comm in the tracepoint patch (1/5), right? Thanks, Sasha -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/