Hi Tang,
On Thu, 2013-01-31 at 17:44 +0800, Tang Chen wrote:
> Hi Simon,
> 
> On 01/31/2013 04:48 PM, Simon Jeons wrote:
> > Hi Tang,
> > On Thu, 2013-01-31 at 15:10 +0800, Tang Chen wrote:
> >
> > 1. IIUC, there is a button on machine which supports hot-remove memory,
> > then what's the difference between press button and echo to /sys?
> 
> No important difference, I think. Since I don't have the machine you are
> saying, I cannot surely answer you. :)
> AFAIK, pressing the button means trigger the hotplug from hardware, sysfs
> is just another entrance. At last, they will run into the same code.
> 
> > 2. Since kernel memory is linear mapping(I mean direct mapping part),
> > why can't put kernel direct mapping memory into one memory device, and
> > other memory into the other devices?
> 
> We cannot do that because in that way, we will lose NUMA performance.
> 
> If you know NUMA, you will understand the following example:
> 
> node0:                    node1:
>     cpu0~cpu15                cpu16~cpu31
>     memory0~memory511         memory512~memory1023
> 
> cpu16~cpu31 access memory16~memory1023 much faster than memory0~memory511.
> If we set direct mapping area in node0, and movable area in node1, then
> the kernel code running on cpu16~cpu31 will have to access 
> memory0~memory511.
> This is a terrible performance down.

So if config NUMA, kernel memory will not be linear mapping anymore? For
example, 

Node 0  Node 1 

0 ~ 10G 11G~14G

kernel memory only at Node 0? Can part of kernel memory also at Node 1?

How big is kernel direct mapping memory in x86_64? Is there max limit?
It seems that only around 896MB on x86_32. 

> 
> >As you know x86_64 don't need
> > highmem, IIUC, all kernel memory will linear mapping in this case. Is my
> > idea available? If is correct, x86_32 can't implement in the same way
> > since highmem(kmap/kmap_atomic/vmalloc) can map any address, so it's
> > hard to focus kernel memory on single memory device.
> 
> Sorry, I'm not quite familiar with x86_32 box.
> 
> > 3. In current implementation, if memory hotplug just need memory
> > subsystem and ACPI codes support? Or also needs firmware take part in?
> > Hope you can explain in details, thanks in advance. :)
> 
> We need firmware take part in, such as SRAT in ACPI BIOS, or the firmware
> based memory migration mentioned by Liu Jiang.

Is there any material about firmware based memory migration?

> 
> So far, I only know this. :)
> 
> > 4. What's the status of memory hotplug? Apart from can't remove kernel
> > memory, other things are fully implementation?
> 
> I think the main job is done for now. And there are still bugs to fix.
> And this functionality is not stable.
> 
> Thanks. :)


_______________________________________________
Linuxppc-dev mailing list
Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org
https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev

Reply via email to