On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Caitlin Bestler wrote: > > What does it mean that the "application layer has to be determine what > > pages are registered"? The application does not know which of its > pages > > are currently in memory. It can only force these pages to stay in > > memory if their are mlocked. > > > > An application that advertises an RDMA accessible buffer > to a remote peer *does* have to know that its pages *are* > currently in memory.
Ok that would mean it needs to inform the VM of that issue by mlocking these pages. > But the more fundamental issue is recognizing that applications > that use direct interfaces need to know that buffers that they > enable truly have committed resources. They need a way to > ask for twenty *real* pages, not twenty pages of address > space. And they need to do it in a way that allows memory > to be rearranged or even migrated with them to a new host. mlock will force the pages to stay in memory without requiring the OS to keep them where they are. _______________________________________________ general mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openfabrics.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/general To unsubscribe, please visit http://openib.org/mailman/listinfo/openib-general
