On Mon, Sep 25, 2000 at 06:02:18PM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote:
> Frankly, how often do we allocate multi-order pages? I've just made quick
> statistics wrt. how allocation orders are distributed on a more or less
> typical system:
> 
>       (ALLOC ORDER)
>       0: 167081
>       1: 850
>       2: 16
>       3: 25
>       4: 0
>       5: 1
>       6: 0
>       7: 2
>       8: 13
>       9: 5
> 
> ie. 99.45% of all allocations are single-page! 0.50% is the 8kb
> task-structure. The rest is 0.05%.

An important exception in 2.2/2.4 is NFS with bigger rsize (will be fixed
in 2.5, but 2.4 does it this way). For an 8K r/wsize you need reliable 
(=GFP_ATOMIC) 16K allocations.  

Another thing I would worry about are ports with multiple user page sizes in 2.5.
Another ugly case is the x86-64 port which has 4K pages but may likely need
a 16K kernel stack due to the 64bit stack bloat.


-Andi
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