Hey John,

On Tue, Jun 11, 2013 at 09:22:47PM -0700, John Stultz wrote:
> At lsf-mm, the issue was brought up that there is a precedence with
> interfaces like mlock, such that new mappings in a pre-existing range
> do no inherit the mlock state.
> 
> This is mostly because mlock only modifies the existing vmas, and so
> any new mmaps create new vmas, which won't be mlocked.
> 
> Since volatility is not stored in the vma (for good cause, specfically
> as we'd have to have manage file volatility differently from anonymous
> and we're likely to manage volatility on small chunks of memory, which
> would cause lots of vma splitting and churn), this patch clears volatilty
> on new mappings, to ensure that we don't inherit volatility if memory in
> an existing volatile range is unmapped and then re-mapped with something
> else.
> 
> Thus, this patch forces any volatility to be cleared on mmap.

If we have lots of node on vroot but it doesn't include newly mmmaping
vma range, it's purely unnecessary cost and that's never what we want.

> 
> XXX: We expect this patch to be not well loved by mm folks, and are open
> to alternative methods here. Its more of a place holder to address
> the issue from lsf-mm and hopefully will spur some further discussion.

Another idea is we can add "bool is_vrange" in struct vm_area_struct.
It is protected by vrange_lock. The scenario is following as,

When do_vrange is called with VRANGE_VOLATILE, it iterates vmas
and mark the vma->is_vrange to true. So, we can avoid tree traversal
if the is_vrange is false when munmap is called and newly mmaped vma
doesn't need to clear any volatility.

And it would help the performance of purging path to find that a page
is volatile page or not(for now, it is traversing on vroot to find it
but we could do it easily via checking the vma->is_vrange).

-- 
Kind regards,
Minchan Kim
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