On 05/03/2014 04:00 AM, Dan Streetman wrote: > On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 12:15 AM, Weijie Yang <weijie.yang...@gmail.com> > wrote: >> On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 2:48 AM, Dan Streetman <ddstr...@ieee.org> wrote: >>> On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 6:34 AM, Mel Gorman <mgor...@suse.de> wrote: >>>> On Sat, Apr 12, 2014 at 05:00:53PM -0400, Dan Streetman wrote: > <SNIP> >>>>> diff --git a/mm/frontswap.c b/mm/frontswap.c >>>>> index 1b24bdc..fae1160 100644 >>>>> --- a/mm/frontswap.c >>>>> +++ b/mm/frontswap.c >>>>> @@ -327,15 +327,12 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(__frontswap_invalidate_area); >>>>> >>>>> static unsigned long __frontswap_curr_pages(void) >>>>> { >>>>> - int type; >>>>> unsigned long totalpages = 0; >>>>> struct swap_info_struct *si = NULL; >>>>> >>>>> assert_spin_locked(&swap_lock); >>>>> - for (type = swap_list.head; type >= 0; type = si->next) { >>>>> - si = swap_info[type]; >>>>> + list_for_each_entry(si, &swap_list_head, list) >>>>> totalpages += atomic_read(&si->frontswap_pages); >>>>> - } >>>>> return totalpages; >>>>> } >>>>> >>>>> @@ -347,11 +344,9 @@ static int __frontswap_unuse_pages(unsigned long >>>>> total, unsigned long *unused, >>>>> int si_frontswap_pages; >>>>> unsigned long total_pages_to_unuse = total; >>>>> unsigned long pages = 0, pages_to_unuse = 0; >>>>> - int type; >>>>> >>>>> assert_spin_locked(&swap_lock); >>>>> - for (type = swap_list.head; type >= 0; type = si->next) { >>>>> - si = swap_info[type]; >>>>> + list_for_each_entry(si, &swap_list_head, list) { >>>>> si_frontswap_pages = atomic_read(&si->frontswap_pages); >>>>> if (total_pages_to_unuse < si_frontswap_pages) { >>>>> pages = pages_to_unuse = total_pages_to_unuse; >>>> >>>> The frontswap shrink code looks suspicious. If the target is smaller than >>>> the total number of frontswap pages then it does nothing. The callers
__frontswap_unuse_pages() is called only to get the correct value of pages_to_unuse which will pass to try_to_unuse(), perhaps we should rename it to __frontswap_unuse_pages_nr().. ------ ret = __frontswap_shrink(target_pages, &pages_to_unuse, &type); -> __frontswap_unuse_pages(total_pages_to_unuse, pages_to_unuse, type); try_to_unuse(type, true, pages_to_unuse); ------ >>>> appear to get this right at least. Similarly, if the first swapfile has >>>> fewer frontswap pages than the target then it does not unuse the target >>>> number of pages because it only handles one swap file. It's outside the >>>> scope of your patch to address this or wonder if xen balloon driver is >>>> really using it the way it's expected. >>> >>> I didn't look into the frontswap shrinking code, but I agree the >>> existing logic there doesn't look right. I'll review frontswap in >>> more detail to see if it needs changing here, unless anyone else gets >>> it to first :-) >>> >> >> FYI, I drop the frontswap_shrink code in a patch >> see: https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/1/27/98 > > frontswap_shrink() is actually used (only) by drivers/xen/xen-selfballoon.c. > > However, I completely agree with you that the backend should be doing > the shrinking, not from a frontswap api. Forcing frontswap to shrink > is backwards - xen-selfballoon appears to be assuming that xem/tmem is > the only possible frontswap backend. It certainly doensn't make any > sense for xen-selfballoon to force zswap to shrink itself, does it? > > If xen-selfballoon wants to shrink its frontswap backend tmem, it > should do that by telling tmem directly to shrink itself (which it > looks like tmem would have to implement, just like zswap sends its LRU > pages back to swapcache when it becomes full). > Yes, it's possible in theory, but tmem is located in xen(host) which can't put back pages to swap cache(in guest os) directly. Use frontswap_shrink() can make things simple and easier. And I think frontswap shrink isn't a blocker of this patch set, so please keep it. -- Regards, -Bob -- 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/