From: kanoj@google.engr.sgi.com (Kanoj Sarcar)
To: "Stephen C. Tweedie" <sct@redhat.com>
Cc: riel@nl.linux.org, linux-mm@kvack.org
Subject: Re: filecache/swapcache questions
Date: Thu, 17 Jun 1999 17:20:10 -0700 (PDT) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <199906180020.RAA02498@google.engr.sgi.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <14185.34250.163041.796165@dukat.scot.redhat.com> from "Stephen C. Tweedie" at Jun 18, 99 00:33:30 am
>
> Hi,
>
> On Tue, 15 Jun 1999 09:32:19 +0200 (CEST), Rik van Riel
> <riel@nl.linux.org> said:
>
> >> How will it be possible for a page to be in the swapcache, for its
> >> reference count to be 1 (which has been checked just before), and for
> >> its swap_count(page->offset) to also be 1? I can see this being
> >> possible only if an unmap/exit path might lazily leave a anonymous
> >> page in the swap cache, but I don't believe that happens.
>
> > It does happen. We use a 'two-stage' reclamation process instead
> > of page aging. It seems to work wonderfully -- nice page aging
> > properties without the overhead.
>
> Much more than that: if we take a write fault to a page which is shared
> on swap by two processes, then we bring it into cache and take a
> copy-on-write, leaving one copy in the swap cache (reference one: it is
> _only_ in use by the swap cache now), and the other copy being reference
> by the faulting process.
>
> --Stephen
> --
Interesting scenario ... unfortunately, I am getting confused.
I am trying to lay out the steps in your example here:
Step 1: P1 and P2 sharing a page which is not in core, is out on
swap at swap handle X, swap_count(X) = 2 (P1 + P2)
Step 2: P1 writes to page.
Step 2a: swap_in reads in the page into core into page A,
page_count(A) = 2 (swapcache + P1), A.offset = X,
swap_count (X)= 2 (P2 + swapcache)
Step 2b: P1 incurs do_wp_page on the page, gets a new page.
The old page A ends up with a page_count = 1 (swapcache), and
swap_count (X) stays at 2.
So, what am I missing, since your example does not end up with
page_count = 1 and swap_count(page offset/swaphandle) = 1?
I did give an alternative scenario involving an exitting process,
do you believe that one?
While I have your attention, I think I found a bug in the
sys_swapoff algorithm ... basically, it needs to also look
at swap_lockmap. Say an exitting process fired off some async
swap ins just before it exitted, and a bunch of these are in
flight (swap_lockmaps are set, as are swap_map, from swapcache).
The swap device gets deleted (with a printk warning message due
to non zero swap_map count). Finally, the old async swap in's
start terminating, invoking swap_after_unlock_page. Interesting
things could happen, depending on whether the swap id has been
reallocated or not ... Is there any protection against this
scenario?
Thanks.
Kanoj
kanoj@engr.sgi.com
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~1999-06-18 0:20 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 23+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
1999-06-15 7:16 Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-15 7:32 ` Rik van Riel
1999-06-15 15:51 ` Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-15 20:24 ` Rik van Riel
1999-06-15 21:02 ` Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-16 20:37 ` Andrea Arcangeli
1999-06-17 23:33 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
1999-06-18 0:20 ` Kanoj Sarcar [this message]
1999-06-18 17:00 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
1999-06-18 17:03 ` Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-21 5:29 Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-21 11:25 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
1999-06-21 16:46 ` Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-21 16:57 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
1999-06-21 17:36 ` Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-21 17:49 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
1999-06-21 18:46 ` Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-21 23:44 ` Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-24 22:23 ` Andrea Arcangeli
1999-06-24 23:55 ` Kanoj Sarcar
1999-06-25 0:26 ` Andrea Arcangeli
1999-06-28 22:36 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
1999-06-28 23:24 ` Kanoj Sarcar
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