From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Mon, 3 Jan 2005 14:24:06 -0200 From: Marcelo Tosatti Subject: Re: page migration\ Message-ID: <20050103162406.GB14886@logos.cnet> References: <41D98556.8050605@sgi.com> <1104776733.25994.11.camel@localhost> <41D99743.5000601@sgi.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: inline In-Reply-To: <41D99743.5000601@sgi.com> Sender: owner-linux-mm@kvack.org Return-Path: To: Ray Bryant Cc: Dave Hansen , Hirokazu Takahashi , linux-mm List-ID: On Mon, Jan 03, 2005 at 01:04:35PM -0600, Ray Bryant wrote: > Dave Hansen wrote: > > > > >>I'd like to see this order of patches become the new order for the memory > >>hotplug patch. That way, I won't have to pull the migration patches out > >>of the hotplug patch every time a new one comes out (I need the migration > >>code, but not the hotplug code for a project I am working on.) > >> > >>Do you suppose this can be done??? > > > > > >Absolutely. I was simply working them in the order that they were > >implemented. But, if we want the migration stuff merged first, I have > >absolutely no problem with putting it first in the patch set. > > > >Next time I publish a tree, I'll see what I can do about producing > >similar rollups to what you have, with migration broken out from > >hotplug. > > > > Cool. Let me know if I can help at all with that. > > Once we get that done I'd like to pursure getting the migration patches > proposed for -mm and then mainline. Does that make sense? > > (perhaps it will make the hotplug patch easier to accept if we can get the > memory migration stuff in first). > > Of course, the "standalone" memory migration stuff makes most sense on > NUMA, and there is some minor interface changes there to support that (i. > e. consider: > > migrate_onepage(page); > > vs > > migrate_onepage_node(page, node); > > what the latter does is to call alloc_pages_node() instead of > page_cache_alloc() to get the new page.) > > This is all to support NUMA process and memory migration, where the > required function is to move a process >>and<< its memory from one > set of nodes to another. (I should have a patch for these initial > interface changes later this week.) > > But the real question I am wrestling with at the moment is the following: > > "Which approach to a NUMA process and memory migration facility would be > more likely to get into the mainline kernel: > > (1) One based on the existing memory migration patches, or > > (2) something simpler just written for the NUMA process and memory > migration case." > > My preference would be to build on top of the existing code > from the hotplug project. But the key goal here is to get the code > into the mainline. I am a little concerned that the hotlug memory migration > code will be regarded as too complicated to get in, and I don't want that > to hold up the NUMA process and memory migration facility, which is what I > am > working on and we (well, SGI) specifically need. > > Suggestions? Hi Ray! IMO, if you are in a hurry to get SGI's NUMA process/migration facility in mainline, we will have duplicated efforts/code in the future. My suggestion is to wait for the memory migration code to get in. It might take sometime, yes, which is a good thing from stabilization/maturity POV. If SGI has deadlines for the process/migration facility then implement your own (can even be based on the current migration infrastructure) and do no try to merge it to the tree, please. This is also valid for the memory defragmentation effort I'm working on, I could have implemented standalone code myself (and I actually did), but it was a duplication, to some extent, to what was already being done at the migration code. So I had to try to change the migration code to attend my needs, and in the process me and Hirokazu came up with the migration cache, which is an advantage for every user of the memory migration. Unification - you get the point. -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: aart@kvack.org