From: 'David Gibson' <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
To: Adam Litke <agl@us.ibm.com>
Cc: akpm@osdl.org, "Chen, Kenneth W" <kenneth.w.chen@intel.com>,
wli@holomorphy.com, linux-mm@kvack.org
Subject: Re: [RFD hugetlbfs] strict accounting and wasteful reservations
Date: Thu, 13 Apr 2006 20:18:01 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20060413191801.GA9195@localhost.localdomain> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1144949802.10795.99.camel@localhost.localdomain>
On Thu, Apr 13, 2006 at 12:36:42PM -0500, Adam Litke wrote:
> Sorry to bring this up after the strict accounting patch was merged but
> things moved along a bit too fast for me to intervene.
>
> In the thread beginning at http://lkml.org/lkml/2006/3/8/47 , a
> discussion was had to compare the patch from David Gibson (the patch
> that was ultimately merged) with an alternative patch from Ken Chen.
> The main functional difference is how we handle arbitrary file offsets
> into a hugetlb file. The current patch reserves enough huge pages to
> populate the whole file up to the highest file offset in use. Ken's
> patch supported arbitrary blocks.
>
> For libhugetlbfs, we would like to have sparsely populated hugetlb files
> without wasting all the extra huge pages that the current implementation
> requires. That aside, having yet another difference in behavior for
> hugetlbfs files (that isn't necessary) seems like a bad idea.
We would? Why?
> So on to my questions. Do people agree that supporting reservation for
> sparsely populated hugetlbfs files makes sense?
>
> I've been hearing complaints about the code churn in hugetlbfs code
> lately, so is there a way to adapt what we currently have to support
> this?
>
> Otherwise, should I (or Ken?) take a stab at resurrecting Ken's
> competing patch with the intent of eventually replacing the current
> code?
--
David Gibson | I'll have my music baroque, and my code
david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au | minimalist, thank you. NOT _the_ _other_
| _way_ _around_!
http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibson
--
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: <a href=mailto:"dont@kvack.org"> email@kvack.org </a>
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2006-04-13 19:18 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-04-13 17:36 Adam Litke
2006-04-13 19:18 ` 'David Gibson' [this message]
2006-04-13 19:51 ` Adam Litke
2006-04-13 20:01 ` 'David Gibson'
2006-04-13 20:06 ` Adam Litke
2006-04-13 21:32 ` 'David Gibson'
2006-04-14 1:55 ` Chen, Kenneth W
2006-04-14 17:33 ` Adam Litke
2006-04-14 17:40 ` Chen, Kenneth W
Reply instructions:
You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:
* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
and reply-to-all from there: mbox
Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style
* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
switches of git-send-email(1):
git send-email \
--in-reply-to=20060413191801.GA9195@localhost.localdomain \
--to=david@gibson.dropbear.id.au \
--cc=agl@us.ibm.com \
--cc=akpm@osdl.org \
--cc=kenneth.w.chen@intel.com \
--cc=linux-mm@kvack.org \
--cc=wli@holomorphy.com \
/path/to/YOUR_REPLY
https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html
* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line
before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox