Re: [Fwd: [-mm] Add an owner to the mm_struct (v9)]

From: Paul Menage
Date: Thu Apr 17 2008 - 12:35:19 EST


On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 4:30 AM, Oleg Nesterov <oleg@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > I had this loop earlier (inspired from zap_threads()), is this loop more
> > efficient than what we have?
>
> All sub-threads have the same ->mm. Once we see that c->mm != mm, we don't
> need to waste CPU iterating over the all other threads in the thread group.

Technically they don't have to have the same mm, right? You can use
CLONE_THREAD without CLONE_VM when creating a new subthread.

So the complete loop is required for correctness - but it might make
sense to include your version of the loop first, since that will be
faster whenever there are heavily-threaded apps on the system, and
will give the right answer 99.9% of the time (i.e. except when the
user is doing something really weird with clone flags).

> chance you have the "for dummies" explanation what mm->owner is?
> I mean, I can't understand how it is possible that 2 CLONE_VM tasks
> are not equal wrt "ownering".

The idea is to be able to get from an mm to a task, where that task is
representative of the tasks using the mm. Uses include:

- virtual address space cgroup - when we extend an mm, we don't always
have a task pointer available currently.

- swap cgroup - when swapping from an mm, find a task whose swap
cgroup we can charge the swap page to

- revokeat() - apparently needs this for locating tasks based on file mappings

> When the old owner dies, we choose a
> random thread with the same mm. But we do nothing when the last user
> of ->mm dies. What is the point? (please feel free to ignore my q

When the last user of the mm dies, the mm is freed, so there's no need
for mm->owner to be valid any longer.

Paul
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