Re: [PATCH 2/3] mm: Avoid putting a bad page back on the LRU v2

From: Russ Anderson
Date: Thu May 01 2008 - 22:33:23 EST


On Thu, May 01, 2008 at 06:12:49PM -0700, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Thu, 1 May 2008, Russ Anderson wrote:
>
> > Index: linus/mm/migrate.c
> > ===================================================================
> > --- linus.orig/mm/migrate.c 2008-05-01 19:05:33.000000000 -0500
> > +++ linus/mm/migrate.c 2008-05-01 19:06:15.000000000 -0500
> > @@ -380,6 +380,7 @@ static void migrate_page_copy(struct pag
> > SetPageChecked(newpage);
> > if (PageMappedToDisk(page))
> > SetPageMappedToDisk(newpage);
> > + /* Do not migrate PG_memerror to the new page */
>
> Why is the comment here?

To let anyone that may think PG_memerror should get copied to
the new page that it should not. I can remove the comment.

> > if (PageDirty(page)) {
> > clear_page_dirty_for_io(page);
> > @@ -721,6 +722,8 @@ unlock:
> > */
> > list_del(&page->lru);
> > move_to_lru(page);
> > + if (PageMemError(page))
> > + totalbad_pages++;
>
> Wouldnt this be taken care of by the lru handling?

It is only for accounting purposes, keeping a count
of the bad pages.

> > +#ifdef CONFIG_PAGEFLAGS_EXTENDED
> > +PAGEFLAG(MemError, memerror)
> > +#else
> > +#define PageMemError(page) 0
>
> Use
>
> PAGEFLAG_FLAGS(MemError)

OK.

> > #include <linux/page-flags.h>
> >
> > -#define PAGE_FLAGS (1 << PG_lru | 1 << PG_private | 1 << PG_locked | \
> > +#define PAGE_FLAGS_BASE (1 << PG_lru | 1 << PG_private | 1 << PG_locked | \
> > 1 << PG_buddy | 1 << PG_writeback | \
> > 1 << PG_slab | 1 << PG_swapcache | 1 << PG_active)
> > +
> > +#ifdef CONFIG_PAGEFLAGS_EXTENDED
> > +#define PAGE_FLAGS (PAGE_FLAGS_BASE | 1UL << PG_memerror)
> > +#else
> > +#define PAGE_FLAGS (PAGE_FLAGS_BASE)
> > +#endif
> >
> > #define PAGE_FLAGS_RECLAIM (PAGE_FLAGS | 1 << PG_reclaim | 1 << PG_dirty)
> > #define PAGE_FLAGS_RESERVE (PAGE_FLAGS | 1 << PG_reserved)
>
> The groups of page flags could also be put into page-flags.h.

page-flags.h is where I originally put them. Since they are only used in
mm/page_alloc.c, I thought mm.h would be a more appropriate place.
I can put them in page-flags.h.

--
Russ Anderson, OS RAS/Partitioning Project Lead
SGI - Silicon Graphics Inc rja@xxxxxxx
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