Re: [7/7,v8] NUMA Hotplug Emulator: Implement per-node add_memorydebugfs interface

From: David Rientjes
Date: Thu Dec 09 2010 - 16:29:51 EST


On Thu, 9 Dec 2010, Shaohui Zheng wrote:

> > I don't think you should be using memparse() to support this type of
> > interface, the standard way of writing memory locations is by writing
> > address in hex as the first example does. The idea is to not try to make
> > things simpler by introducing multiple ways of doing the same thing but
> > rather to standardize on a single interface.
>
> Undoubtedly, A hex is the best way to represent a physical address. If we use
> memparse function, we can use the much simpler way to represent an address,
> it is not the offical way, but it takes many conveniences if we just want to
> to some simple test.
>

Testing code should be removed from the patch prior to proposal.

> When we reserce memory, we use mempasre to parse the mem=XXX parameter, we can
> avoid the complicated translation when we add memory thru the add_memory interface,
> how about still use the memparse here? but remove it from the document since it is
> just for some simple testing.
>

We really don't want a public interface to have undocumented behavior, so
it would be much better to retain the documentation if you choose to keep
the memparse(). I disagree that converting the mem= parameter to hex is
"complicated," however, so I'd prefer that the interface is similar to
that of add_node.

> > > + printk(KERN_INFO "Add a memory section to node: %d.\n", nid);
> > > + phys_addr = memparse(buf, NULL);
> > > + ret = add_memory(nid, phys_addr, PAGES_PER_SECTION << PAGE_SHIFT);
> >
> > Does the add_memory() call handle memoryless nodes such that they
> > appropriately transition to N_HIGH_MEMORY when memory is added?
>
> For memoryless nodes, it will cause OOM issue on old kernel version, but now
> memoryless node is already supported, and the test result matches it well. The
> emulator is a tool to reproduce the OOM issue in eraly kernel.
>

That doesn't address the question. My question is whether or not adding
memory to a memoryless node in this way transitions its state to
N_HIGH_MEMORY in the VM?
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/