Re: [PATCH] ib/core: not to set page dirty bit if it's already set.

From: Qing Huang
Date: Tue May 23 2017 - 17:40:28 EST




On 5/23/2017 12:42 AM, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
On Mon, May 22, 2017 at 04:43:57PM -0700, Qing Huang wrote:
On 5/19/2017 6:05 AM, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 04:33:53PM -0700, Qing Huang wrote:
This change will optimize kernel memory deregistration operations.
__ib_umem_release() used to call set_page_dirty_lock() against every
writable page in its memory region. Its purpose is to keep data
synced between CPU and DMA device when swapping happens after mem
deregistration ops. Now we choose not to set page dirty bit if it's
already set by kernel prior to calling __ib_umem_release(). This
reduces memory deregistration time by half or even more when we ran
application simulation test program.
As far as I can tell this code doesn't even need set_page_dirty_lock
and could just use set_page_dirty
It seems that set_page_dirty_lock has been used here for more than 10 years.
Don't know the original purpose. Maybe it was used to prevent races between
setting dirty bits and swapping out pages?
I suspect copy & paste. Or maybe I don't actually understand the
explanation of set_page_dirty vs set_page_dirty_lock enough. But
I'd rather not hack around the problem.
--
I think there are two parts here. First part is that we don't need to set the dirty bit if it's already set. Second part is whether we use set_page_dirty or set_page_dirty_lock to set dirty bits.