Re: [PATCH] zram: add zstd to the supported algorithms list

From: Sergey Senozhatsky
Date: Fri Aug 25 2017 - 01:25:59 EST


On (08/25/17 02:46), Nick Terrell wrote:
> On 8/24/17, 7:21 PM, "Sergey Senozhatsky" <sergey.senozhatsky.work@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > not really familiar either... I was thinking about having "zstd" and
> > "zstd_dict" crypto_alg structs - one would be !dict, the other one would
> > allocate dict and pass it to compress/decompress zstd callbacks. "zstd"
> > vecrsion would invoke zstd_params() passing zeros as compress and dict
> > sizes to ZSTD_getParams(), while "zstd_dict" would invoke, lets say,
> > zstd_params_dict() passing PAGE_SIZE-s. hm... (0, PAGE_SIZE)? to
> > ZSTD_getParams(). just a rough idea...
>
> The way zstd dictionaries work is the user provides some data which gets
> "prepended" to the data that is about to be compressed, without actually
> writing it to output. That way zstd can find matches in the dictionary and
> represent them for "free". That means the user has to pass the same data to
> both the compressor and decompressor.

ah... I thought zstd would construct the dictionary for us based on the
data it compresses; and we just need to provide the buffer.

> We could build a dictionary, say every 20 minutes, by sampling 512 B chunks
> of the RAM and constructing a 16 KB dictionary. Then recompress all the
> compressed RAM with the new dictionary. This is just a simple example of a
> dictionary construction algorithm. You could imagine grouping pages by
> application, and building a dictionary per application, since those pages
> would likely be more similar.
>
> Regarding the crypto API, I think it would be possible to experiment by
> creating functions like
> `zstd_comp_add_dictionary(void *ctx, void *data, size_t size)'
> and `zstd_decomp_add_dictionary(void *ctx, void *data, size_t size)'
> in the crypto zstd implementation and declare them in `zcomp.c'. If the
> experiments prove that using zstd dictionaries (or LZ4 dictionaries) is
> worthwhile, then we can figure out how we can make it work for real.

-ss