Re: swapping and the value of /proc/sys/vm/swappiness

From: Marcelo Tosatti
Date: Wed Sep 08 2004 - 15:57:54 EST


On Wed, Sep 08, 2004 at 02:35:03PM -0500, Ray Bryant wrote:
>
>
> Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
>
> >
> >
> >Huh, that changes the meaning of the dirty limits. Dont think its suitable
> >for mainline.
> >
> >
>
> The change is, in fact, not much different from what is already actually
> there. The code in get_dirty_limits() adjusts the value of the user
> supplied parameters in /proc/sys/vm depending on how much mapped memory
> there is. If you undo the convoluted arithmetic that is in there, one
> finds that if you are using the default dirty_ratio of 40%, then if the
> unmapped_ratio is between 80% and 10%, then
>
> dirty_ratio = unmapped_ratio / 2;
>
> and, a little bit of algebra later:
>
> dirty = (total_pages - wbs->nr_mapped)/2
>
> and
>
> background = dirty_background_ratio/vm_background_ratio * (total_pages
> - wbs->nr_mapped)
>
> That is, for a wide range of memory usage, you are really running with an
> dirty ratio of 50% stated in terms of the number of unmapped pages, and
> there is no direct way to override this.

OK I see, yes.

> Of course, at the edges, the code changes these calculations. It just
> seems to me that rather than continue the convoluted calculation that is in
> get_dirty_limits(), we just make the outcome more explicit and tell the user
> what is really going on.
>
> We'd still have to figure out how to encourage a minimum page cache size of
> some kind, which is what I understand the 5% min value for dirty_ratio is
> in there for.

For the user "dirty_ratio" and "dirty_background_ratio" means "percentage
of total memory" (thats how it has been traditionally in Linux). And right now,
as you noted, we dont do that way.

There's probably a good reason for the "no more than half of unmapped memory".
Andrew ?
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