Re: swap on eMMC and other flash

From: Pavel Machek
Date: Mon Jul 16 2012 - 09:29:47 EST


On Wed 2012-04-11 13:28:39, Adrian Hunter wrote:
> On 04/04/12 15:47, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > On Wednesday 04 April 2012, Adrian Hunter wrote:
> >> On 30/03/12 21:50, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> >>> (sorry for the duplicated email, this corrects the address of the android
> >>> kernel team, please reply here)
> >>>
> >>> On Friday 30 March 2012, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> >>>
> >>> We've had a discussion in the Linaro storage team (Saugata, Venkat and me,
> >>> with Luca joining in on the discussion) about swapping to flash based media
> >>> such as eMMC. This is a summary of what we found and what we think should
> >>> be done. If people agree that this is a good idea, we can start working
> >>> on it.
> >>
> >> There is mtdswap.
> >
> > Ah, very interesting. I wasn't aware of that. Obviously we can't directly
> > use it on block devices that have their own garbage collection and wear
> > leveling built into them, but it's interesting to see how this was solved
> > before.
> >
> > While we could build something similar that remaps blocks between an
> > eMMC device and the logical swap space that is used by the mm code,
> > my feeling is that it would be easier to modify the swap code itself
> > to do the right thing.
> >
> >> Also the old Nokia N900 had swap to eMMC.
> >>
> >> The last I heard was that swap was considered to be simply too slow on hand
> >> held devices.
> >
> > That's the part that we want to solve here. It has nothing to do with
> > handheld devices, but more with specific incompatibilities of the
> > block allocation in the swap code vs. what an eMMC device expects
> > to see for fast operation. If you write data in the wrong order on
> > flash devices, you get long delays that you don't get when you do
> > it the right way. The same problem exists for file systems, and is
> > being addressed there as well.
> >
> >> As systems adopt more RAM, isn't there a decreasing demand for swap?
> >
> > No. You would never be able to make hibernate work, no matter how much
> > RAM you add ;-)
>
> Have you considered making hibernate work without swap?

It does work without swap. See userland suspend packages, where you
write the image is up-to you.

Pavel
--
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