Re: [PATCH] mm: Save soft-dirty bits on swapped pages
From: Pavel Emelyanov
Date: Thu Jul 25 2013 - 03:30:11 EST
On 07/24/2013 11:40 PM, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 24, 2013 at 12:04 PM, Cyrill Gorcunov <gorcunov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On Wed, Jul 24, 2013 at 10:55:41PM +0400, Pavel Emelyanov wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Well, some part of information already lays in pte (such as 'file' bit,
>>>> swap entries) so it looks natural i think to work on this level. but
>>>> letme think if use page struct for that be more convenient...
>>>
>>> It hardly will be. Consider we have a page shared between two tasks,
>>> then first one "touches" it and soft-dirty is put onto his PTE and,
>>> subsequently, the page itself. The we go and clear sofr-dirty for the
>>> 2nd task. What should we do with the soft-dirty bit on the page?
>>
>> Indeed, this won't help. Well then, bippidy-boppidy-boo, our
>> pants are metaphorically on fire (c)
>
> Hmm. So there are at least three kinds of memory:
>
> Anonymous pages: soft-dirty works
> Shared file-backed pages: soft-dirty does not work
> Private file-backed pages: soft-dirty works (but see below)
The shared file-backed pages case works, but unmap-map case doesn't
preserve the soft-dirty bit. Just like the private file did. We'll
fix this case next.
> Perhaps another bit should be allocated to expose to userspace either
> "soft-dirty", "soft-clean", or "soft-dirty unsupported"?
>
> There's another possible issue with private file-backed pages, though:
> how do you distinguish clean-and-not-cowed from cowed-but-soft-clean?
> (The former will reflect changes in the underlying file, I think, but
> the latter won't.)
There's a bit called PAGE_FILE bit in /proc/pagemap file introduced with
the 052fb0d635df5d49dfc85687d94e1a87bf09378d commit.
Plz, refer to Documentation/vm/pagemap.txt and soft-dirty.txt, all this
is described there pretty well.
> --Andy
Thanks,
Pavel
--
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/