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From: Cyrill Gorcunov <gorcunov@gmail.com>
To: Andy Lutomirski <luto@amacapital.net>
Cc: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@hansenpartnership.com>,
	Linux MM <linux-mm@kvack.org>,
	LKML <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
	Pavel Emelyanov <xemul@parallels.com>,
	Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>,
	Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>,
	Xiao Guangrong <xiaoguangrong@linux.vnet.ibm.com>,
	Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com>,
	KOSAKI Motohiro <kosaki.motohiro@gmail.com>,
	Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] mm: Save soft-dirty bits on swapped pages
Date: Wed, 24 Jul 2013 22:15:16 +0400	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20130724181516.GI8508@moon> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CALCETrV5MD1qCQsyz4=t+QW1BJuTBYainewzDfEaXW12S91K=A@mail.gmail.com>

On Wed, Jul 24, 2013 at 10:42:24AM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> >
> > Lets just be clear about the problem first: the vmscan pass referred to
> > above happens only on clean pages, so the soft dirty bit could only be
> > set if the page was previously dirty and got written back.  Now it's an
> > exercise for the reader whether we want to reinstantiate a cleaned
> > evicted page for the purpose of doing an iterative migration or whether
> > we want to flip the page in the migrated entity to be evicted (so if it
> > gets referred to, it pulls in an up to date copy) ... assuming the
> > backing file also gets transferred, of course.

Good question! I rather forward it to Pavel as an author for soft dirty
bit feature. Pavel?

> I think I understand your distinction.  Nonetheless, given the loss of
> the soft-dirty bit, the migration tool could fail to notice that the
> pages was dirtied and subsequently cleaned and evicted.  I'm
> unconvinced that doing this on a per-PTE basis is the right way,
> though.

I fear for tracking soft-dirty-bit for swapped entries we sinply have
no other place than pte (still i'm quite open for ideas, maybe there
are a better way which I've missed).

> I've long wanted a feature to efficiently see what changed on a
> filesystem by comparing, say, a hash tree.  NTFS can do this (sort
> of), but I don't think that anything else can.  I think that btrfs
> should be able to, but there's no API that I've ever seen.

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  reply	other threads:[~2013-07-24 18:15 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 21+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2013-07-24 16:08 [PATCH] mm: Save soft-dirty bits on swapped pages Cyrill Gorcunov
2013-07-24 16:23 ` Andy Lutomirski
2013-07-24 16:37   ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2013-07-24 17:06     ` Andy Lutomirski
2013-07-24 17:17       ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2013-07-24 17:36         ` James Bottomley
2013-07-24 17:42           ` Andy Lutomirski
2013-07-24 18:15             ` Cyrill Gorcunov [this message]
2013-07-24 18:21               ` Andy Lutomirski
2013-07-24 18:52                 ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2013-07-24 18:55                   ` Pavel Emelyanov
2013-07-24 19:04                     ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2013-07-24 19:18                       ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2013-07-24 19:40                       ` Andy Lutomirski
2013-07-25  7:07                         ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2013-07-25  7:29                         ` Pavel Emelyanov
2013-07-25  8:26                           ` Hush Bensen
2013-07-25  8:43                             ` Pavel Emelyanov
2013-07-25 16:02                           ` Andy Lutomirski
2013-07-24 18:52   ` Pavel Emelyanov
2013-07-24 18:52 ` Pavel Emelyanov

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