[PATCH] Fake NUMA emulation for PowerPC
Balbir Singh
balbir at linux.vnet.ibm.com
Sat Dec 8 09:18:45 EST 2007
Kumar Gala wrote:
>
> On Dec 7, 2007, at 4:12 PM, Balbir Singh wrote:
>
>> Kumar Gala wrote:
>>>
>>> On Dec 7, 2007, at 3:35 PM, Balbir Singh wrote:
>>>
>>>> Olof Johansson wrote:
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> On Sat, Dec 08, 2007 at 02:44:25AM +0530, Balbir Singh wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Comments are as always welcome!
>>>>>
>>>>> Care to explain what this is useful for? (Not saying it's a stupid
>>>>> idea,
>>>>> just wondering what the reason for doing it is).
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> In my case, I use it to test parts of my memory controller patches
>>>> on an
>>>> emulated NUMA machine. I plan to use it to test out page migration
>>>> across nodes.
>>>
>>> Can you explain that further. I'm still not clear on why this is
>>> useful.
>>>
>>> - k
>>
>> Sure. In my case I need to emulate NUMA nodes to do some NUMA specific
>> testing. The memory controller I've written has some interesting data
>> structures like per node, per zone LRU lists. To be able to test those
>> features on a non-numa box is a problem, since we get just the default
>> node.
>
> Maybe I'm missing something, what do you mean by memory controller
> you've written? (I'm use to the term 'memory controller' meaning the
> actual RAM control).
>
Ah! that explains the disconnect. If you look at the latest -mm tree. We
have a memory controller under control groups, we use it to control how
much memory a group of process can access at a time.
>> To be able to test the memory controller under NUMA, I use fake NUMA
>> nodes. x86-64 has a similar feature, the code I have here is the
>> simplest I could come up with for PowerPC.
>>
>> I just thought of another very interesting use case, it can be used to
>> split up the zone's lru lock which is highly contended.
>
> - k
--
Warm Regards,
Balbir Singh
Linux Technology Center
IBM, ISTL
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