On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 06:16:50PM +0800, Simon Jeons wrote:
> Hi Mel,
> On 03/19/2013 05:55 PM, Mel Gorman wrote:
> >On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 07:53:16AM +0800, Simon Jeons wrote:
> >>Hi Mel,
> >>On 03/17/2013 09:04 PM, Mel Gorman wrote:
> >>>The number of pages kswapd can reclaim is bound by the number of pages it
> >>>scans which is related to the size of the zone and the scanning priority. 
> >>>In
> >>>many cases the priority remains low because it's reset every 
> >>>SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX
> >>>reclaimed pages but in the event kswapd scans a large number of pages it
> >>>cannot reclaim, it will raise the priority and potentially discard a large
> >>>percentage of the zone as sc->nr_to_reclaim is ULONG_MAX. The user-visible
> >>>effect is a reclaim "spike" where a large percentage of memory is suddenly
> >>>freed. It would be bad enough if this was just unused memory but because
> >>Since there is nr_reclaimed >= nr_to_reclaim check if priority is
> >>large than DEF_PRIORITY in shrink_lruvec, how can a large percentage
> >>of memory is suddenly freed happen?
> >>
> >Because of the priority checks made in get_scan_count(). Patch 5 has
> >more detail on why this happens.
> >
> But nr_reclaim >= nr_to_reclaim check in function shrink_lruvec is
> after scan each evictable lru, so if priority == 0, still scan the
> whole world.
> 

Patch 5 deals with the case where priority == 0.

-- 
Mel Gorman
SUSE Labs
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