Message ID | cover.1697687357.git.zhengqi.arch@bytedance.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | handle memoryless nodes more appropriately | expand |
On 19.10.23 09:36, Qi Zheng wrote: > Hi all, > > Currently, in the process of initialization or offline memory, memoryless > nodes will still be built into the fallback list of itself or other nodes. > > This is not what we expected, so this patch series removes memoryless > nodes from the fallback list entirely. What's the end result of this change -- IOW why do we care? Patch #1 mentions "which will reduce runtime overhead." and patch #2 mentions "This will incur some runtime overhead.". IIUC the comment in patch #1 correctly, these changes don't fix anything, correct? Did you look into showing a performance gain?
Hi David, On 2023/10/19 15:56, David Hildenbrand wrote: > On 19.10.23 09:36, Qi Zheng wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> Currently, in the process of initialization or offline memory, memoryless >> nodes will still be built into the fallback list of itself or other >> nodes. >> >> This is not what we expected, so this patch series removes memoryless >> nodes from the fallback list entirely. > > What's the end result of this change -- IOW why do we care? Patch #1 > mentions "which will reduce runtime overhead." and patch #2 mentions > "This will incur some runtime overhead.". IIUC the comment in patch #1 > correctly, these changes don't fix anything, correct? Yes, after dropping the NODE_MIN_SIZE constrain in x86, the panic problem fixed by this patch no longer exists (Unless there are other architectures that have this constrain). The reason I am re-sending this patch is that I agree with Ingo's point of view: ``` While I agree with dropping the limitation, and I agree that 9391a3f9c7f1 should have provided more of a justification, I believe a core MM fix is in order as well, for it to not crash. ``` I also think that core MM should be safe (not crash) even in some weird topology. > > Did you look into showing a performance gain? > No, and I think the performance gain should be small, after all it just traverses one less node. ;) Thanks, Qi