Thread (59 messages) 59 messages, 14 authors, 2011-07-04

[Linaro-mm-sig] [PATCH 08/10] mm: cma: Contiguous Memory Allocator added

From: Hans Verkuil <hidden>
Date: 2011-06-22 07:05:14
Also in: linux-media, linux-mm, lkml

On Wednesday, June 15, 2011 09:37:18 Arnd Bergmann wrote:
On Wednesday 15 June 2011 09:11:39 Marek Szyprowski wrote:
quoted
I see your concerns, but I really wonder how to determine the properties
of the global/default cma pool. You definitely don't want to give all
available memory o CMA, because it will have negative impact on kernel
operation (kernel really needs to allocate unmovable pages from time to
time). 
Exactly. This is a hard problem, so I would prefer to see a solution for
coming up with reasonable defaults.
quoted
The only solution I see now is to provide Kconfig entry to determine
the size of the global CMA pool, but this still have some issues,
especially for multi-board kernels (each board probably will have
different amount of RAM and different memory-consuming devices
available). It looks that each board startup code still might need to
tweak the size of CMA pool. I can add a kernel command line option for
it, but such solution also will not solve all the cases (afair there
was a discussion about kernel command line parameters for memory 
configuration and the conclusion was that it should be avoided).
The command line option can be a last resort if the heuristics fail,
but it's not much better than a fixed Kconfig setting.

How about a Kconfig option that defines the percentage of memory
to set aside for contiguous allocations?
I would actually like to see a cma_size kernel option of some sort. This would
be for the global CMA pool only as I don't think we should try to do anything
more complicated here.

While it is relatively easy for embedded systems to do a recompile every time
you need to change the pool size, this isn't an option on 'normal' desktop
systems.

While usually you have more than enough memory on such systems and don't need
CMA, there are a number of cases where you do want to reserve sufficient
memory. Usually these involve lots of video capture cards in one system.

What I was wondering about is how this patch series changes the allocation
in case it can't allocate from the CMA pool. Will it attempt to fall back
to a 'normal' allocation?

The reason I ask is that for desktop systems you could just start with a CMA
pool of size 0. And only in specific situations would you need to add a
cma_size kernel parameter depending on your needs. But this scheme would
require a fallback scenario in case of a global CMA pool of size 0.

Hmm, perhaps this fallback scenario is more driver specific. For SoC platform
video devices you may not want a fallback, whereas for PCI(e)/USB devices you
do. I don't know what's best, frankly.

Regards,

	Hans
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