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-rw-r--r--Documentation/vm/frontswap.txt278
-rw-r--r--MAINTAINERS7
-rw-r--r--drivers/staging/ramster/zcache-main.c8
-rw-r--r--drivers/staging/zcache/zcache-main.c10
-rw-r--r--drivers/xen/tmem.c8
-rw-r--r--include/linux/frontswap.h127
-rw-r--r--include/linux/swap.h4
-rw-r--r--include/linux/swapfile.h13
-rw-r--r--mm/Kconfig17
-rw-r--r--mm/Makefile1
-rw-r--r--mm/frontswap.c314
-rw-r--r--mm/page_io.c12
-rw-r--r--mm/swapfile.c54
13 files changed, 827 insertions, 26 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/vm/frontswap.txt b/Documentation/vm/frontswap.txt
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..37067cf455f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/vm/frontswap.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,278 @@
+Frontswap provides a "transcendent memory" interface for swap pages.
+In some environments, dramatic performance savings may be obtained because
+swapped pages are saved in RAM (or a RAM-like device) instead of a swap disk.
+
+(Note, frontswap -- and cleancache (merged at 3.0) -- are the "frontends"
+and the only necessary changes to the core kernel for transcendent memory;
+all other supporting code -- the "backends" -- is implemented as drivers.
+See the LWN.net article "Transcendent memory in a nutshell" for a detailed
+overview of frontswap and related kernel parts:
+https://lwn.net/Articles/454795/ )
+
+Frontswap is so named because it can be thought of as the opposite of
+a "backing" store for a swap device. The storage is assumed to be
+a synchronous concurrency-safe page-oriented "pseudo-RAM device" conforming
+to the requirements of transcendent memory (such as Xen's "tmem", or
+in-kernel compressed memory, aka "zcache", or future RAM-like devices);
+this pseudo-RAM device is not directly accessible or addressable by the
+kernel and is of unknown and possibly time-varying size. The driver
+links itself to frontswap by calling frontswap_register_ops to set the
+frontswap_ops funcs appropriately and the functions it provides must
+conform to certain policies as follows:
+
+An "init" prepares the device to receive frontswap pages associated
+with the specified swap device number (aka "type"). A "store" will
+copy the page to transcendent memory and associate it with the type and
+offset associated with the page. A "load" will copy the page, if found,
+from transcendent memory into kernel memory, but will NOT remove the page
+from from transcendent memory. An "invalidate_page" will remove the page
+from transcendent memory and an "invalidate_area" will remove ALL pages
+associated with the swap type (e.g., like swapoff) and notify the "device"
+to refuse further stores with that swap type.
+
+Once a page is successfully stored, a matching load on the page will normally
+succeed. So when the kernel finds itself in a situation where it needs
+to swap out a page, it first attempts to use frontswap. If the store returns
+success, the data has been successfully saved to transcendent memory and
+a disk write and, if the data is later read back, a disk read are avoided.
+If a store returns failure, transcendent memory has rejected the data, and the
+page can be written to swap as usual.
+
+If a backend chooses, frontswap can be configured as a "writethrough
+cache" by calling frontswap_writethrough(). In this mode, the reduction
+in swap device writes is lost (and also a non-trivial performance advantage)
+in order to allow the backend to arbitrarily "reclaim" space used to
+store frontswap pages to more completely manage its memory usage.
+
+Note that if a page is stored and the page already exists in transcendent memory
+(a "duplicate" store), either the store succeeds and the data is overwritten,
+or the store fails AND the page is invalidated. This ensures stale data may
+never be obtained from frontswap.
+
+If properly configured, monitoring of frontswap is done via debugfs in
+the /sys/kernel/debug/frontswap directory. The effectiveness of
+frontswap can be measured (across all swap devices) with:
+
+failed_stores - how many store attempts have failed
+loads - how many loads were attempted (all should succeed)
+succ_stores - how many store attempts have succeeded
+invalidates - how many invalidates were attempted
+
+A backend implementation may provide additional metrics.
+
+FAQ
+
+1) Where's the value?
+
+When a workload starts swapping, performance falls through the floor.
+Frontswap significantly increases performance in many such workloads by
+providing a clean, dynamic interface to read and write swap pages to
+"transcendent memory" that is otherwise not directly addressable to the kernel.
+This interface is ideal when data is transformed to a different form
+and size (such as with compression) or secretly moved (as might be
+useful for write-balancing for some RAM-like devices). Swap pages (and
+evicted page-cache pages) are a great use for this kind of slower-than-RAM-
+but-much-faster-than-disk "pseudo-RAM device" and the frontswap (and
+cleancache) interface to transcendent memory provides a nice way to read
+and write -- and indirectly "name" -- the pages.
+
+Frontswap -- and cleancache -- with a fairly small impact on the kernel,
+provides a huge amount of flexibility for more dynamic, flexible RAM
+utilization in various system configurations:
+
+In the single kernel case, aka "zcache", pages are compressed and
+stored in local memory, thus increasing the total anonymous pages
+that can be safely kept in RAM. Zcache essentially trades off CPU
+cycles used in compression/decompression for better memory utilization.
+Benchmarks have shown little or no impact when memory pressure is
+low while providing a significant performance improvement (25%+)
+on some workloads under high memory pressure.
+
+"RAMster" builds on zcache by adding "peer-to-peer" transcendent memory
+support for clustered systems. Frontswap pages are locally compressed
+as in zcache, but then "remotified" to another system's RAM. This
+allows RAM to be dynamically load-balanced back-and-forth as needed,
+i.e. when system A is overcommitted, it can swap to system B, and
+vice versa. RAMster can also be configured as a memory server so
+many servers in a cluster can swap, dynamically as needed, to a single
+server configured with a large amount of RAM... without pre-configuring
+how much of the RAM is available for each of the clients!
+
+In the virtual case, the whole point of virtualization is to statistically
+multiplex physical resources acrosst the varying demands of multiple
+virtual machines. This is really hard to do with RAM and efforts to do
+it well with no kernel changes have essentially failed (except in some
+well-publicized special-case workloads).
+Specifically, the Xen Transcendent Memory backend allows otherwise
+"fallow" hypervisor-owned RAM to not only be "time-shared" between multiple
+virtual machines, but the pages can be compressed and deduplicated to
+optimize RAM utilization. And when guest OS's are induced to surrender
+underutilized RAM (e.g. with "selfballooning"), sudden unexpected
+memory pressure may result in swapping; frontswap allows those pages
+to be swapped to and from hypervisor RAM (if overall host system memory
+conditions allow), thus mitigating the potentially awful performance impact
+of unplanned swapping.
+
+A KVM implementation is underway and has been RFC'ed to lkml. And,
+using frontswap, investigation is also underway on the use of NVM as
+a memory extension technology.
+
+2) Sure there may be performance advantages in some situations, but
+ what's the space/time overhead of frontswap?
+
+If CONFIG_FRONTSWAP is disabled, every frontswap hook compiles into
+nothingness and the only overhead is a few extra bytes per swapon'ed
+swap device. If CONFIG_FRONTSWAP is enabled but no frontswap "backend"
+registers, there is one extra global variable compared to zero for
+every swap page read or written. If CONFIG_FRONTSWAP is enabled
+AND a frontswap backend registers AND the backend fails every "store"
+request (i.e. provides no memory despite claiming it might),
+CPU overhead is still negligible -- and since every frontswap fail
+precedes a swap page write-to-disk, the system is highly likely
+to be I/O bound and using a small fraction of a percent of a CPU
+will be irrelevant anyway.
+
+As for space, if CONFIG_FRONTSWAP is enabled AND a frontswap backend
+registers, one bit is allocated for every swap page for every swap
+device that is swapon'd. This is added to the EIGHT bits (which
+was sixteen until about 2.6.34) that the kernel already allocates
+for every swap page for every swap device that is swapon'd. (Hugh
+Dickins has observed that frontswap could probably steal one of
+the existing eight bits, but let's worry about that minor optimization
+later.) For very large swap disks (which are rare) on a standard
+4K pagesize, this is 1MB per 32GB swap.
+
+When swap pages are stored in transcendent memory instead of written
+out to disk, there is a side effect that this may create more memory
+pressure that can potentially outweigh the other advantages. A
+backend, such as zcache, must implement policies to carefully (but
+dynamically) manage memory limits to ensure this doesn't happen.
+
+3) OK, how about a quick overview of what this frontswap patch does
+ in terms that a kernel hacker can grok?
+
+Let's assume that a frontswap "backend" has registered during
+kernel initialization; this registration indicates that this
+frontswap backend has access to some "memory" that is not directly
+accessible by the kernel. Exactly how much memory it provides is
+entirely dynamic and random.
+
+Whenever a swap-device is swapon'd frontswap_init() is called,
+passing the swap device number (aka "type") as a parameter.
+This notifies frontswap to expect attempts to "store" swap pages
+associated with that number.
+
+Whenever the swap subsystem is readying a page to write to a swap
+device (c.f swap_writepage()), frontswap_store is called. Frontswap
+consults with the frontswap backend and if the backend says it does NOT
+have room, frontswap_store returns -1 and the kernel swaps the page
+to the swap device as normal. Note that the response from the frontswap
+backend is unpredictable to the kernel; it may choose to never accept a
+page, it could accept every ninth page, or it might accept every
+page. But if the backend does accept a page, the data from the page
+has already been copied and associated with the type and offset,
+and the backend guarantees the persistence of the data. In this case,
+frontswap sets a bit in the "frontswap_map" for the swap device
+corresponding to the page offset on the swap device to which it would
+otherwise have written the data.
+
+When the swap subsystem needs to swap-in a page (swap_readpage()),
+it first calls frontswap_load() which checks the frontswap_map to
+see if the page was earlier accepted by the frontswap backend. If
+it was, the page of data is filled from the frontswap backend and
+the swap-in is complete. If not, the normal swap-in code is
+executed to obtain the page of data from the real swap device.
+
+So every time the frontswap backend accepts a page, a swap device read
+and (potentially) a swap device write are replaced by a "frontswap backend
+store" and (possibly) a "frontswap backend loads", which are presumably much
+faster.
+
+4) Can't frontswap be configured as a "special" swap device that is
+ just higher priority than any real swap device (e.g. like zswap,
+ or maybe swap-over-nbd/NFS)?
+
+No. First, the existing swap subsystem doesn't allow for any kind of
+swap hierarchy. Perhaps it could be rewritten to accomodate a hierarchy,
+but this would require fairly drastic changes. Even if it were
+rewritten, the existing swap subsystem uses the block I/O layer which
+assumes a swap device is fixed size and any page in it is linearly
+addressable. Frontswap barely touches the existing swap subsystem,
+and works around the constraints of the block I/O subsystem to provide
+a great deal of flexibility and dynamicity.
+
+For example, the acceptance of any swap page by the frontswap backend is
+entirely unpredictable. This is critical to the definition of frontswap
+backends because it grants completely dynamic discretion to the
+backend. In zcache, one cannot know a priori how compressible a page is.
+"Poorly" compressible pages can be rejected, and "poorly" can itself be
+defined dynamically depending on current memory constraints.
+
+Further, frontswap is entirely synchronous whereas a real swap
+device is, by definition, asynchronous and uses block I/O. The
+block I/O layer is not only unnecessary, but may perform "optimizations"
+that are inappropriate for a RAM-oriented device including delaying
+the write of some pages for a significant amount of time. Synchrony is
+required to ensure the dynamicity of the backend and to avoid thorny race
+conditions that would unnecessarily and greatly complicate frontswap
+and/or the block I/O subsystem. That said, only the initial "store"
+and "load" operations need be synchronous. A separate asynchronous thread
+is free to manipulate the pages stored by frontswap. For example,
+the "remotification" thread in RAMster uses standard asynchronous
+kernel sockets to move compressed frontswap pages to a remote machine.
+Similarly, a KVM guest-side implementation could do in-guest compression
+and use "batched" hypercalls.
+
+In a virtualized environment, the dynamicity allows the hypervisor
+(or host OS) to do "intelligent overcommit". For example, it can
+choose to accept pages only until host-swapping might be imminent,
+then force guests to do their own swapping.
+
+There is a downside to the transcendent memory specifications for
+frontswap: Since any "store" might fail, there must always be a real
+slot on a real swap device to swap the page. Thus frontswap must be
+implemented as a "shadow" to every swapon'd device with the potential
+capability of holding every page that the swap device might have held
+and the possibility that it might hold no pages at all. This means
+that frontswap cannot contain more pages than the total of swapon'd
+swap devices. For example, if NO swap device is configured on some
+installation, frontswap is useless. Swapless portable devices
+can still use frontswap but a backend for such devices must configure
+some kind of "ghost" swap device and ensure that it is never used.
+
+5) Why this weird definition about "duplicate stores"? If a page
+ has been previously successfully stored, can't it always be
+ successfully overwritten?
+
+Nearly always it can, but no, sometimes it cannot. Consider an example
+where data is compressed and the original 4K page has been compressed
+to 1K. Now an attempt is made to overwrite the page with data that
+is non-compressible and so would take the entire 4K. But the backend
+has no more space. In this case, the store must be rejected. Whenever
+frontswap rejects a store that would overwrite, it also must invalidate
+the old data and ensure that it is no longer accessible. Since the
+swap subsystem then writes the new data to the read swap device,
+this is the correct course of action to ensure coherency.
+
+6) What is frontswap_shrink for?
+
+When the (non-frontswap) swap subsystem swaps out a page to a real
+swap device, that page is only taking up low-value pre-allocated disk
+space. But if frontswap has placed a page in transcendent memory, that
+page may be taking up valuable real estate. The frontswap_shrink
+routine allows code outside of the swap subsystem to force pages out
+of the memory managed by frontswap and back into kernel-addressable memory.
+For example, in RAMster, a "suction driver" thread will attempt
+to "repatriate" pages sent to a remote machine back to the local machine;
+this is driven using the frontswap_shrink mechanism when memory pressure
+subsides.
+
+7) Why does the frontswap patch create the new include file swapfile.h?
+
+The frontswap code depends on some swap-subsystem-internal data
+structures that have, over the years, moved back and forth between
+static and global. This seemed a reasonable compromise: Define
+them as global but declare them in a new include file that isn't
+included by the large number of source files that include swap.h.
+
+Dan Magenheimer, last updated April 9, 2012
diff --git a/MAINTAINERS b/MAINTAINERS
index 55f0fda602e..6a52bb4a4fc 100644
--- a/MAINTAINERS
+++ b/MAINTAINERS
@@ -2930,6 +2930,13 @@ F: Documentation/power/freezing-of-tasks.txt
F: include/linux/freezer.h
F: kernel/freezer.c
+FRONTSWAP API
+M: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@oracle.com>
+L: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
+S: Maintained
+F: mm/frontswap.c
+F: include/linux/frontswap.h
+
FS-CACHE: LOCAL CACHING FOR NETWORK FILESYSTEMS
M: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
L: linux-cachefs@redhat.com
diff --git a/drivers/staging/ramster/zcache-main.c b/drivers/staging/ramster/zcache-main.c
index 4e7ef0e6b79..d46764b5aab 100644
--- a/drivers/staging/ramster/zcache-main.c
+++ b/drivers/staging/ramster/zcache-main.c
@@ -3002,7 +3002,7 @@ static inline struct tmem_oid oswiz(unsigned type, u32 ind)
return oid;
}
-static int zcache_frontswap_put_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
+static int zcache_frontswap_store(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
struct page *page)
{
u64 ind64 = (u64)offset;
@@ -3025,7 +3025,7 @@ static int zcache_frontswap_put_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
/* returns 0 if the page was successfully gotten from frontswap, -1 if
* was not present (should never happen!) */
-static int zcache_frontswap_get_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
+static int zcache_frontswap_load(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
struct page *page)
{
u64 ind64 = (u64)offset;
@@ -3080,8 +3080,8 @@ static void zcache_frontswap_init(unsigned ignored)
}
static struct frontswap_ops zcache_frontswap_ops = {
- .put_page = zcache_frontswap_put_page,
- .get_page = zcache_frontswap_get_page,
+ .store = zcache_frontswap_store,
+ .load = zcache_frontswap_load,
.invalidate_page = zcache_frontswap_flush_page,
.invalidate_area = zcache_frontswap_flush_area,
.init = zcache_frontswap_init
diff --git a/drivers/staging/zcache/zcache-main.c b/drivers/staging/zcache/zcache-main.c
index 2734dacacba..784c796b984 100644
--- a/drivers/staging/zcache/zcache-main.c
+++ b/drivers/staging/zcache/zcache-main.c
@@ -1835,7 +1835,7 @@ static int zcache_frontswap_poolid = -1;
* Swizzling increases objects per swaptype, increasing tmem concurrency
* for heavy swaploads. Later, larger nr_cpus -> larger SWIZ_BITS
* Setting SWIZ_BITS to 27 basically reconstructs the swap entry from
- * frontswap_get_page(), but has side-effects. Hence using 8.
+ * frontswap_load(), but has side-effects. Hence using 8.
*/
#define SWIZ_BITS 8
#define SWIZ_MASK ((1 << SWIZ_BITS) - 1)
@@ -1849,7 +1849,7 @@ static inline struct tmem_oid oswiz(unsigned type, u32 ind)
return oid;
}
-static int zcache_frontswap_put_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
+static int zcache_frontswap_store(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
struct page *page)
{
u64 ind64 = (u64)offset;
@@ -1870,7 +1870,7 @@ static int zcache_frontswap_put_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
/* returns 0 if the page was successfully gotten from frontswap, -1 if
* was not present (should never happen!) */
-static int zcache_frontswap_get_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
+static int zcache_frontswap_load(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
struct page *page)
{
u64 ind64 = (u64)offset;
@@ -1919,8 +1919,8 @@ static void zcache_frontswap_init(unsigned ignored)
}
static struct frontswap_ops zcache_frontswap_ops = {
- .put_page = zcache_frontswap_put_page,
- .get_page = zcache_frontswap_get_page,
+ .store = zcache_frontswap_store,
+ .load = zcache_frontswap_load,
.invalidate_page = zcache_frontswap_flush_page,
.invalidate_area = zcache_frontswap_flush_area,
.init = zcache_frontswap_init
diff --git a/drivers/xen/tmem.c b/drivers/xen/tmem.c
index dcb79521e6c..89f264c6742 100644
--- a/drivers/xen/tmem.c
+++ b/drivers/xen/tmem.c
@@ -269,7 +269,7 @@ static inline struct tmem_oid oswiz(unsigned type, u32 ind)
}
/* returns 0 if the page was successfully put into frontswap, -1 if not */
-static int tmem_frontswap_put_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
+static int tmem_frontswap_store(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
struct page *page)
{
u64 ind64 = (u64)offset;
@@ -295,7 +295,7 @@ static int tmem_frontswap_put_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
* returns 0 if the page was successfully gotten from frontswap, -1 if
* was not present (should never happen!)
*/
-static int tmem_frontswap_get_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
+static int tmem_frontswap_load(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset,
struct page *page)
{
u64 ind64 = (u64)offset;
@@ -362,8 +362,8 @@ static int __init no_frontswap(char *s)
__setup("nofrontswap", no_frontswap);
static struct frontswap_ops __initdata tmem_frontswap_ops = {
- .put_page = tmem_frontswap_put_page,
- .get_page = tmem_frontswap_get_page,
+ .store = tmem_frontswap_store,
+ .load = tmem_frontswap_load,
.invalidate_page = tmem_frontswap_flush_page,
.invalidate_area = tmem_frontswap_flush_area,
.init = tmem_frontswap_init
diff --git a/include/linux/frontswap.h b/include/linux/frontswap.h
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..0e4e2eec5c1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/frontswap.h
@@ -0,0 +1,127 @@
+#ifndef _LINUX_FRONTSWAP_H
+#define _LINUX_FRONTSWAP_H
+
+#include <linux/swap.h>
+#include <linux/mm.h>
+#include <linux/bitops.h>
+
+struct frontswap_ops {
+ void (*init)(unsigned);
+ int (*store)(unsigned, pgoff_t, struct page *);
+ int (*load)(unsigned, pgoff_t, struct page *);
+ void (*invalidate_page)(unsigned, pgoff_t);
+ void (*invalidate_area)(unsigned);
+};
+
+extern bool frontswap_enabled;
+extern struct frontswap_ops
+ frontswap_register_ops(struct frontswap_ops *ops);
+extern void frontswap_shrink(unsigned long);
+extern unsigned long frontswap_curr_pages(void);
+extern void frontswap_writethrough(bool);
+
+extern void __frontswap_init(unsigned type);
+extern int __frontswap_store(struct page *page);
+extern int __frontswap_load(struct page *page);
+extern void __frontswap_invalidate_page(unsigned, pgoff_t);
+extern void __frontswap_invalidate_area(unsigned);
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_FRONTSWAP
+
+static inline bool frontswap_test(struct swap_info_struct *sis, pgoff_t offset)
+{
+ bool ret = false;
+
+ if (frontswap_enabled && sis->frontswap_map)
+ ret = test_bit(offset, sis->frontswap_map);
+ return ret;
+}
+
+static inline void frontswap_set(struct swap_info_struct *sis, pgoff_t offset)
+{
+ if (frontswap_enabled && sis->frontswap_map)
+ set_bit(offset, sis->frontswap_map);
+}
+
+static inline void frontswap_clear(struct swap_info_struct *sis, pgoff_t offset)
+{
+ if (frontswap_enabled && sis->frontswap_map)
+ clear_bit(offset, sis->frontswap_map);
+}
+
+static inline void frontswap_map_set(struct swap_info_struct *p,
+ unsigned long *map)
+{
+ p->frontswap_map = map;
+}
+
+static inline unsigned long *frontswap_map_get(struct swap_info_struct *p)
+{
+ return p->frontswap_map;
+}
+#else
+/* all inline routines become no-ops and all externs are ignored */
+
+#define frontswap_enabled (0)
+
+static inline bool frontswap_test(struct swap_info_struct *sis, pgoff_t offset)
+{
+ return false;
+}
+
+static inline void frontswap_set(struct swap_info_struct *sis, pgoff_t offset)
+{
+}
+
+static inline void frontswap_clear(struct swap_info_struct *sis, pgoff_t offset)
+{
+}
+
+static inline void frontswap_map_set(struct swap_info_struct *p,
+ unsigned long *map)
+{
+}
+
+static inline unsigned long *frontswap_map_get(struct swap_info_struct *p)
+{
+ return NULL;
+}
+#endif
+
+static inline int frontswap_store(struct page *page)
+{
+ int ret = -1;
+
+ if (frontswap_enabled)
+ ret = __frontswap_store(page);
+ return ret;
+}
+
+static inline int frontswap_load(struct page *page)
+{
+ int ret = -1;
+
+ if (frontswap_enabled)
+ ret = __frontswap_load(page);
+ return ret;
+}
+
+static inline void frontswap_invalidate_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset)
+{
+ if (frontswap_enabled)
+ __frontswap_invalidate_page(type, offset);
+}
+
+static inline void frontswap_invalidate_area(unsigned type)
+{
+ if (frontswap_enabled)
+ __frontswap_invalidate_area(type);
+}
+
+static inline void frontswap_init(unsigned type)
+{
+ if (frontswap_enabled)
+ __frontswap_init(type);
+}
+
+#endif /* _LINUX_FRONTSWAP_H */
diff --git a/include/linux/swap.h b/include/linux/swap.h
index b6661933e25..c84ec68eaec 100644
--- a/include/linux/swap.h
+++ b/include/linux/swap.h
@@ -197,6 +197,10 @@ struct swap_info_struct {
struct block_device *bdev; /* swap device or bdev of swap file */
struct file *swap_file; /* seldom referenced */
unsigned int old_block_size; /* seldom referenced */
+#ifdef CONFIG_FRONTSWAP
+ unsigned long *frontswap_map; /* frontswap in-use, one bit per page */
+ atomic_t frontswap_pages; /* frontswap pages in-use counter */
+#endif
};
struct swap_list_t {
diff --git a/include/linux/swapfile.h b/include/linux/swapfile.h
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..e282624e8c1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/swapfile.h
@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
+#ifndef _LINUX_SWAPFILE_H
+#define _LINUX_SWAPFILE_H
+
+/*
+ * these were static in swapfile.c but frontswap.c needs them and we don't
+ * want to expose them to the dozens of source files that include swap.h
+ */
+extern spinlock_t swap_lock;
+extern struct swap_list_t swap_list;
+extern struct swap_info_struct *swap_info[];
+extern int try_to_unuse(unsigned int, bool, unsigned long);
+
+#endif /* _LINUX_SWAPFILE_H */
diff --git a/mm/Kconfig b/mm/Kconfig
index b2176374b98..82fed4eb2b6 100644
--- a/mm/Kconfig
+++ b/mm/Kconfig
@@ -389,3 +389,20 @@ config CLEANCACHE
in a negligible performance hit.
If unsure, say Y to enable cleancache
+
+config FRONTSWAP
+ bool "Enable frontswap to cache swap pages if tmem is present"
+ depends on SWAP
+ default n
+ help
+ Frontswap is so named because it can be thought of as the opposite
+ of a "backing" store for a swap device. The data is stored into
+ "transcendent memory", memory that is not directly accessible or
+ addressable by the kernel and is of unknown and possibly
+ time-varying size. When space in transcendent memory is available,
+ a significant swap I/O reduction may be achieved. When none is
+ available, all frontswap calls are reduced to a single pointer-
+ compare-against-NULL resulting in a negligible performance hit
+ and swap data is stored as normal on the matching swap device.
+
+ If unsure, say Y to enable frontswap.
diff --git a/mm/Makefile b/mm/Makefile
index a156285ce88..2e2fbbefb99 100644
--- a/mm/Makefile
+++ b/mm/Makefile
@@ -29,6 +29,7 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_HAVE_MEMBLOCK) += memblock.o
obj-$(CONFIG_BOUNCE) += bounce.o
obj-$(CONFIG_SWAP) += page_io.o swap_state.o swapfile.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_FRONTSWAP) += frontswap.o
obj-$(CONFIG_HAS_DMA) += dmapool.o
obj-$(CONFIG_HUGETLBFS) += hugetlb.o
obj-$(CONFIG_NUMA) += mempolicy.o
diff --git a/mm/frontswap.c b/mm/frontswap.c
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..e25025574a0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/mm/frontswap.c
@@ -0,0 +1,314 @@
+/*
+ * Frontswap frontend
+ *
+ * This code provides the generic "frontend" layer to call a matching
+ * "backend" driver implementation of frontswap. See
+ * Documentation/vm/frontswap.txt for more information.
+ *
+ * Copyright (C) 2009-2012 Oracle Corp. All rights reserved.
+ * Author: Dan Magenheimer
+ *
+ * This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2.
+ */
+
+#include <linux/mm.h>
+#include <linux/mman.h>
+#include <linux/swap.h>
+#include <linux/swapops.h>
+#include <linux/proc_fs.h>
+#include <linux/security.h>
+#include <linux/capability.h>
+#include <linux/module.h>
+#include <linux/uaccess.h>
+#include <linux/debugfs.h>
+#include <linux/frontswap.h>
+#include <linux/swapfile.h>
+
+/*
+ * frontswap_ops is set by frontswap_register_ops to contain the pointers
+ * to the frontswap "backend" implementation functions.
+ */
+static struct frontswap_ops frontswap_ops __read_mostly;
+
+/*
+ * This global enablement flag reduces overhead on systems where frontswap_ops
+ * has not been registered, so is preferred to the slower alternative: a
+ * function call that checks a non-global.
+ */
+bool frontswap_enabled __read_mostly;
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(frontswap_enabled);
+
+/*
+ * If enabled, frontswap_store will return failure even on success. As
+ * a result, the swap subsystem will always write the page to swap, in
+ * effect converting frontswap into a writethrough cache. In this mode,
+ * there is no direct reduction in swap writes, but a frontswap backend
+ * can unilaterally "reclaim" any pages in use with no data loss, thus
+ * providing increases control over maximum memory usage due to frontswap.
+ */
+static bool frontswap_writethrough_enabled __read_mostly;
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_FS
+/*
+ * Counters available via /sys/kernel/debug/frontswap (if debugfs is
+ * properly configured). These are for information only so are not protected
+ * against increment races.
+ */
+static u64 frontswap_loads;
+static u64 frontswap_succ_stores;
+static u64 frontswap_failed_stores;
+static u64 frontswap_invalidates;
+
+static inline void inc_frontswap_loads(void) {
+ frontswap_loads++;
+}
+static inline void inc_frontswap_succ_stores(void) {
+ frontswap_succ_stores++;
+}
+static inline void inc_frontswap_failed_stores(void) {
+ frontswap_failed_stores++;
+}
+static inline void inc_frontswap_invalidates(void) {
+ frontswap_invalidates++;
+}
+#else
+static inline void inc_frontswap_loads(void) { }
+static inline void inc_frontswap_succ_stores(void) { }
+static inline void inc_frontswap_failed_stores(void) { }
+static inline void inc_frontswap_invalidates(void) { }
+#endif
+/*
+ * Register operations for frontswap, returning previous thus allowing
+ * detection of multiple backends and possible nesting.
+ */
+struct frontswap_ops frontswap_register_ops(struct frontswap_ops *ops)
+{
+ struct frontswap_ops old = frontswap_ops;
+
+ frontswap_ops = *ops;
+ frontswap_enabled = true;
+ return old;
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(frontswap_register_ops);
+
+/*
+ * Enable/disable frontswap writethrough (see above).
+ */
+void frontswap_writethrough(bool enable)
+{
+ frontswap_writethrough_enabled = enable;
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(frontswap_writethrough);
+
+/*
+ * Called when a swap device is swapon'd.
+ */
+void __frontswap_init(unsigned type)
+{
+ struct swap_info_struct *sis = swap_info[type];
+
+ BUG_ON(sis == NULL);
+ if (sis->frontswap_map == NULL)
+ return;
+ if (frontswap_enabled)
+ (*frontswap_ops.init)(type);
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(__frontswap_init);
+
+/*
+ * "Store" data from a page to frontswap and associate it with the page's
+ * swaptype and offset. Page must be locked and in the swap cache.
+ * If frontswap already contains a page with matching swaptype and
+ * offset, the frontswap implmentation may either overwrite the data and
+ * return success or invalidate the page from frontswap and return failure.
+ */
+int __frontswap_store(struct page *page)
+{
+ int ret = -1, dup = 0;
+ swp_entry_t entry = { .val = page_private(page), };
+ int type = swp_type(entry);
+ struct swap_info_struct *sis = swap_info[type];
+ pgoff_t offset = swp_offset(entry);
+
+ BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page));
+ BUG_ON(sis == NULL);
+ if (frontswap_test(sis, offset))
+ dup = 1;
+ ret = (*frontswap_ops.store)(type, offset, page);
+ if (ret == 0) {
+ frontswap_set(sis, offset);
+ inc_frontswap_succ_stores();
+ if (!dup)
+ atomic_inc(&sis->frontswap_pages);
+ } else if (dup) {
+ /*
+ failed dup always results in automatic invalidate of
+ the (older) page from frontswap
+ */
+ frontswap_clear(sis, offset);
+ atomic_dec(&sis->frontswap_pages);
+ inc_frontswap_failed_stores();
+ } else
+ inc_frontswap_failed_stores();
+ if (frontswap_writethrough_enabled)
+ /* report failure so swap also writes to swap device */
+ ret = -1;
+ return ret;
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(__frontswap_store);
+
+/*
+ * "Get" data from frontswap associated with swaptype and offset that were
+ * specified when the data was put to frontswap and use it to fill the
+ * specified page with data. Page must be locked and in the swap cache.
+ */
+int __frontswap_load(struct page *page)
+{
+ int ret = -1;
+ swp_entry_t entry = { .val = page_private(page), };
+ int type = swp_type(entry);
+ struct swap_info_struct *sis = swap_info[type];
+ pgoff_t offset = swp_offset(entry);
+
+ BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page));
+ BUG_ON(sis == NULL);
+ if (frontswap_test(sis, offset))
+ ret = (*frontswap_ops.load)(type, offset, page);
+ if (ret == 0)
+ inc_frontswap_loads();
+ return ret;
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(__frontswap_load);
+
+/*
+ * Invalidate any data from frontswap associated with the specified swaptype
+ * and offset so that a subsequent "get" will fail.
+ */
+void __frontswap_invalidate_page(unsigned type, pgoff_t offset)
+{
+ struct swap_info_struct *sis = swap_info[type];
+
+ BUG_ON(sis == NULL);
+ if (frontswap_test(sis, offset)) {
+ (*frontswap_ops.invalidate_page)(type, offset);
+ atomic_dec(&sis->frontswap_pages);
+ frontswap_clear(sis, offset);
+ inc_frontswap_invalidates();
+ }
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(__frontswap_invalidate_page);
+
+/*
+ * Invalidate all data from frontswap associated with all offsets for the
+ * specified swaptype.
+ */
+void __frontswap_invalidate_area(unsigned type)
+{
+ struct swap_info_struct *sis = swap_info[type];
+
+ BUG_ON(sis == NULL);
+ if (sis->frontswap_map == NULL)
+ return;
+ (*frontswap_ops.invalidate_area)(type);
+ atomic_set(&sis->frontswap_pages, 0);
+ memset(sis->frontswap_map, 0, sis->max / sizeof(long));
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(__frontswap_invalidate_area);
+
+/*
+ * Frontswap, like a true swap device, may unnecessarily retain pages
+ * under certain circumstances; "shrink" frontswap is essentially a
+ * "partial swapoff" and works by calling try_to_unuse to attempt to
+ * unuse enough frontswap pages to attempt to -- subject to memory
+ * constraints -- reduce the number of pages in frontswap to the
+ * number given in the parameter target_pages.
+ */
+void frontswap_shrink(unsigned long target_pages)
+{
+ struct swap_info_struct *si = NULL;
+ int si_frontswap_pages;
+ unsigned long total_pages = 0, total_pages_to_unuse;
+ unsigned long pages = 0, pages_to_unuse = 0;
+ int type;
+ bool locked = false;
+
+ /*
+ * we don't want to hold swap_lock while doing a very
+ * lengthy try_to_unuse, but swap_list may change
+ * so restart scan from swap_list.head each time
+ */
+ spin_lock(&swap_lock);
+ locked = true;
+ total_pages = 0;
+ for (type = swap_list.head; type >= 0; type = si->next) {
+ si = swap_info[type];
+ total_pages += atomic_read(&si->frontswap_pages);
+ }
+ if (total_pages <= target_pages)
+ goto out;
+ total_pages_to_unuse = total_pages - target_pages;
+ for (type = swap_list.head; type >= 0; type = si->next) {
+ si = swap_info[type];
+ si_frontswap_pages = atomic_read(&si->frontswap_pages);
+ if (total_pages_to_unuse < si_frontswap_pages)
+ pages = pages_to_unuse = total_pages_to_unuse;
+ else {
+ pages = si_frontswap_pages;
+ pages_to_unuse = 0; /* unuse all */
+ }
+ /* ensure there is enough RAM to fetch pages from frontswap */
+ if (security_vm_enough_memory_mm(current->mm, pages))
+ continue;
+ vm_unacct_memory(pages);
+ break;
+ }
+ if (type < 0)
+ goto out;
+ locked = false;
+ spin_unlock(&swap_lock);
+ try_to_unuse(type, true, pages_to_unuse);
+out:
+ if (locked)
+ spin_unlock(&swap_lock);
+ return;
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(frontswap_shrink);
+
+/*
+ * Count and return the number of frontswap pages across all
+ * swap devices. This is exported so that backend drivers can
+ * determine current usage without reading debugfs.
+ */
+unsigned long frontswap_curr_pages(void)
+{
+ int type;
+ unsigned long totalpages = 0;
+ struct swap_info_struct *si = NULL;
+
+ spin_lock(&swap_lock);
+ for (type = swap_list.head; type >= 0; type = si->next) {
+ si = swap_info[type];
+ totalpages += atomic_read(&si->frontswap_pages);
+ }
+ spin_unlock(&swap_lock);
+ return totalpages;
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(frontswap_curr_pages);
+
+static int __init init_frontswap(void)
+{
+#ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_FS
+ struct dentry *root = debugfs_create_dir("frontswap", NULL);
+ if (root == NULL)
+ return -ENXIO;
+ debugfs_create_u64("loads", S_IRUGO, root, &frontswap_loads);
+ debugfs_create_u64("succ_stores", S_IRUGO, root, &frontswap_succ_stores);
+ debugfs_create_u64("failed_stores", S_IRUGO, root,
+ &frontswap_failed_stores);
+ debugfs_create_u64("invalidates", S_IRUGO,
+ root, &frontswap_invalidates);
+#endif
+ return 0;
+}
+
+module_init(init_frontswap);
diff --git a/mm/page_io.c b/mm/page_io.c
index dc76b4d0611..34f02923744 100644
--- a/mm/page_io.c
+++ b/mm/page_io.c
@@ -18,6 +18,7 @@
#include <linux/bio.h>
#include <linux/swapops.h>
#include <linux/writeback.h>
+#include <linux/frontswap.h>
#include <asm/pgtable.h>
static struct bio *get_swap_bio(gfp_t gfp_flags,
@@ -98,6 +99,12 @@ int swap_writepage(struct page *page, struct writeback_control *wbc)
unlock_page(page);
goto out;
}
+ if (frontswap_store(page) == 0) {
+ set_page_writeback(page);
+ unlock_page(page);
+ end_page_writeback(page);
+ goto out;
+ }
bio = get_swap_bio(GFP_NOIO, page, end_swap_bio_write);
if (bio == NULL) {
set_page_dirty(page);
@@ -122,6 +129,11 @@ int swap_readpage(struct page *page)
VM_BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page));
VM_BUG_ON(PageUptodate(page));
+ if (frontswap_load(page) == 0) {
+ SetPageUptodate(page);
+ unlock_page(page);
+ goto out;
+ }
bio = get_swap_bio(GFP_KERNEL, page, end_swap_bio_read);
if (bio == NULL) {
unlock_page(page);
diff --git a/mm/swapfile.c b/mm/swapfile.c
index 457b10baef5..de5bc51c4a6 100644
--- a/mm/swapfile.c
+++ b/mm/swapfile.c
@@ -31,6 +31,8 @@
#include <linux/memcontrol.h>
#include <linux/poll.h>
#include <linux/oom.h>
+#include <linux/frontswap.h>
+#include <linux/swapfile.h>
#include <asm/pgtable.h>
#include <asm/tlbflush.h>
@@ -42,7 +44,7 @@ static bool swap_count_continued(struct swap_info_struct *, pgoff_t,
static void free_swap_count_continuations(struct swap_info_struct *);
static sector_t map_swap_entry(swp_entry_t, struct block_device**);
-static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(swap_lock);
+DEFINE_SPINLOCK(swap_lock);
static unsigned int nr_swapfiles;
long nr_swap_pages;
long total_swap_pages;
@@ -53,9 +55,9 @@ static const char Unused_file[] = "Unused swap file entry ";
static const char Bad_offset[] = "Bad swap offset entry ";
static const char Unused_offset[] = "Unused swap offset entry ";
-static struct swap_list_t swap_list = {-1, -1};
+struct swap_list_t swap_list = {-1, -1};
-static struct swap_info_struct *swap_info[MAX_SWAPFILES];
+struct swap_info_struct *swap_info[MAX_SWAPFILES];
static DEFINE_MUTEX(swapon_mutex);
@@ -556,6 +558,7 @@ static unsigned char swap_entry_free(struct swap_info_struct *p,
swap_list.next = p->type;
nr_swap_pages++;
p->inuse_pages--;
+ frontswap_invalidate_page(p->type, offset);
if ((p->flags & SWP_BLKDEV) &&
disk->fops->swap_slot_free_notify)
disk->fops->swap_slot_free_notify(p->bdev, offset);
@@ -985,11 +988,12 @@ static int unuse_mm(struct mm_struct *mm,
}
/*
- * Scan swap_map from current position to next entry still in use.
+ * Scan swap_map (or frontswap_map if frontswap parameter is true)
+ * from current position to next entry still in use.
* Recycle to start on reaching the end, returning 0 when empty.
*/
static unsigned int find_next_to_unuse(struct swap_info_struct *si,
- unsigned int prev)
+ unsigned int prev, bool frontswap)
{
unsigned int max = si->max;
unsigned int i = prev;
@@ -1015,6 +1019,12 @@ static unsigned int find_next_to_unuse(struct swap_info_struct *si,
prev = 0;
i = 1;
}
+ if (frontswap) {
+ if (frontswap_test(si, i))
+ break;
+ else
+ continue;
+ }
count = si->swap_map[i];
if (count && swap_count(count) != SWAP_MAP_BAD)
break;
@@ -1026,8 +1036,12 @@ static unsigned int find_next_to_unuse(struct swap_info_struct *si,
* We completely avoid races by reading each swap page in advance,
* and then search for the process using it. All the necessary
* page table adjustments can then be made atomically.
+ *
+ * if the boolean frontswap is true, only unuse pages_to_unuse pages;
+ * pages_to_unuse==0 means all pages; ignored if frontswap is false
*/
-static int try_to_unuse(unsigned int type)
+int try_to_unuse(unsigned int type, bool frontswap,
+ unsigned long pages_to_unuse)
{
struct swap_info_struct *si = swap_info[type];
struct mm_struct *start_mm;
@@ -1060,7 +1074,7 @@ static int try_to_unuse(unsigned int type)
* one pass through swap_map is enough, but not necessarily:
* there are races when an instance of an entry might be missed.
*/
- while ((i = find_next_to_unuse(si, i)) != 0) {
+ while ((i = find_next_to_unuse(si, i, frontswap)) != 0) {
if (signal_pending(current)) {
retval = -EINTR;
break;
@@ -1227,6 +1241,10 @@ static int try_to_unuse(unsigned int type)
* interactive performance.
*/
cond_resched();
+ if (frontswap && pages_to_unuse > 0) {
+ if (!--pages_to_unuse)
+ break;
+ }
}
mmput(start_mm);
@@ -1486,7 +1504,8 @@ bad_bmap:
}
static void enable_swap_info(struct swap_info_struct *p, int prio,
- unsigned char *swap_map)
+ unsigned char *swap_map,
+ unsigned long *frontswap_map)
{
int i, prev;
@@ -1496,6 +1515,7 @@ static void enable_swap_info(struct swap_info_struct *p, int prio,
else
p->prio = --least_priority;
p->swap_map = swap_map;
+ frontswap_map_set(p, frontswap_map);
p->flags |= SWP_WRITEOK;
nr_swap_pages += p->pages;
total_swap_pages += p->pages;
@@ -1512,6 +1532,7 @@ static void enable_swap_info(struct swap_info_struct *p, int prio,
swap_list.head = swap_list.next = p->type;
else
swap_info[prev]->next = p->type;
+ frontswap_init(p->type);
spin_unlock(&swap_lock);
}
@@ -1585,7 +1606,7 @@ SYSCALL_DEFINE1(swapoff, const char __user *, specialfile)
spin_unlock(&swap_lock);
oom_score_adj = test_set_oom_score_adj(OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MAX);
- err = try_to_unuse(type);
+ err = try_to_unuse(type, false, 0); /* force all pages to be unused */
compare_swap_oom_score_adj(OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MAX, oom_score_adj);
if (err) {
@@ -1596,7 +1617,7 @@ SYSCALL_DEFINE1(swapoff, const char __user *, specialfile)
* sys_swapoff for this swap_info_struct at this point.
*/
/* re-insert swap space back into swap_list */
- enable_swap_info(p, p->prio, p->swap_map);
+ enable_swap_info(p, p->prio, p->swap_map, frontswap_map_get(p));
goto out_dput;
}
@@ -1622,9 +1643,11 @@ SYSCALL_DEFINE1(swapoff, const char __user *, specialfile)
swap_map = p->swap_map;
p->swap_map = NULL;
p->flags = 0;
+ frontswap_invalidate_area(type);
spin_unlock(&swap_lock);
mutex_unlock(&swapon_mutex);
vfree(swap_map);
+ vfree(frontswap_map_get(p));
/* Destroy swap account informatin */
swap_cgroup_swapoff(type);
@@ -1988,6 +2011,7 @@ SYSCALL_DEFINE2(swapon, const char __user *, specialfile, int, swap_flags)
sector_t span;
unsigned long maxpages;
unsigned char *swap_map = NULL;
+ unsigned long *frontswap_map = NULL;
struct page *page = NULL;
struct inode *inode = NULL;
@@ -2071,6 +2095,9 @@ SYSCALL_DEFINE2(swapon, const char __user *, specialfile, int, swap_flags)
error = nr_extents;
goto bad_swap;
}
+ /* frontswap enabled? set up bit-per-page map for frontswap */
+ if (frontswap_enabled)
+ frontswap_map = vzalloc(maxpages / sizeof(long));
if (p->bdev) {
if (blk_queue_nonrot(bdev_get_queue(p->bdev))) {
@@ -2086,14 +2113,15 @@ SYSCALL_DEFINE2(swapon, const char __user *, specialfile, int, swap_flags)
if (swap_flags & SWAP_FLAG_PREFER)
prio =
(swap_flags & SWAP_FLAG_PRIO_MASK) >> SWAP_FLAG_PRIO_SHIFT;
- enable_swap_info(p, prio, swap_map);
+ enable_swap_info(p, prio, swap_map, frontswap_map);
printk(KERN_INFO "Adding %uk swap on %s. "
- "Priority:%d extents:%d across:%lluk %s%s\n",
+ "Priority:%d extents:%d across:%lluk %s%s%s\n",
p->pages<<(PAGE_SHIFT-10), name, p->prio,
nr_extents, (unsigned long long)span<<(PAGE_SHIFT-10),
(p->flags & SWP_SOLIDSTATE) ? "SS" : "",
- (p->flags & SWP_DISCARDABLE) ? "D" : "");
+ (p->flags & SWP_DISCARDABLE) ? "D" : "",
+ (frontswap_map) ? "FS" : "");
mutex_unlock(&swapon_mutex);
atomic_inc(&proc_poll_event);