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authorMel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>2012-10-25 14:16:31 +0200
committerMel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>2012-12-11 14:42:39 +0000
commitd10e63f29488b0f312a443f9507ea9b6fd3c9090 (patch)
treeb39e3caa5d25e9e5ebad84c606a724e25c6b8e91 /mm/mempolicy.c
parent1ba6e0b50b479cbadb8f05ebde3020da9ac87201 (diff)
downloadlinux-d10e63f29488b0f312a443f9507ea9b6fd3c9090.tar.bz2
mm: numa: Create basic numa page hinting infrastructure
Note: This patch started as "mm/mpol: Create special PROT_NONE infrastructure" and preserves the basic idea but steals *very* heavily from "autonuma: numa hinting page faults entry points" for the actual fault handlers without the migration parts. The end result is barely recognisable as either patch so all Signed-off and Reviewed-bys are dropped. If Peter, Ingo and Andrea are ok with this version, I will re-add the signed-offs-by to reflect the history. In order to facilitate a lazy -- fault driven -- migration of pages, create a special transient PAGE_NUMA variant, we can then use the 'spurious' protection faults to drive our migrations from. The meaning of PAGE_NUMA depends on the architecture but on x86 it is effectively PROT_NONE. Actual PROT_NONE mappings will not generate these NUMA faults for the reason that the page fault code checks the permission on the VMA (and will throw a segmentation fault on actual PROT_NONE mappings), before it ever calls handle_mm_fault. [dhillf@gmail.com: Fix typo] Signed-off-by: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de> Reviewed-by: Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
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