Check out my first novel, midnight's simulacra!
Pages: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
* They were a [http://lwn.net/Articles/40840/ 2003 Kernel Summit] topic, after seeing first [http://kerneltrap.org/node/418 introduction] in Linux 2.5.36 ([http://linuxgazette.net/155/krishnakumar.html LinuxGazette] primer article) | * They were a [http://lwn.net/Articles/40840/ 2003 Kernel Summit] topic, after seeing first [http://kerneltrap.org/node/418 introduction] in Linux 2.5.36 ([http://linuxgazette.net/155/krishnakumar.html LinuxGazette] primer article) | ||
* [http://lwn.net/Articles/6971/ Rohit Seth] provided the first explicit large page support to applications as covered in [http://lwn.net/Articles/6969/ this LWN article] | * [http://lwn.net/Articles/6971/ Rohit Seth] provided the first explicit large page support to applications as covered in [http://lwn.net/Articles/6969/ this LWN article] | ||
** <tt>alloc_hugepages</tt>, <tt>free_hugepages</tt>, <tt>get_large_pages(2)</tt> and <tt>shared_large_pages(2)</tt> | ** <tt>alloc_hugepages</tt>, <tt>free_hugepages</tt>, <tt>get_large_pages(2)</tt> and <tt>shared_large_pages(2)</tt> were present in kernels 2.5.36-2.5.54 | ||
* [http://www.mjmwired.net/kernel/Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt hugetlbfs] and assorted infrastructure replaced these. Mel Gorman's [http://linux-mm.org/HugePages Linux MM wiki] has a good page on hugetlbfs. | * [http://www.mjmwired.net/kernel/Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt hugetlbfs] and assorted infrastructure replaced these. Mel Gorman's [http://linux-mm.org/HugePages Linux MM wiki] has a good page on hugetlbfs. | ||
* Val Henson wrote a good 2006 [http://lwn.net/Articles/188056/ KHB article] in LWN on transparent largepage support | |||
===Applications=== | ===Applications=== |
Revision as of 05:40, 19 June 2009
Huge Pages
Making pages larger means fewer TLB misses for a given TLB size (due to more pages being supportable in the same amount of memory, due to narrower page identifiers), large mapping/releasing operations will be faster (due to fewer page table entries needing to be handled), and less memory is devoted to page table entries for a given amount of memory being indexed. The downside is possible wastage of main memory (due to pages not being used as completely). A 2002 paper from Navarro et al at Rice proposed transparent operating system support: "Transparent Operating System Support for Superpages".
Linux
- They were a 2003 Kernel Summit topic, after seeing first introduction in Linux 2.5.36 (LinuxGazette primer article)
- Rohit Seth provided the first explicit large page support to applications as covered in this LWN article
- alloc_hugepages, free_hugepages, get_large_pages(2) and shared_large_pages(2) were present in kernels 2.5.36-2.5.54
- hugetlbfs and assorted infrastructure replaced these. Mel Gorman's Linux MM wiki has a good page on hugetlbfs.
- Val Henson wrote a good 2006 KHB article in LWN on transparent largepage support
Applications
- MySQL can use hugetlbfs via the large-pages option
- kvm can use hugetlbfs with the --mem-path option since kvm-62, released in late 2008
Page Clustering
Page clustering (implemented by William Lee Irwin for Linux in 2003, and not to be confused with page-granularity swap-out clustering). There's good coverage in this KernelTrap article. This is essentially huge pages without hardware support, and therefore with some overhead and no improvements in TLB-relative performance. It was written up in Irwin's 2003 OLS paper, "A 2.5 Page Clustering Implementation".