This patch insures that the slab node lists in the NUMA case only contain
slabs that belong to that specific node. All slab allocations use
GFP_THISNODE when calling into the page allocator. If an allocation fails
then we fall back in the slab allocator according to the zonelists appropriate
for a certain context.
This allows a replication of the behavior of alloc_pages and alloc_pages node
in the slab layer.
Currently allocations requested from the page allocator may be redirected via
cpusets to other nodes. This results in remote pages on nodelists and that in
turn results in interrupt latency issues during cache draining. Plus the slab
is handing out memory as local when it is really remote.
Fallback for slab memory allocations will occur within the slab allocator and
not in the page allocator. This is necessary in order to be able to use the
existing pools of objects on the nodes that we fall back to before adding more
pages to a slab.
The fallback function insures that the nodes we fall back to obey cpuset
restrictions of the current context. We do not allocate objects from outside
of the current cpuset context like before.
Note that the implementation of locality constraints within the slab allocator
requires importing logic from the page allocator. This is a mischmash that is
not that great. Other allocators (uncached allocator, vmalloc, huge pages)
face similar problems and have similar minimal reimplementations of the basic
fallback logic of the page allocator. There is another way of implementing a
slab by avoiding per node lists (see modular slab) but this wont work within
the existing slab.
V1->V2:
- Use NUMA_BUILD to avoid #ifdef CONFIG_NUMA
- Exploit GFP_THISNODE being 0 in the NON_NUMA case to avoid another
#ifdef
[akpm@osdl.org: build fix] Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>