AFAICR, the MCL coredump implementation I'd seen (and used as
a reference to model some of this code for lkcd) seemed to
save only a kernel dump (not user space pages), so it would
use the free and user pages as destination for compressed
dump. What you are describing sounds a little different and
closer to what we are doing. I'd be interested in takng a look
at the implementation you are working with if it actually
saves the whole memory by making use of pages it has already
compressed. Could you point me to the code ?
> located. That a lot of the complexity of MCL coredump.
>
> |
> |While the patch I'd posted has been designed so that ideally
> |it should be possible to preserve everything, I'm still not
> |certain if the compression we get is good enough for all cases
> |(e.g a heavily loaded system with lots of non-redundant data)
> |-- we really need to play around with the implementation and
> |tune it. Secondly, for a large memory system, it could take a
> |bit of time to compress all pages, and we might just want to
> |dump potentially more relevant data (e.g kernel pages) for
> |some kind of problems. It was easy enough to do this with some
> |simple heuristics like dumping inuse pages which are nonlru.
>
> ~From my experience, data is memory is very compressible
> (moreso than the average text file). Perhaps some pieces are
> not very compressible, but in the whole they are. Plus you don't
Well, it may just be a matter of how our implementation is tuned.
MCL compresses a much larger buffer at a time than we do at the
moment (we did it a page at a time to simplify some of the tracking
in the dump format), so that could be one factor to consider and
maybe rethink. Its a little early to say, though; I need to
investigate further.
> have to have that much compressions for this to work, just enough
> to give you memory to boot the next kernel and save off a dump.
Also has to be enough to not overwrite the current kernel (at
least the parts that the dump saving code is using or relying on)
> And speed is probably not a big issue here, since this should be a
> very rare occurrance.
Speed is secondary of course, but just good to keep in mind
for very large memory systems.
Regards
Suparna
Suparna Bhattacharya (suparna@in.ibm.com)
Linux Technology Center
IBM Software Labs, India
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