[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Re: GSoC 2010 - Migration from memory ballooning to memory hotplug in Xen
> Yes. Another approach would be to fiddle with the E820 maps early at > boot to add more RAM, but then early_reserve it and hand it over to the > control of the balloon driver. But it does mean you need to statically > come up with the max ever at boot time. You need to do that too for memory hotadd -- you need predeclared hotadd regions. Linux mainly needs it to know in which node to put the memory. Other OS use it for other things too. > > The only advantage of using memory hotadd is that the mem_map doesn't > > need to be pre-allocated, but that's only a few percent of the memory. > > > > So it would only help if you want to add gigantic amounts of memory > > to a VM (like >20-30x of what it already has). > > > > That's not wildly unreasonable on the face of it; consider a domain > which starts at 1GB but could go up to 32GB as demand requires. But The programs which need 32GB will probably not even start in 1GB :) > > One trap is also that memory hotadd is a frequent source of regressions, > > so you'll likely run into existing bugs. > > That could be painful, but I expect the main reason for regressions is > that the code is fairly underused. Adding new users should help. Yes, and we fixed a lot of the bugs, but still a lot of them were tricky and frankly new ones might be too difficult for a SoC. -Andi -- ak@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -- Speaking for myself only. _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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