1.. _numa_memory_policy: 2 3================== 4NUMA Memory Policy 5================== 6 7What is NUMA Memory Policy? 8============================ 9 10In the Linux kernel, "memory policy" determines from which node the kernel will 11allocate memory in a NUMA system or in an emulated NUMA system. Linux has 12supported platforms with Non-Uniform Memory Access architectures since 2.4.?. 13The current memory policy support was added to Linux 2.6 around May 2004. This 14document attempts to describe the concepts and APIs of the 2.6 memory policy 15support. 16 17Memory policies should not be confused with cpusets 18(``Documentation/admin-guide/cgroup-v1/cpusets.rst``) 19which is an administrative mechanism for restricting the nodes from which 20memory may be allocated by a set of processes. Memory policies are a 21programming interface that a NUMA-aware application can take advantage of. When 22both cpusets and policies are applied to a task, the restrictions of the cpuset 23takes priority. See :ref:`Memory Policies and cpusets <mem_pol_and_cpusets>` 24below for more details. 25 26Memory Policy Concepts 27====================== 28 29Scope of Memory Policies 30------------------------ 31 32The Linux kernel supports _scopes_ of memory policy, described here from 33most general to most specific: 34 35System Default Policy 36 this policy is "hard coded" into the kernel. It is the policy 37 that governs all page allocations that aren't controlled by 38 one of the more specific policy scopes discussed below. When 39 the system is "up and running", the system default policy will 40 use "local allocation" described below. However, during boot 41 up, the system default policy will be set to interleave 42 allocations across all nodes with "sufficient" memory, so as 43 not to overload the initial boot node with boot-time 44 allocations. 45 46Task/Process Policy 47 this is an optional, per-task policy. When defined for a 48 specific task, this policy controls all page allocations made 49 by or on behalf of the task that aren't controlled by a more 50 specific scope. If a task does not define a task policy, then 51 all page allocations that would have been controlled by the 52 task policy "fall back" to the System Default Policy. 53 54 The task policy applies to the entire address space of a task. Thus, 55 it is inheritable, and indeed is inherited, across both fork() 56 [clone() w/o the CLONE_VM flag] and exec*(). This allows a parent task 57 to establish the task policy for a child task exec()'d from an 58 executable image that has no awareness of memory policy. See the 59 :ref:`Memory Policy APIs <memory_policy_apis>` section, 60 below, for an overview of the system call 61 that a task may use to set/change its task/process policy. 62 63 In a multi-threaded task, task policies apply only to the thread 64 [Linux kernel task] that installs the policy and any threads 65 subsequently created by that thread. Any sibling threads existing 66 at the time a new task policy is installed retain their current 67 policy. 68 69 A task policy applies only to pages allocated after the policy is 70 installed. Any pages already faulted in by the task when the task 71 changes its task policy remain where they were allocated based on 72 the policy at the time they were allocated. 73 74.. _vma_policy: 75 76VMA Policy 77 A "VMA" or "Virtual Memory Area" refers to a range of a task's 78 virtual address space. A task may define a specific policy for a range 79 of its virtual address space. See the 80 :ref:`Memory Policy APIs <memory_policy_apis>` section, 81 below, for an overview of the mbind() system call used to set a VMA 82 policy. 83 84 A VMA policy will govern the allocation of pages that back 85 this region of the address space. Any regions of the task's 86 address space that don't have an explicit VMA policy will fall 87 back to the task policy, which may itself fall back to the 88 System Default Policy. 89 90 VMA policies have a few complicating details: 91 92 * VMA policy applies ONLY to anonymous pages. These include 93 pages allocated for anonymous segments, such as the task 94 stack and heap, and any regions of the address space 95 mmap()ed with the MAP_ANONYMOUS flag. If a VMA policy is 96 applied to a file mapping, it will be ignored if the mapping 97 used the MAP_SHARED flag. If the file mapping used the 98 MAP_PRIVATE flag, the VMA policy will only be applied when 99 an anonymous page is allocated on an attempt to write to the 100 mapping-- i.e., at Copy-On-Write. 101 102 * VMA policies are shared between all tasks that share a 103 virtual address space--a.k.a. threads--independent of when 104 the policy is installed; and they are inherited across 105 fork(). However, because VMA policies refer to a specific 106 region of a task's address space, and because the address 107 space is discarded and recreated on exec*(), VMA policies 108 are NOT inheritable across exec(). Thus, only NUMA-aware 109 applications may use VMA policies. 110 111 * A task may install a new VMA policy on a sub-range of a 112 previously mmap()ed region. When this happens, Linux splits 113 the existing virtual memory area into 2 or 3 VMAs, each with 114 it's own policy. 115 116 * By default, VMA policy applies only to pages allocated after 117 the policy is installed. Any pages already faulted into the 118 VMA range remain where they were allocated based on the 119 policy at the time they were allocated. However, since 120 2.6.16, Linux supports page migration via the mbind() system 121 call, so that page contents can be moved to match a newly 122 installed policy. 123 124Shared Policy 125 Conceptually, shared policies apply to "memory objects" mapped 126 shared into one or more tasks' distinct address spaces. An 127 application installs shared policies the same way as VMA 128 policies--using the mbind() system call specifying a range of 129 virtual addresses that map the shared object. However, unlike 130 VMA policies, which can be considered to be an attribute of a 131 range of a task's address space, shared policies apply 132 directly to the shared object. Thus, all tasks that attach to 133 the object share the policy, and all pages allocated for the 134 shared object, by any task, will obey the shared policy. 135 136 As of 2.6.22, only shared memory segments, created by shmget() or 137 mmap(MAP_ANONYMOUS|MAP_SHARED), support shared policy. When shared 138 policy support was added to Linux, the associated data structures were 139 added to hugetlbfs shmem segments. At the time, hugetlbfs did not 140 support allocation at fault time--a.k.a lazy allocation--so hugetlbfs 141 shmem segments were never "hooked up" to the shared policy support. 142 Although hugetlbfs segments now support lazy allocation, their support 143 for shared policy has not been completed. 144 145 As mentioned above in :ref:`VMA policies <vma_policy>` section, 146 allocations of page cache pages for regular files mmap()ed 147 with MAP_SHARED ignore any VMA policy installed on the virtual 148 address range backed by the shared file mapping. Rather, 149 shared page cache pages, including pages backing private 150 mappings that have not yet been written by the task, follow 151 task policy, if any, else System Default Policy. 152 153 The shared policy infrastructure supports different policies on subset 154 ranges of the shared object. However, Linux still splits the VMA of 155 the task that installs the policy for each range of distinct policy. 156 Thus, different tasks that attach to a shared memory segment can have 157 different VMA configurations mapping that one shared object. This 158 can be seen by examining the /proc/<pid>/numa_maps of tasks sharing 159 a shared memory region, when one task has installed shared policy on 160 one or more ranges of the region. 161 162Components of Memory Policies 163----------------------------- 164 165A NUMA memory policy consists of a "mode", optional mode flags, and 166an optional set of nodes. The mode determines the behavior of the 167policy, the optional mode flags determine the behavior of the mode, 168and the optional set of nodes can be viewed as the arguments to the 169policy behavior. 170 171Internally, memory policies are implemented by a reference counted 172structure, struct mempolicy. Details of this structure will be 173discussed in context, below, as required to explain the behavior. 174 175NUMA memory policy supports the following 4 behavioral modes: 176 177Default Mode--MPOL_DEFAULT 178 This mode is only used in the memory policy APIs. Internally, 179 MPOL_DEFAULT is converted to the NULL memory policy in all 180 policy scopes. Any existing non-default policy will simply be 181 removed when MPOL_DEFAULT is specified. As a result, 182 MPOL_DEFAULT means "fall back to the next most specific policy 183 scope." 184 185 For example, a NULL or default task policy will fall back to the 186 system default policy. A NULL or default vma policy will fall 187 back to the task policy. 188 189 When specified in one of the memory policy APIs, the Default mode 190 does not use the optional set of nodes. 191 192 It is an error for the set of nodes specified for this policy to 193 be non-empty. 194 195MPOL_BIND 196 This mode specifies that memory must come from the set of 197 nodes specified by the policy. Memory will be allocated from 198 the node in the set with sufficient free memory that is 199 closest to the node where the allocation takes place. 200 201MPOL_PREFERRED 202 This mode specifies that the allocation should be attempted 203 from the single node specified in the policy. If that 204 allocation fails, the kernel will search other nodes, in order 205 of increasing distance from the preferred node based on 206 information provided by the platform firmware. 207 208 Internally, the Preferred policy uses a single node--the 209 preferred_node member of struct mempolicy. When the internal 210 mode flag MPOL_F_LOCAL is set, the preferred_node is ignored 211 and the policy is interpreted as local allocation. "Local" 212 allocation policy can be viewed as a Preferred policy that 213 starts at the node containing the cpu where the allocation 214 takes place. 215 216 It is possible for the user to specify that local allocation 217 is always preferred by passing an empty nodemask with this 218 mode. If an empty nodemask is passed, the policy cannot use 219 the MPOL_F_STATIC_NODES or MPOL_F_RELATIVE_NODES flags 220 described below. 221 222MPOL_INTERLEAVED 223 This mode specifies that page allocations be interleaved, on a 224 page granularity, across the nodes specified in the policy. 225 This mode also behaves slightly differently, based on the 226 context where it is used: 227 228 For allocation of anonymous pages and shared memory pages, 229 Interleave mode indexes the set of nodes specified by the 230 policy using the page offset of the faulting address into the 231 segment [VMA] containing the address modulo the number of 232 nodes specified by the policy. It then attempts to allocate a 233 page, starting at the selected node, as if the node had been 234 specified by a Preferred policy or had been selected by a 235 local allocation. That is, allocation will follow the per 236 node zonelist. 237 238 For allocation of page cache pages, Interleave mode indexes 239 the set of nodes specified by the policy using a node counter 240 maintained per task. This counter wraps around to the lowest 241 specified node after it reaches the highest specified node. 242 This will tend to spread the pages out over the nodes 243 specified by the policy based on the order in which they are 244 allocated, rather than based on any page offset into an 245 address range or file. During system boot up, the temporary 246 interleaved system default policy works in this mode. 247 248MPOL_PREFERRED_MANY 249 This mode specifices that the allocation should be preferrably 250 satisfied from the nodemask specified in the policy. If there is 251 a memory pressure on all nodes in the nodemask, the allocation 252 can fall back to all existing numa nodes. This is effectively 253 MPOL_PREFERRED allowed for a mask rather than a single node. 254 255NUMA memory policy supports the following optional mode flags: 256 257MPOL_F_STATIC_NODES 258 This flag specifies that the nodemask passed by 259 the user should not be remapped if the task or VMA's set of allowed 260 nodes changes after the memory policy has been defined. 261 262 Without this flag, any time a mempolicy is rebound because of a 263 change in the set of allowed nodes, the preferred nodemask (Preferred 264 Many), preferred node (Preferred) or nodemask (Bind, Interleave) is 265 remapped to the new set of allowed nodes. This may result in nodes 266 being used that were previously undesired. 267 268 With this flag, if the user-specified nodes overlap with the 269 nodes allowed by the task's cpuset, then the memory policy is 270 applied to their intersection. If the two sets of nodes do not 271 overlap, the Default policy is used. 272 273 For example, consider a task that is attached to a cpuset with 274 mems 1-3 that sets an Interleave policy over the same set. If 275 the cpuset's mems change to 3-5, the Interleave will now occur 276 over nodes 3, 4, and 5. With this flag, however, since only node 277 3 is allowed from the user's nodemask, the "interleave" only 278 occurs over that node. If no nodes from the user's nodemask are 279 now allowed, the Default behavior is used. 280 281 MPOL_F_STATIC_NODES cannot be combined with the 282 MPOL_F_RELATIVE_NODES flag. It also cannot be used for 283 MPOL_PREFERRED policies that were created with an empty nodemask 284 (local allocation). 285 286MPOL_F_RELATIVE_NODES 287 This flag specifies that the nodemask passed 288 by the user will be mapped relative to the set of the task or VMA's 289 set of allowed nodes. The kernel stores the user-passed nodemask, 290 and if the allowed nodes changes, then that original nodemask will 291 be remapped relative to the new set of allowed nodes. 292 293 Without this flag (and without MPOL_F_STATIC_NODES), anytime a 294 mempolicy is rebound because of a change in the set of allowed 295 nodes, the node (Preferred) or nodemask (Bind, Interleave) is 296 remapped to the new set of allowed nodes. That remap may not 297 preserve the relative nature of the user's passed nodemask to its 298 set of allowed nodes upon successive rebinds: a nodemask of 299 1,3,5 may be remapped to 7-9 and then to 1-3 if the set of 300 allowed nodes is restored to its original state. 301 302 With this flag, the remap is done so that the node numbers from 303 the user's passed nodemask are relative to the set of allowed 304 nodes. In other words, if nodes 0, 2, and 4 are set in the user's 305 nodemask, the policy will be effected over the first (and in the 306 Bind or Interleave case, the third and fifth) nodes in the set of 307 allowed nodes. The nodemask passed by the user represents nodes 308 relative to task or VMA's set of allowed nodes. 309 310 If the user's nodemask includes nodes that are outside the range 311 of the new set of allowed nodes (for example, node 5 is set in 312 the user's nodemask when the set of allowed nodes is only 0-3), 313 then the remap wraps around to the beginning of the nodemask and, 314 if not already set, sets the node in the mempolicy nodemask. 315 316 For example, consider a task that is attached to a cpuset with 317 mems 2-5 that sets an Interleave policy over the same set with 318 MPOL_F_RELATIVE_NODES. If the cpuset's mems change to 3-7, the 319 interleave now occurs over nodes 3,5-7. If the cpuset's mems 320 then change to 0,2-3,5, then the interleave occurs over nodes 321 0,2-3,5. 322 323 Thanks to the consistent remapping, applications preparing 324 nodemasks to specify memory policies using this flag should 325 disregard their current, actual cpuset imposed memory placement 326 and prepare the nodemask as if they were always located on 327 memory nodes 0 to N-1, where N is the number of memory nodes the 328 policy is intended to manage. Let the kernel then remap to the 329 set of memory nodes allowed by the task's cpuset, as that may 330 change over time. 331 332 MPOL_F_RELATIVE_NODES cannot be combined with the 333 MPOL_F_STATIC_NODES flag. It also cannot be used for 334 MPOL_PREFERRED policies that were created with an empty nodemask 335 (local allocation). 336 337Memory Policy Reference Counting 338================================ 339 340To resolve use/free races, struct mempolicy contains an atomic reference 341count field. Internal interfaces, mpol_get()/mpol_put() increment and 342decrement this reference count, respectively. mpol_put() will only free 343the structure back to the mempolicy kmem cache when the reference count 344goes to zero. 345 346When a new memory policy is allocated, its reference count is initialized 347to '1', representing the reference held by the task that is installing the 348new policy. When a pointer to a memory policy structure is stored in another 349structure, another reference is added, as the task's reference will be dropped 350on completion of the policy installation. 351 352During run-time "usage" of the policy, we attempt to minimize atomic operations 353on the reference count, as this can lead to cache lines bouncing between cpus 354and NUMA nodes. "Usage" here means one of the following: 355 3561) querying of the policy, either by the task itself [using the get_mempolicy() 357 API discussed below] or by another task using the /proc/<pid>/numa_maps 358 interface. 359 3602) examination of the policy to determine the policy mode and associated node 361 or node lists, if any, for page allocation. This is considered a "hot 362 path". Note that for MPOL_BIND, the "usage" extends across the entire 363 allocation process, which may sleep during page reclaimation, because the 364 BIND policy nodemask is used, by reference, to filter ineligible nodes. 365 366We can avoid taking an extra reference during the usages listed above as 367follows: 368 3691) we never need to get/free the system default policy as this is never 370 changed nor freed, once the system is up and running. 371 3722) for querying the policy, we do not need to take an extra reference on the 373 target task's task policy nor vma policies because we always acquire the 374 task's mm's mmap_lock for read during the query. The set_mempolicy() and 375 mbind() APIs [see below] always acquire the mmap_lock for write when 376 installing or replacing task or vma policies. Thus, there is no possibility 377 of a task or thread freeing a policy while another task or thread is 378 querying it. 379 3803) Page allocation usage of task or vma policy occurs in the fault path where 381 we hold them mmap_lock for read. Again, because replacing the task or vma 382 policy requires that the mmap_lock be held for write, the policy can't be 383 freed out from under us while we're using it for page allocation. 384 3854) Shared policies require special consideration. One task can replace a 386 shared memory policy while another task, with a distinct mmap_lock, is 387 querying or allocating a page based on the policy. To resolve this 388 potential race, the shared policy infrastructure adds an extra reference 389 to the shared policy during lookup while holding a spin lock on the shared 390 policy management structure. This requires that we drop this extra 391 reference when we're finished "using" the policy. We must drop the 392 extra reference on shared policies in the same query/allocation paths 393 used for non-shared policies. For this reason, shared policies are marked 394 as such, and the extra reference is dropped "conditionally"--i.e., only 395 for shared policies. 396 397 Because of this extra reference counting, and because we must lookup 398 shared policies in a tree structure under spinlock, shared policies are 399 more expensive to use in the page allocation path. This is especially 400 true for shared policies on shared memory regions shared by tasks running 401 on different NUMA nodes. This extra overhead can be avoided by always 402 falling back to task or system default policy for shared memory regions, 403 or by prefaulting the entire shared memory region into memory and locking 404 it down. However, this might not be appropriate for all applications. 405 406.. _memory_policy_apis: 407 408Memory Policy APIs 409================== 410 411Linux supports 3 system calls for controlling memory policy. These APIS 412always affect only the calling task, the calling task's address space, or 413some shared object mapped into the calling task's address space. 414 415.. note:: 416 the headers that define these APIs and the parameter data types for 417 user space applications reside in a package that is not part of the 418 Linux kernel. The kernel system call interfaces, with the 'sys\_' 419 prefix, are defined in <linux/syscalls.h>; the mode and flag 420 definitions are defined in <linux/mempolicy.h>. 421 422Set [Task] Memory Policy:: 423 424 long set_mempolicy(int mode, const unsigned long *nmask, 425 unsigned long maxnode); 426 427Set's the calling task's "task/process memory policy" to mode 428specified by the 'mode' argument and the set of nodes defined by 429'nmask'. 'nmask' points to a bit mask of node ids containing at least 430'maxnode' ids. Optional mode flags may be passed by combining the 431'mode' argument with the flag (for example: MPOL_INTERLEAVE | 432MPOL_F_STATIC_NODES). 433 434See the set_mempolicy(2) man page for more details 435 436 437Get [Task] Memory Policy or Related Information:: 438 439 long get_mempolicy(int *mode, 440 const unsigned long *nmask, unsigned long maxnode, 441 void *addr, int flags); 442 443Queries the "task/process memory policy" of the calling task, or the 444policy or location of a specified virtual address, depending on the 445'flags' argument. 446 447See the get_mempolicy(2) man page for more details 448 449 450Install VMA/Shared Policy for a Range of Task's Address Space:: 451 452 long mbind(void *start, unsigned long len, int mode, 453 const unsigned long *nmask, unsigned long maxnode, 454 unsigned flags); 455 456mbind() installs the policy specified by (mode, nmask, maxnodes) as a 457VMA policy for the range of the calling task's address space specified 458by the 'start' and 'len' arguments. Additional actions may be 459requested via the 'flags' argument. 460 461See the mbind(2) man page for more details. 462 463Memory Policy Command Line Interface 464==================================== 465 466Although not strictly part of the Linux implementation of memory policy, 467a command line tool, numactl(8), exists that allows one to: 468 469+ set the task policy for a specified program via set_mempolicy(2), fork(2) and 470 exec(2) 471 472+ set the shared policy for a shared memory segment via mbind(2) 473 474The numactl(8) tool is packaged with the run-time version of the library 475containing the memory policy system call wrappers. Some distributions 476package the headers and compile-time libraries in a separate development 477package. 478 479.. _mem_pol_and_cpusets: 480 481Memory Policies and cpusets 482=========================== 483 484Memory policies work within cpusets as described above. For memory policies 485that require a node or set of nodes, the nodes are restricted to the set of 486nodes whose memories are allowed by the cpuset constraints. If the nodemask 487specified for the policy contains nodes that are not allowed by the cpuset and 488MPOL_F_RELATIVE_NODES is not used, the intersection of the set of nodes 489specified for the policy and the set of nodes with memory is used. If the 490result is the empty set, the policy is considered invalid and cannot be 491installed. If MPOL_F_RELATIVE_NODES is used, the policy's nodes are mapped 492onto and folded into the task's set of allowed nodes as previously described. 493 494The interaction of memory policies and cpusets can be problematic when tasks 495in two cpusets share access to a memory region, such as shared memory segments 496created by shmget() of mmap() with the MAP_ANONYMOUS and MAP_SHARED flags, and 497any of the tasks install shared policy on the region, only nodes whose 498memories are allowed in both cpusets may be used in the policies. Obtaining 499this information requires "stepping outside" the memory policy APIs to use the 500cpuset information and requires that one know in what cpusets other task might 501be attaching to the shared region. Furthermore, if the cpusets' allowed 502memory sets are disjoint, "local" allocation is the only valid policy. 503