mbind — set memory policy for a memory range
#include <numaif.h>
long
mbind( |
void *addr, |
unsigned long len, | |
int mode, | |
const unsigned long *nodemask, | |
unsigned long maxnode, | |
unsigned int flags) ; |
Note | |
---|---|
There is no glibc wrapper for this system call; see NOTES. |
Note | |
---|---|
Link with |
mbind
() sets the NUMA memory
policy, which consists of a policy mode and zero or more
nodes, for the memory range starting with addr
and continuing for
len
bytes. The memory
policy defines from which node memory is allocated.
If the memory range specified by the addr
and len
arguments includes an
"anonymous" region of memory—that is a region of memory
created using the mmap(2) system call with
the MAP_ANONYMOUS
—or a
memory-mapped file, mapped using the mmap(2) system call with
the MAP_PRIVATE
flag, pages
will be allocated only according to the specified policy when
the application writes (stores) to the page. For anonymous
regions, an initial read access will use a shared page in the
kernel containing all zeros. For a file mapped with
MAP_PRIVATE
, an initial read
access will allocate pages according to the memory policy of
the thread that causes the page to be allocated. This may not
be the thread that called mbind
().
The specified policy will be ignored for any MAP_SHARED
mappings in the specified memory
range. Rather the pages will be allocated according to the
memory policy of the thread that caused the page to be
allocated. Again, this may not be the thread that called
mbind
().
If the specified memory range includes a shared memory
region created using the shmget(2) system call and
attached using the shmat(2) system call, pages
allocated for the anonymous or shared memory region will be
allocated according to the policy specified, regardless of
which process attached to the shared memory segment causes
the allocation. If, however, the shared memory region was
created with the SHM_HUGETLB
flag, the huge pages will be allocated according to the
policy specified only if the page allocation is caused by the
process that calls mbind
() for
that region.
By default, mbind
() has an
effect only for new allocations; if the pages inside the
range have been already touched before setting the policy,
then the policy has no effect. This default behavior may be
overridden by the MPOL_MF_MOVE
and MPOL_MF_MOVE_ALL
flags
described below.
The mode
argument
must specify one of MPOL_DEFAULT
, MPOL_BIND
, MPOL_INTERLEAVE
, MPOL_PREFERRED
, or MPOL_LOCAL
(which are described in detail
below). All policy modes except MPOL_DEFAULT
require the caller to specify
the node or nodes to which the mode applies, via the
nodemask
argument.
The mode
argument
may also include an optional mode
flag. The supported mode flags are:
MPOL_F_STATIC_NODES
(since
Linux-2.6.26)A nonempty nodemask
specifies
physical node IDs. Linux does not remap the nodemask
when the thread
moves to a different cpuset context, nor when the set
of nodes allowed by the thread's current cpuset context
changes.
MPOL_F_RELATIVE_NODES
(since
Linux-2.6.26)A nonempty nodemask
specifies node
IDs that are relative to the set of node IDs allowed by
the thread's current cpuset.
nodemask
points to
a bit mask of nodes containing up to maxnode
bits. The bit mask size
is rounded to the next multiple of sizeof(unsigned long), but the
kernel will use bits only up to maxnode
. A NULL value of
nodemask
or a
maxnode
value of zero
specifies the empty set of nodes. If the value of maxnode
is zero, the nodemask
argument is ignored.
Where a nodemask
is
required, it must contain at least one node that is on-line,
allowed by the thread's current cpuset context (unless the
MPOL_F_STATIC_NODES
mode flag
is specified), and contains memory.
The mode
argument
must include one of the following values:
MPOL_DEFAULT
This mode requests that any nondefault policy be
removed, restoring default behavior. When applied to a
range of memory via mbind
(), this means to use the thread
memory policy, which may have been set with set_mempolicy(2). If
the mode of the thread memory policy is also
MPOL_DEFAULT
, the
system-wide default policy will be used. The
system-wide default policy allocates pages on the node
of the CPU that triggers the allocation. For
MPOL_DEFAULT
, the
nodemask
and
maxnode
arguments must be specify the empty set of nodes.
MPOL_BIND
This mode specifies a strict policy that restricts
memory allocation to the nodes specified in nodemask
. If nodemask
specifies more
than one node, page allocations will come from the node
with sufficient free memory that is closest to the node
where the allocation takes place. Pages will not be
allocated from any node not specified in the IR
nodemask . (Before Linux 2.6.26, page allocations came
from the node with the lowest numeric node ID first,
until that node contained no free memory. Allocations
then came from the node with the next highest node ID
specified in nodemask
and so forth,
until none of the specified nodes contained free
memory.)
MPOL_INTERLEAVE
This mode specifies that page allocations be
interleaved across the set of nodes specified in
nodemask
. This
optimizes for bandwidth instead of latency by spreading
out pages and memory accesses to those pages across
multiple nodes. To be effective the memory area should
be fairly large, at least 1 MB or bigger with a fairly
uniform access pattern. Accesses to a single page of
the area will still be limited to the memory bandwidth
of a single node.
MPOL_PREFERRED
This mode sets the preferred node for allocation.
The kernel will try to allocate pages from this node
first and fall back to other nodes if the preferred
nodes is low on free memory. If nodemask
specifies more
than one node ID, the first node in the mask will be
selected as the preferred node. If the nodemask
and maxnode
arguments specify
the empty set, then the memory is allocated on the node
of the CPU that triggered the allocation.
MPOL_LOCAL
(since Linux
3.8)This mode specifies "local allocation"; the memory
is allocated on the node of the CPU that triggered the
allocation (the "local node"). The nodemask
and maxnode
arguments must
specify the empty set. If the "local node" is low on
free memory, the kernel will try to allocate memory
from other nodes. The kernel will allocate memory from
the "local node" whenever memory for this node is
available. If the "local node" is not allowed by the
thread's current cpuset context, the kernel will try to
allocate memory from other nodes. The kernel will
allocate memory from the "local node" whenever it
becomes allowed by the thread's current cpuset context.
By contrast, MPOL_DEFAULT
reverts to the memory policy of the thread (which may
be set via set_mempolicy(2));
that policy may be something other than "local
allocation".
If MPOL_MF_STRICT
is passed
in flags
and
mode
is not
MPOL_DEFAULT
, then the call
fails with the error EIO if
the existing pages in the memory range don't follow the
policy.
If MPOL_MF_MOVE
is specified
in flags
, then the
kernel will attempt to move all the existing pages in the
memory range so that they follow the policy. Pages that are
shared with other processes will not be moved. If
MPOL_MF_STRICT
is also
specified, then the call fails with the error EIO if some pages could not be moved.
If MPOL_MF_MOVE_ALL
is
passed in flags
, then
the kernel will attempt to move all existing pages in the
memory range regardless of whether other processes use the
pages. The calling thread must be privileged (CAP_SYS_NICE
) to use this flag. If
MPOL_MF_STRICT
is also
specified, then the call fails with the error EIO if some pages could not be moved.
On success, mbind
() returns
0; on error, −1 is returned and errno
is set to indicate the error.
Part or all of the memory range specified by
nodemask
and
maxnode
points
outside your accessible address space. Or, there was an
unmapped hole in the specified memory range specified
by addr
and
len
.
An invalid value was specified for flags
or mode
; or addr + len was less than
addr
; or
addr
is not a
multiple of the system page size. Or, mode
is MPOL_DEFAULT
and nodemask
specified a
nonempty set; or mode
is MPOL_BIND
or MPOL_INTERLEAVE
and nodemask
is empty. Or,
maxnode
exceeds
a kernel-imposed limit. Or, nodemask
specifies one or
more node IDs that are greater than the maximum
supported node ID. Or, none of the node IDs specified
by nodemask
are
on-line and allowed by the thread's current cpuset
context, or none of the specified nodes contain memory.
Or, the mode
argument specified both MPOL_F_STATIC_NODES
and MPOL_F_RELATIVE_NODES
.
MPOL_MF_STRICT
was
specified and an existing page was already on a node
that does not follow the policy; or MPOL_MF_MOVE
or MPOL_MF_MOVE_ALL
was specified and
the kernel was unable to move all existing pages in the
range.
Insufficient kernel memory was available.
The flags
argument included the MPOL_MF_MOVE_ALL
flag and the caller
does not have the CAP_SYS_NICE
privilege.
Glibc does not provide a wrapper for this system call. For information on library support, see numa(7).
NUMA policy is not supported on a memory-mapped file range
that was mapped with the MAP_SHARED
flag.
The MPOL_DEFAULT
mode can
have different effects for mbind
() and set_mempolicy(2). When
MPOL_DEFAULT
is specified for
set_mempolicy(2), the
thread's memory policy reverts to the system default policy
or local allocation. When MPOL_DEFAULT
is specified for a range of
memory using mbind
(), any pages
subsequently allocated for that range will use the thread's
memory policy, as set by set_mempolicy(2). This
effectively removes the explicit policy from the specified
range, "falling back" to a possibly nondefault policy. To
select explicit "local allocation" for a memory range,
specify a mode
of
MPOL_LOCAL
or MPOL_PREFERRED
with an empty set of nodes.
This method will work for set_mempolicy(2), as
well.
Support for huge page policy was added with 2.6.16. For interleave policy to be effective on huge page mappings the policied memory needs to be tens of megabytes or larger.
Before Linux 5.7. MPOL_MF_STRICT
was ignored on huge page
mappings.
MPOL_MF_MOVE
and
MPOL_MF_MOVE_ALL
are available
only on Linux 2.6.16 and later.
get_mempolicy(2), getcpu(2), mmap(2), set_mempolicy(2), shmat(2), shmget(2), numa(3), cpuset(7), numa(7), numactl(8)
This page is part of release 5.11 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page, can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man−pages/.
Copyright 2003,2004 Andi Kleen, SuSE Labs. and Copyright 2007 Lee Schermerhorn, Hewlett Packard %%%LICENSE_START(VERBATIM_PROF) Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Since the Linux kernel and libraries are constantly changing, this manual page may be incorrect or out-of-date. The author(s) assume no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein. Formatted or processed versions of this manual, if unaccompanied by the source, must acknowledge the copyright and authors of this work. %%%LICENSE_END 2006-02-03, mtk, substantial wording changes and other improvements 2007-08-27, Lee Schermerhorn <Lee.Schermerhornhp.com> more precise specification of behavior. FIXME Linux 3.8 added MPOL_MF_LAZY, which needs to be documented. Does it also apply for move_pages()? commit b24f53a0bea38b266d219ee651b22dba727c44ae Author: Lee Schermerhorn <lee.schermerhornhp.com> Date: Thu Oct 25 14:16:32 2012 +0200 |