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Date:      Tue, 28 Oct 1997 13:29:17 -0500 (EST)
From:      "John S. Dyson" <toor@dyson.iquest.net>
To:        tlambert@primenet.com (Terry Lambert)
Cc:        dyson@FreeBSD.ORG, tlambert@primenet.com, angio@angio.net, perlsta@cs.sunyit.edu, hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: help with fstat?
Message-ID:  <199710281829.NAA16590@dyson.iquest.net>
In-Reply-To: <199710281704.KAA25457@usr06.primenet.com> from Terry Lambert at "Oct 28, 97 05:04:37 pm"

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Terry Lambert said:
> > > > > There used to be a MAP_SEQUENTIAL flag to get it to discard buffers
> > > > > after they had been accesed, instead of forcing more pages off the
> > > > > LRU, but BSD doesn't support this.  8-(.
> > > > > 
> > > > > 
> > > > Try madvise(2).  It has a MADV_SEQUENTIAL.
> > > 
> > > Is this supposed to cause it to discard page A after faulting in page B
> > > on the assumption A will not be rereferenced?
> > > 
> > > I didn't think that it did this in -current...
> >
> > It doesn't 'discard', but should either deactivate or cache the page.
> 
> Then it leaves the machine with quickly faulted pages (no system call
> overhead, like read/write would need, so faulting is "unfair") filling
> the LRU, pushing off "good" pages in preference for "bad" pages.  In
> this case, "good" == "will be referenced again" and "bad" == "will not
> be referenced again".
> 
Pages are usually pretty darned unused by the time they are on the
inactive or cache queues.

-- 
John
dyson@freebsd.org
jdyson@nc.com



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