GFP_ATOMIC 与 GFP_KERNEL(转载)
本文转载至:http://lists.metaprl.org/pipermail/cs134-labs/2002-October/000025.html
The short (or kinda long) answer is this: GFP_ATOMIC means roughly "make the allocation operation atomic". This means that the kernel will try to find the memory using a pile of free memory set aside for urgent allocation. If that pile doesn't have enough free pages, the operation will fail. This flag is useful for allocation within interrupt handlers. GFP_KERNEL will try a little harder to find memory. There's a possibility that the call to kmalloc() will sleep while the kernel is trying to find memory (thus making it unsuitable for interrupt handlers). It's much more rare for an allocation with GFP_KERNEL to fail than with GFP_ATOMIC. In all cases, kmalloc() should only be used allocating small amounts of memory (a few kb). vmalloc() is better for larger amounts. Also note that in lab 1 and lab 2, it would have been arguably better to use GFP_KERNEL instead of GFP_ATOMIC. GFP_ATOMIC should be saved for those instances in which a sleep would be totally unacceptable. This is a fuzzy issue though...there's no absolute right or wrong answer.