Kernel same-page merging


In computing, kernel same-page merging, also known as kernel shared memory, memory merging, memory deduplication, and page deduplication is a kernel feature that makes it possible for a hypervisor system to share memory pages that have identical contents between multiple processes and/or virtualized guests. While not directly linked, Kernel-based Virtual Machine can use KSM to merge memory pages occupied by virtual machines.
KSM performs memory deduplication by scanning through main memory for physical pages that have identical content, and identifies the virtual pages that are mapped to those physical pages. It leaves one page unchanged, and re-maps each duplicate page to point to the same physical page, after which it releases the extra physical page for re-use. It also marks both virtual pages as "copy-on-write", so that kernel will automatically remap a virtual page back to having its own separate physical page as soon as any process begins to write to it.
KSM was originally intended to run more virtual machines on one host by sharing memory between processes as well as virtual machines. Upon its implementation, users found KSM to also be useful for non-virtualized environments in which memory is at a premium. An experimental implementation of KSM by Red Hat found that 52 virtual instances of Windows XP with 1 GB of memory, could run on a host computer that had only 16 GB of RAM.
KSM was merged into the Linux kernel mainline in version 2.6.32, which was released on December 3, 2009. To be effective, the operating system kernel must find identical memory pages held by different processes. The kernel also needs to predict whether the pages are likely to update infrequently enough that the merging would be an efficient use of processor resources. A concern is that although memory usage is reduced, CPU usage is increased, thus negating potential increases in performance.

Security risks

Security is also a concern: