Re: [PATCH 6/6] mm/page_owner: use stackdepot to store stacktrace

From: Michal Hocko
Date: Tue May 10 2016 - 04:57:18 EST


On Tue 10-05-16 16:07:14, Joonsoo Kim wrote:
> 2016-05-05 4:40 GMT+09:00 Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxxxx>:
> > On Thu 05-05-16 00:30:35, Joonsoo Kim wrote:
> >> 2016-05-04 18:21 GMT+09:00 Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxxxx>:
> > [...]
> >> > Do we really consume 512B of stack during reclaim. That sounds more than
> >> > worrying to me.
> >>
> >> Hmm...I checked it by ./script/stackusage and result is as below.
> >>
> >> shrink_zone() 128
> >> shrink_zone_memcg() 248
> >> shrink_active_list() 176
> >>
> >> We have a call path that shrink_zone() -> shrink_zone_memcg() ->
> >> shrink_active_list().
> >> I'm not sure whether it is the deepest path or not.
> >
> > This is definitely not the deepest path. Slab shrinkers can take more
> > but 512B is still a lot. Some call paths are already too deep when
> > calling into the allocator and some of them already use GFP_NOFS to
> > prevent from potentially deep callchain slab shrinkers. Anyway worth
> > exploring for better solutions.
> >
> > And I believe it would be better to solve this in the stackdepot
> > directly so other users do not have to invent their own ways around the
> > same issue. I have just checked the code and set_track uses save_stack
> > which does the same thing and it seems to be called from the slab
> > allocator. I have missed this usage before so the problem already does
> > exist. It would be unfair to request you to fix that in order to add a
> > new user. It would be great if this got addressed though.
>
> Yes, fixing it in stackdepot looks more reasonable.
> Then, I will just change PAGE_OWNER_STACK_DEPTH from 64 to 16 and
> leave the code as is for now. With this change, we will just consume 128B stack
> and would not cause stack problem. If anyone has an objection,
> please let me know.

128B is still quite a lot but considering there is a plan to make it
more robust I can live with it as a temporary workaround.

--
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs