Re: [PATCH] mm/mglru: fix cgroup OOM during MGLRU state switching
From: Kairui Song
Date: Mon Mar 02 2026 - 03:01:41 EST
On Mon, Mar 2, 2026 at 3:43 PM Yafang Shao <laoar.shao@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Mar 2, 2026 at 2:58 PM Barry Song <21cnbao@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > I assume latency is not a concern for a very rare
> > MGLRU on/off case. Do you require the switch to happen
> > with zero latency?
> > My main concern is the correctness of the code.
> >
> > Now the proposed patch is:
> >
> > + bool lrugen_enabled = smp_load_acquire(&lruvec->lrugen.enabled);
> > + bool lru_draining = smp_load_acquire(&lruvec->lrugen.draining);
> >
> > Then choose MGLRU or active/inactive LRU based on
> > those values.
> >
> > However, nothing prevents those values from changing
> > after they are read. Even within the shrink path,
> > they can still change.
Hi all,
> If these values are changed during reclaim, the currently running
> reclaimer will continue to operate with the old settings, while any
> new reclaimer processes will adopt the new values. This approach
> should prevent any immediate issues, but the primary risk of this
> lockless method is the potential for a user to rapidly toggle the
> MGLRU feature, particularly during an intermediate state.
>
> >
> > So I think we need an rwsem or something similar here —
> > a read lock for shrink and a write lock for on/off. The
> > write lock should happen very rarely.
>
> We can introduce a lock-based mechanism in v2.
I hope we don't need a lock here. Currently there is only a static
key, this patch is already adding more branches, a lock will make
things more complex and the shrinking path is quite performance
sensitive.
> >
> > To be honest, the on/off toggle is quite odd. If possible,
> > I’d prefer not to switch MGLRU or active/inactive
> > dynamically. Once it’s set up during system boot, it
> > should remain unchanged.
>
> While it is well-suited for Android environments, it is not viable for
> Kubernetes production servers, where rebooting is highly disruptive.
> This limitation is precisely why we need to introduce dynamic toggles.
I agree with Barry, the switch isn't supposed to be a knob to be
turned on/off frequently. And I think in the long term we should just
identify the workloads where MGLRU doesn't work well, and fix MGLRU.
Having two LRUs in the kernel is already very odd.