Re: [RFC] Storing cgroup id in page->private (Was: Re: [RFC] [PATCH0/6] Provide cgroup isolation for buffered writes.)

From: KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki
Date: Thu Mar 10 2011 - 22:20:20 EST


On Thu, 10 Mar 2011 22:15:04 -0500
Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 11:52:35AM +0900, KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki wrote:
> > On Thu, 10 Mar 2011 21:15:31 -0500
> > Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > > > IMO, if you really need some per-page information, then just put it
> > > > in the struct page - you can't hide the memory overhead just by
> > > > having the filesystem to store it for you. That just adds
> > > > unnecessary complexity...
> > >
> > > Ok. I guess adding anything to struct page is going to be hard and
> > > we might have to fall back to looking into using page_cgroup for
> > > tracking page state. I was trying to explore the ways so that we don't
> > > have to instantiate whole page_cgroup structure just for trying
> > > to figure out who dirtied the page.
> > >
> >
> > Is this bad ?
> > ==
>
> Sounds like an interesting idea. I am primarily concered about the radix
> tree node size increase. Not sure how big a concern this is.
>
> Also tracking is useful for two things.
>
> - Proportinal IO
> - IO throttling
>
> For proportional IO, anyway we have to use it with memory controller to
> control per cgroup dirty ratio so storing info in page_cgroup should
> not hurt.
>

dirty-ratio for memcg will be implemented. It's definitely necessary.

> The only other case where dependence on page_cgroup hurts is IO throttling
> where IO controller does not really need memory cgroup controller (I hope
> so). But we are still not sure if throttling IO at device level is a
> good idea and how to resolve issues related to priority inversion.
>
Yes, that's priority inversion is my concern.

Thanks,
-Kame

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