Re: [PATCH 6/8] memcg asynchronous memory reclaim interface
From: Hiroyuki Kamezawa
Date: Fri May 20 2011 - 19:56:56 EST
2011/5/21 Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
> On Fri, 20 May 2011 12:46:36 +0900
> KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> This patch adds a logic to keep usage margin to the limit in asynchronous way.
>> When the usage over some threshould (determined automatically), asynchronous
>> memory reclaim runs and shrink memory to limit - MEMCG_ASYNC_STOP_MARGIN.
>>
>> By this, there will be no difference in total amount of usage of cpu to
>> scan the LRU
>
> This is not true if "don't writepage at all (revisit this when
> dirty_ratio comes.)" is true. Skipping over dirty pages can cause
> larger amounts of CPU consumption.
>
>> but we'll have a chance to make use of wait time of applications
>> for freeing memory. For example, when an application read a file or socket,
>> to fill the newly alloated memory, it needs wait. Async reclaim can make use
>> of that time and give a chance to reduce latency by background works.
>>
>> This patch only includes required hooks to trigger async reclaim and user interfaces.
>> Core logics will be in the following patches.
>>
>>
>> ...
>>
>> /*
>> + * For example, with transparent hugepages, memory reclaim scan at hitting
>> + * limit can very long as to reclaim HPAGE_SIZE of memory. This increases
>> + * latency of page fault and may cause fallback. At usual page allocation,
>> + * we'll see some (shorter) latency, too. To reduce latency, it's appreciated
>> + * to free memory in background to make margin to the limit. This consumes
>> + * cpu but we'll have a chance to make use of wait time of applications
>> + * (read disk etc..) by asynchronous reclaim.
>> + *
>> + * This async reclaim tries to reclaim HPAGE_SIZE * 2 of pages when margin
>> + * to the limit is smaller than HPAGE_SIZE * 2. This will be enabled
>> + * automatically when the limit is set and it's greater than the threshold.
>> + */
>> +#if HPAGE_SIZE != PAGE_SIZE
>> +#define MEMCG_ASYNC_LIMIT_THRESH (HPAGE_SIZE * 64)
>> +#define MEMCG_ASYNC_MARGIN (HPAGE_SIZE * 4)
>> +#else /* make the margin as 4M bytes */
>> +#define MEMCG_ASYNC_LIMIT_THRESH (128 * 1024 * 1024)
>> +#define MEMCG_ASYNC_MARGIN (8 * 1024 * 1024)
>> +#endif
>
> Document them, please. How are they used, what are their units.
>
will do.
>> +static void mem_cgroup_may_async_reclaim(struct mem_cgroup *mem);
>> +
>> +/*
>> * The memory controller data structure. The memory controller controls both
>> * page cache and RSS per cgroup. We would eventually like to provide
>> * statistics based on the statistics developed by Rik Van Riel for clock-pro,
>> @@ -278,6 +303,12 @@ struct mem_cgroup {
>> */
>> unsigned long move_charge_at_immigrate;
>> /*
>> + * Checks for async reclaim.
>> + */
>> + unsigned long async_flags;
>> +#define AUTO_ASYNC_ENABLED (0)
>> +#define USE_AUTO_ASYNC (1)
>
> These are really confusing. I looked at the implementation and at the
> documentation file and I'm still scratching my head. I can't work out
> why they exist. With the amount of effort I put into it ;)
>
> Also, AUTO_ASYNC_ENABLED and USE_AUTO_ASYNC have practically the same
> meaning, which doesn't help things.
>
Ah, yes it's confusing.
> Some careful description at this place in the code might help clear
> things up.
>
yes, I'll fix and add text, consider better name.
> Perhaps s/USE_AUTO_ASYNC/AUTO_ASYNC_IN_USE/ is what you meant.
>
Ah, good name :)
>>
>> ...
>>
>> +static void mem_cgroup_may_async_reclaim(struct mem_cgroup *mem)
>> +{
>> + if (!test_bit(USE_AUTO_ASYNC, &mem->async_flags))
>> + return;
>> + if (res_counter_margin(&mem->res) <= MEMCG_ASYNC_MARGIN) {
>> + /* Fill here */
>> + }
>> +}
>
> I'd expect a function called foo_may_bar() to return a bool.
>
ok,
> But given the lack of documentation and no-op implementation, I have o
> idea what's happening here!
>
yes. Hmm, maybe adding an empty function here and comments on the
function will make this better.
Thank you for review.
-Kame
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