Re: [PATCH 0/5] Some vmevent fixes...

From: KOSAKI Motohiro
Date: Mon Jun 04 2012 - 16:05:11 EST


Anton, I expect you already investigated android low memory killer so maybe you know pros and cons of each solution.
Could you convince us "why we need vmevent" and "why can't android LMK do it?"

Note that 1) and 2) are not problems per se, it's just implementation
details, easy stuff. Vmevent is basically an ABI/API, and I didn't
hear anybody who would object to vmevent ABI idea itself. More than
this, nobody stop us from implementing in-kernel vmevent API, and
make Android Lowmemory killer use it, if we want to.

I never agree "it's mere ABI" discussion. Until the implementation is ugly,
I never agree the ABI even if syscall interface is very clean.


The real problem is not with vmevent. Today there are two real problems:

a) Gathering proper statistics from the kernel. Both cgroups and vmstat
have issues. Android lowmemory killer has the same problems w/ the
statistics as vmevent, it uses vmstat, so by no means Android
low memory killer is better or easier in this regard.
(And cgroups has issues w/ slab accounting, plus some folks don't
want memcg at all, since it has runtime and memory-wise costs.)

Right. android lowmemory killer is also buggy.


b) Interpreting this statistics. We can't provide one, universal
"low memory" definition that would work for everybody.
(Btw, your "levels" based low memory grading actually sounds
the same as mine RECLAIMABLE_CACHE_PAGES and
RECLAIMABLE_CACHE_PAGES_NOIO idea, i.e.
http://lkml.indiana.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1205.0/02751.html
so personally I like the idea of level-based approach, based
on available memory *cost*.)

So, you see, all these issues are valid for vmevent, cgroups and
android low memory killer.

KOSAKI, AFAIRC, you are a person who hates android low memory killer.
Why do you hate it? If it solve problems I mentioned, do you have a concern, still?
If so, please, list up.

Android low memory killer is proved solution for a long time, at least embedded area(So many android phone already have used it) so I think improving it makes sense to me rather than inventing new wheel.

Yes, nobody throws Android lowmemory killer away. And recently I fixed
a bunch of issues in its tasks traversing and killing code. Now it's
just time to "fix" statistics gathering and interpretation issues,
and I see vmevent as a good way to do just that, and then we
can either turn Android lowmemory killer driver to use the vmevent
in-kernel API (so it will become just a "glue" between notifications
and killing functions), or use userland daemon.

Huh? No? android lowmem killer is a "killer". it doesn't make any notification,
it only kill memory hogging process. I don't think we can merge them.



Note that memcg has notifications as well, so it's another proof that
there is a demand for this stuff outside of embedded world, and going
with ad-hoc, custom "low memory killer" is simple and tempting approach,
but it doesn't solve any real problems.

Wrong.
memcg notification notify the event to _another_ mem cgroup's process. Then, it can
avoid a notified process can't work well by swap thrashing. Its feature only share a
weakness of vmevent api.



Frankly speaking, I don't know vmevent's other use cases except low memory notification

I won't speak for realistic use-cases, but that is what comes to
mind:

- DB can grow its caches/in-memory indexes infinitely, and start dropping
them on demand (based on internal LRU list, for example). No more
guessed/static configuration for DB daemons?

They uses direct-io for fine grained cache control.


- Assuming VPS hosting w/ dynamic resources management, notifications
would be useful to readjust resources?

How do they readjust? Now kvm/xen use balloon driver for dynamic resource
adjustment. AND it work more fine than vmevent because it doesn't route
userspace.


- On desktops, apps can drop their caches on demand if they want to
and can avoid swap activity?

In this case, fallocate(VOLATILE) is work more better.

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