2017-05-19 15:22 GMT+01:00 Konstantin Khlebnikov <khlebnikov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
Show count of global oom killer invocations in /proc/vmstat and
count of oom kills inside memory cgroup in knob "memory.events"
(in memory.oom_control for v1 cgroup).
Also describe difference between "oom" and "oom_kill" in memory
cgroup documentation. Currently oom in memory cgroup kills tasks
iff shortage has happened inside page fault.
These counters helps in monitoring oom kills - for now
the only way is grepping for magic words in kernel log.
Signed-off-by: Konstantin Khlebnikov <khlebnikov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
Documentation/cgroup-v2.txt | 12 +++++++++++-
include/linux/memcontrol.h | 1 +
include/linux/vm_event_item.h | 1 +
mm/memcontrol.c | 2 ++
mm/oom_kill.c | 6 ++++++
mm/vmstat.c | 1 +
6 files changed, 22 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/Documentation/cgroup-v2.txt b/Documentation/cgroup-v2.txt
index dc5e2dcdbef4..a742008d76aa 100644
--- a/Documentation/cgroup-v2.txt
+++ b/Documentation/cgroup-v2.txt
@@ -830,9 +830,19 @@ PAGE_SIZE multiple when read back.
oom
+ The number of time the cgroup's memory usage was
+ reached the limit and allocation was about to fail.
+ Result could be oom kill, -ENOMEM from any syscall or
+ completely ignored in cases like disk readahead.
+ For now oom in memory cgroup kills tasks iff shortage
+ has happened inside page fault.
From a user's point of view the difference between "oom" and "max"
becomes really vague here,
assuming that "max" is described almost in the same words:
"The number of times the cgroup's memory usage was
about to go over the max boundary. If direct reclaim
fails to bring it down, the OOM killer is invoked."
I wonder, if it's better to fix the existing "oom" value to show what
it has to show, according to docs,
rather than to introduce a new one?
+
+ oom_kill
+
The number of times the OOM killer has been invoked in
the cgroup. This may not exactly match the number of
- processes killed but should generally be close.
+ processes killed but should generally be close: each
+ invocation could kill several processes at once.
memory.stat