Re: Showing /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/memory.stat very slow on some machines
From: Bruce Merry
Date: Wed Jul 18 2018 - 13:58:23 EST
On 18 July 2018 at 19:48, Shakeel Butt <shakeelb@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 10:40 AM Bruce Merry <bmerry@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > Yes, very easy to produce zombies, though I don't think kernel
>> > provides any way to tell how many zombies exist on the system.
>> >
>> > To create a zombie, first create a memcg node, enter that memcg,
>> > create a tmpfs file of few KiBs, exit the memcg and rmdir the memcg.
>> > That memcg will be a zombie until you delete that tmpfs file.
>>
>> Thanks, that makes sense. I'll see if I can reproduce the issue. Do
>> you expect the same thing to happen with normal (non-tmpfs) files that
>> are sitting in the page cache, and/or dentries?
>>
>
> Normal files and their dentries can get reclaimed while tmpfs will
> stick and even if the data of tmpfs goes to swap, the kmem related to
> tmpfs files will remain in memory.
Sure, page cache and dentries are reclaimable given memory pressure.
These machines all have more memory than they need though (64GB+) and
generally don't come under any memory pressure. I'm just wondering if
the behaviour we're seeing can be explained as a result of a lot of
dentries sticking around (because there is no memory pressure) and in
turn causing a lot of zombie cgroups to stay present until something
forces reclamation of dentries.
Cheers
Bruce
--
Bruce Merry
Senior Science Processing Developer
SKA South Africa