Re: [PATCH 00/35] Enhance memory utilization with DMEMFS
From: Joao Martins
Date: Mon Oct 12 2020 - 07:01:11 EST
On 10/10/20 9:15 AM, yulei zhang wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 9, 2020 at 7:53 PM Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On 10/9/20 12:39 PM, yulei zhang wrote:
>>> Joao, thanks a lot for the feedback. One more thing needs to mention
>>> is that dmemfs also support fine-grained
>>> memory management which makes it more flexible for tenants with
>>> different requirements.
>>>
>> So as DAX when it allows to partition a region (starting 5.10). Meaning you have a region
>> which you dedicated to userspace. That region can then be partitioning into devices which
>> give you access to multiple (possibly discontinuous) extents with at a given page
>> granularity (selectable when you create the device), accessed through mmap().
>> You can then give that device to a cgroup. Or you can return that memory back to the
>> kernel (should you run into OOM situation), or you recreate the same mappings across
>> reboot/kexec.
>>
>> I probably need to read your patches again, but can you extend on the 'dmemfs also support
>> fine-grained memory management' to understand what is the gap that you mention?
>>
> sure, dmemfs uses bitmap to track the memory usage in the reserved
> memory region in
> a given page size granularity. And for each user the memory can be
> discrete as well.
>
That same functionality of tracking reserved region usage across different users at any
page granularity is covered the DAX series I mentioned below. The discrete part -- IIUC
what you meant -- is then reduced using DAX ABI/tools to create a device file vs a filesystem.
>>> On Fri, Oct 9, 2020 at 3:01 AM Joao Martins <joao.m.martins@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> [adding a couple folks that directly or indirectly work on the subject]
>>>>
>>>> On 10/8/20 8:53 AM, yulei.kernel@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
>>>>> From: Yulei Zhang <yuleixzhang@xxxxxxxxxxx>
>>>>>
>>>>> In current system each physical memory page is assocaited with
>>>>> a page structure which is used to track the usage of this page.
>>>>> But due to the memory usage rapidly growing in cloud environment,
>>>>> we find the resource consuming for page structure storage becomes
>>>>> highly remarkable. So is it an expense that we could spare?
>>>>>
>>>> Happy to see another person working to solve the same problem!
>>>>
>>>> I am really glad to see more folks being interested in solving
>>>> this problem and I hope we can join efforts?
>>>>
>>>> BTW, there is also a second benefit in removing struct page -
>>>> which is carving out memory from the direct map.
>>>>
>>>>> This patchset introduces an idea about how to save the extra
>>>>> memory through a new virtual filesystem -- dmemfs.
>>>>>
>>>>> Dmemfs (Direct Memory filesystem) is device memory or reserved
>>>>> memory based filesystem. This kind of memory is special as it
>>>>> is not managed by kernel and most important it is without 'struct page'.
>>>>> Therefore we can leverage the extra memory from the host system
>>>>> to support more tenants in our cloud service.
>>>>>
>>>> This is like a walk down the memory lane.
>>>>
>>>> About a year ago we followed the same exact idea/motivation to
>>>> have memory outside of the direct map (and removing struct page overhead)
>>>> and started with our own layer/thingie. However we realized that DAX
>>>> is one the subsystems which already gives you direct access to memory
>>>> for free (and is already upstream), plus a couple of things which we
>>>> found more handy.
>>>>
>>>> So we sent an RFC a couple months ago:
>>>>
>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20200110190313.17144-1-joao.m.martins@xxxxxxxxxx/
>>>>
>>>> Since then majority of the work has been in improving DAX[1].
>>>> But now that is done I am going to follow up with the above patchset.
>>>>
>>>> [1]
>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/159625229779.3040297.11363509688097221416.stgit@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
>>>>
>>>> (Give me a couple of days and I will send you the link to the latest
>>>> patches on a git-tree - would love feedback!)
>>>>
>>>> The struct page removal for DAX would then be small, and ticks the
>>>> same bells and whistles (MCE handling, reserving PAT memtypes, ptrace
>>>> support) that we both do, with a smaller diffstat and it doesn't
>>>> touch KVM (not at least fundamentally).
>>>>
>>>> 15 files changed, 401 insertions(+), 38 deletions(-)
>>>>
>>>> The things needed in core-mm is for handling PMD/PUD PAGE_SPECIAL much
>>>> like we both do. Furthermore there wouldn't be a need for a new vm type,
>>>> consuming an extra page bit (in addition to PAGE_SPECIAL) or new filesystem.
>>>>
>>>> [1]
>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/159625229779.3040297.11363509688097221416.stgit@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> We uses a kernel boot parameter 'dmem=' to reserve the system
>>>>> memory when the host system boots up, the details can be checked
>>>>> in /Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt.
>>>>>
>>>>> Theoretically for each 4k physical page it can save 64 bytes if
>>>>> we drop the 'struct page', so for guest memory with 320G it can
>>>>> save about 5G physical memory totally.
>>>>>
>>>> Also worth mentioning that if you only care about 'struct page' cost, and not on the
>>>> security boundary, there's also some work on hugetlbfs preallocation of hugepages into
>>>> tricking vmemmap in reusing tail pages.
>>>>
>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20200915125947.26204-1-songmuchun@xxxxxxxxxxxxx/
>>>>
>>>> Going forward that could also make sense for device-dax to avoid so many
>>>> struct pages allocated (which would require its transition to compound
>>>> struct pages like hugetlbfs which we are looking at too). In addition an
>>>> idea <handwaving> would be perhaps to have a stricter mode in DAX where
>>>> we initialize/use the metadata ('struct page') but remove the underlaying
>>>> PFNs (of the 'struct page') from the direct map having to bear the cost of
>>>> mapping/unmapping on gup/pup.
>>>>
>>>> Joao