Message ID | 1548187782-108454-1-git-send-email-yang.shi@linux.alibaba.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
Series | [RFC] mm: vmscan: do not iterate all mem cgroups for global direct reclaim | expand |
On Wed 23-01-19 04:09:42, Yang Shi wrote: > In current implementation, both kswapd and direct reclaim has to iterate > all mem cgroups. It is not a problem before offline mem cgroups could > be iterated. But, currently with iterating offline mem cgroups, it > could be very time consuming. In our workloads, we saw over 400K mem > cgroups accumulated in some cases, only a few hundred are online memcgs. > Although kswapd could help out to reduce the number of memcgs, direct > reclaim still get hit with iterating a number of offline memcgs in some > cases. We experienced the responsiveness problems due to this > occassionally. Can you provide some numbers? > Here just break the iteration once it reclaims enough pages as what > memcg direct reclaim does. This may hurt the fairness among memcgs > since direct reclaim may awlays do reclaim from same memcgs. But, it > sounds ok since direct reclaim just tries to reclaim SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX > pages and memcgs can be protected by min/low. OK, this makes some sense to me. The purpose of the direct reclaim is to reclaim some memory and throttle the allocation pace. The iterator is cached so the next reclaimer on the same hierarchy will simply continue so the fairness should be more or less achieved. Btw. is there any reason to keep !global_reclaim() check in place? Why is it not sufficient to exclude kswapd? > Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> > Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> > Signed-off-by: Yang Shi <yang.shi@linux.alibaba.com> > --- > mm/vmscan.c | 7 +++---- > 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/mm/vmscan.c b/mm/vmscan.c > index a714c4f..ced5a16 100644 > --- a/mm/vmscan.c > +++ b/mm/vmscan.c > @@ -2764,16 +2764,15 @@ static bool shrink_node(pg_data_t *pgdat, struct scan_control *sc) > sc->nr_reclaimed - reclaimed); > > /* > - * Direct reclaim and kswapd have to scan all memory > - * cgroups to fulfill the overall scan target for the > - * node. > + * Kswapd have to scan all memory cgroups to fulfill > + * the overall scan target for the node. > * > * Limit reclaim, on the other hand, only cares about > * nr_to_reclaim pages to be reclaimed and it will > * retry with decreasing priority if one round over the > * whole hierarchy is not sufficient. > */ > - if (!global_reclaim(sc) && > + if ((!global_reclaim(sc) || !current_is_kswapd()) && > sc->nr_reclaimed >= sc->nr_to_reclaim) { > mem_cgroup_iter_break(root, memcg); > break; > -- > 1.8.3.1 >
On 22.01.2019 23:09, Yang Shi wrote: > In current implementation, both kswapd and direct reclaim has to iterate > all mem cgroups. It is not a problem before offline mem cgroups could > be iterated. But, currently with iterating offline mem cgroups, it > could be very time consuming. In our workloads, we saw over 400K mem > cgroups accumulated in some cases, only a few hundred are online memcgs. > Although kswapd could help out to reduce the number of memcgs, direct > reclaim still get hit with iterating a number of offline memcgs in some > cases. We experienced the responsiveness problems due to this > occassionally. > > Here just break the iteration once it reclaims enough pages as what > memcg direct reclaim does. This may hurt the fairness among memcgs > since direct reclaim may awlays do reclaim from same memcgs. But, it > sounds ok since direct reclaim just tries to reclaim SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX > pages and memcgs can be protected by min/low. In case of we stop after SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX pages are reclaimed; it's possible the following situation. Memcgs, which are closest to root_mem_cgroup, will become empty, and you will have to iterate over empty memcg hierarchy long time, just to find a not empty memcg. I'd suggest, we should not lose fairness. We may introduce mem_cgroup::last_reclaim_child parameter to save a child (or its id), where the last reclaim was interrupted. Then next reclaim should start from this child: memcg = mem_cgroup_iter(root, find_child(root->last_reclaim_child), &reclaim); do { if ((!global_reclaim(sc) || !current_is_kswapd()) && sc->nr_reclaimed >= sc->nr_to_reclaim) { root->last_reclaim_child = memcg->id; mem_cgroup_iter_break(root, memcg); break; } Kirill > Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> > Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> > Signed-off-by: Yang Shi <yang.shi@linux.alibaba.com> > --- > mm/vmscan.c | 7 +++---- > 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/mm/vmscan.c b/mm/vmscan.c > index a714c4f..ced5a16 100644 > --- a/mm/vmscan.c > +++ b/mm/vmscan.c > @@ -2764,16 +2764,15 @@ static bool shrink_node(pg_data_t *pgdat, struct scan_control *sc) > sc->nr_reclaimed - reclaimed); > > /* > - * Direct reclaim and kswapd have to scan all memory > - * cgroups to fulfill the overall scan target for the > - * node. > + * Kswapd have to scan all memory cgroups to fulfill > + * the overall scan target for the node. > * > * Limit reclaim, on the other hand, only cares about > * nr_to_reclaim pages to be reclaimed and it will > * retry with decreasing priority if one round over the > * whole hierarchy is not sufficient. > */ > - if (!global_reclaim(sc) && > + if ((!global_reclaim(sc) || !current_is_kswapd()) && > sc->nr_reclaimed >= sc->nr_to_reclaim) { > mem_cgroup_iter_break(root, memcg); > break; >
On Wed 23-01-19 13:28:03, Kirill Tkhai wrote: > On 22.01.2019 23:09, Yang Shi wrote: > > In current implementation, both kswapd and direct reclaim has to iterate > > all mem cgroups. It is not a problem before offline mem cgroups could > > be iterated. But, currently with iterating offline mem cgroups, it > > could be very time consuming. In our workloads, we saw over 400K mem > > cgroups accumulated in some cases, only a few hundred are online memcgs. > > Although kswapd could help out to reduce the number of memcgs, direct > > reclaim still get hit with iterating a number of offline memcgs in some > > cases. We experienced the responsiveness problems due to this > > occassionally. > > > > Here just break the iteration once it reclaims enough pages as what > > memcg direct reclaim does. This may hurt the fairness among memcgs > > since direct reclaim may awlays do reclaim from same memcgs. But, it > > sounds ok since direct reclaim just tries to reclaim SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX > > pages and memcgs can be protected by min/low. > > In case of we stop after SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX pages are reclaimed; it's possible > the following situation. Memcgs, which are closest to root_mem_cgroup, will > become empty, and you will have to iterate over empty memcg hierarchy long time, > just to find a not empty memcg. > > I'd suggest, we should not lose fairness. We may introduce > mem_cgroup::last_reclaim_child parameter to save a child > (or its id), where the last reclaim was interrupted. Then > next reclaim should start from this child: Why is not our reclaim_cookie based caching sufficient?
On 23.01.2019 14:02, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Wed 23-01-19 13:28:03, Kirill Tkhai wrote: >> On 22.01.2019 23:09, Yang Shi wrote: >>> In current implementation, both kswapd and direct reclaim has to iterate >>> all mem cgroups. It is not a problem before offline mem cgroups could >>> be iterated. But, currently with iterating offline mem cgroups, it >>> could be very time consuming. In our workloads, we saw over 400K mem >>> cgroups accumulated in some cases, only a few hundred are online memcgs. >>> Although kswapd could help out to reduce the number of memcgs, direct >>> reclaim still get hit with iterating a number of offline memcgs in some >>> cases. We experienced the responsiveness problems due to this >>> occassionally. >>> >>> Here just break the iteration once it reclaims enough pages as what >>> memcg direct reclaim does. This may hurt the fairness among memcgs >>> since direct reclaim may awlays do reclaim from same memcgs. But, it >>> sounds ok since direct reclaim just tries to reclaim SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX >>> pages and memcgs can be protected by min/low. >> >> In case of we stop after SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX pages are reclaimed; it's possible >> the following situation. Memcgs, which are closest to root_mem_cgroup, will >> become empty, and you will have to iterate over empty memcg hierarchy long time, >> just to find a not empty memcg. >> >> I'd suggest, we should not lose fairness. We may introduce >> mem_cgroup::last_reclaim_child parameter to save a child >> (or its id), where the last reclaim was interrupted. Then >> next reclaim should start from this child: > > Why is not our reclaim_cookie based caching sufficient? Hm, maybe I missed them. Do cookies already implement this functionality? Kirill
On Wed 23-01-19 14:05:28, Kirill Tkhai wrote: > On 23.01.2019 14:02, Michal Hocko wrote: > > On Wed 23-01-19 13:28:03, Kirill Tkhai wrote: > >> On 22.01.2019 23:09, Yang Shi wrote: > >>> In current implementation, both kswapd and direct reclaim has to iterate > >>> all mem cgroups. It is not a problem before offline mem cgroups could > >>> be iterated. But, currently with iterating offline mem cgroups, it > >>> could be very time consuming. In our workloads, we saw over 400K mem > >>> cgroups accumulated in some cases, only a few hundred are online memcgs. > >>> Although kswapd could help out to reduce the number of memcgs, direct > >>> reclaim still get hit with iterating a number of offline memcgs in some > >>> cases. We experienced the responsiveness problems due to this > >>> occassionally. > >>> > >>> Here just break the iteration once it reclaims enough pages as what > >>> memcg direct reclaim does. This may hurt the fairness among memcgs > >>> since direct reclaim may awlays do reclaim from same memcgs. But, it > >>> sounds ok since direct reclaim just tries to reclaim SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX > >>> pages and memcgs can be protected by min/low. > >> > >> In case of we stop after SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX pages are reclaimed; it's possible > >> the following situation. Memcgs, which are closest to root_mem_cgroup, will > >> become empty, and you will have to iterate over empty memcg hierarchy long time, > >> just to find a not empty memcg. > >> > >> I'd suggest, we should not lose fairness. We may introduce > >> mem_cgroup::last_reclaim_child parameter to save a child > >> (or its id), where the last reclaim was interrupted. Then > >> next reclaim should start from this child: > > > > Why is not our reclaim_cookie based caching sufficient? > > Hm, maybe I missed them. Do cookies already implement this functionality? Have a look at mem_cgroup_iter
On 1/23/19 1:59 AM, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Wed 23-01-19 04:09:42, Yang Shi wrote: >> In current implementation, both kswapd and direct reclaim has to iterate >> all mem cgroups. It is not a problem before offline mem cgroups could >> be iterated. But, currently with iterating offline mem cgroups, it >> could be very time consuming. In our workloads, we saw over 400K mem >> cgroups accumulated in some cases, only a few hundred are online memcgs. >> Although kswapd could help out to reduce the number of memcgs, direct >> reclaim still get hit with iterating a number of offline memcgs in some >> cases. We experienced the responsiveness problems due to this >> occassionally. > Can you provide some numbers? What numbers do you mean? How long did it take to iterate all the memcgs? For now I don't have the exact number for the production environment, but the unresponsiveness is visible. I had some test number with triggering direct reclaim with 8k memcgs artificially, which has just one clean page charged for each memcg, so the reclaim is cheaper than real production environment. perf shows it took around 220ms to iterate 8k memcgs: dd 13873 [011] 578.542919: vmscan:mm_vmscan_direct_reclaim_begin dd 13873 [011] 578.758689: vmscan:mm_vmscan_direct_reclaim_end So, iterating 400K would take at least 11s in this artificial case. The production environment is much more complicated, so it would take much longer in fact. > >> Here just break the iteration once it reclaims enough pages as what >> memcg direct reclaim does. This may hurt the fairness among memcgs >> since direct reclaim may awlays do reclaim from same memcgs. But, it >> sounds ok since direct reclaim just tries to reclaim SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX >> pages and memcgs can be protected by min/low. > OK, this makes some sense to me. The purpose of the direct reclaim is > to reclaim some memory and throttle the allocation pace. The iterator is > cached so the next reclaimer on the same hierarchy will simply continue > so the fairness should be more or less achieved. Yes, you are right. I missed this point. > > Btw. is there any reason to keep !global_reclaim() check in place? Why > is it not sufficient to exclude kswapd? Iterating all memcgs in kswapd is still useful to help to reduce those zombie memcgs. Thanks, Yang > >> Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> >> Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> >> Signed-off-by: Yang Shi <yang.shi@linux.alibaba.com> >> --- >> mm/vmscan.c | 7 +++---- >> 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) >> >> diff --git a/mm/vmscan.c b/mm/vmscan.c >> index a714c4f..ced5a16 100644 >> --- a/mm/vmscan.c >> +++ b/mm/vmscan.c >> @@ -2764,16 +2764,15 @@ static bool shrink_node(pg_data_t *pgdat, struct scan_control *sc) >> sc->nr_reclaimed - reclaimed); >> >> /* >> - * Direct reclaim and kswapd have to scan all memory >> - * cgroups to fulfill the overall scan target for the >> - * node. >> + * Kswapd have to scan all memory cgroups to fulfill >> + * the overall scan target for the node. >> * >> * Limit reclaim, on the other hand, only cares about >> * nr_to_reclaim pages to be reclaimed and it will >> * retry with decreasing priority if one round over the >> * whole hierarchy is not sufficient. >> */ >> - if (!global_reclaim(sc) && >> + if ((!global_reclaim(sc) || !current_is_kswapd()) && >> sc->nr_reclaimed >= sc->nr_to_reclaim) { >> mem_cgroup_iter_break(root, memcg); >> break; >> -- >> 1.8.3.1 >>
On Wed 23-01-19 12:24:38, Yang Shi wrote: > > > On 1/23/19 1:59 AM, Michal Hocko wrote: > > On Wed 23-01-19 04:09:42, Yang Shi wrote: > > > In current implementation, both kswapd and direct reclaim has to iterate > > > all mem cgroups. It is not a problem before offline mem cgroups could > > > be iterated. But, currently with iterating offline mem cgroups, it > > > could be very time consuming. In our workloads, we saw over 400K mem > > > cgroups accumulated in some cases, only a few hundred are online memcgs. > > > Although kswapd could help out to reduce the number of memcgs, direct > > > reclaim still get hit with iterating a number of offline memcgs in some > > > cases. We experienced the responsiveness problems due to this > > > occassionally. > > Can you provide some numbers? > > What numbers do you mean? How long did it take to iterate all the memcgs? > For now I don't have the exact number for the production environment, but > the unresponsiveness is visible. Yeah, I would be interested in the worst case direct reclaim latencies. You can get that from our vmscan tracepoints quite easily. > I had some test number with triggering direct reclaim with 8k memcgs > artificially, which has just one clean page charged for each memcg, so the > reclaim is cheaper than real production environment. > > perf shows it took around 220ms to iterate 8k memcgs: > > dd 13873 [011] 578.542919: > vmscan:mm_vmscan_direct_reclaim_begin > dd 13873 [011] 578.758689: > vmscan:mm_vmscan_direct_reclaim_end > > So, iterating 400K would take at least 11s in this artificial case. The > production environment is much more complicated, so it would take much > longer in fact. Having real world numbers would definitely help with the justification. > > > Here just break the iteration once it reclaims enough pages as what > > > memcg direct reclaim does. This may hurt the fairness among memcgs > > > since direct reclaim may awlays do reclaim from same memcgs. But, it > > > sounds ok since direct reclaim just tries to reclaim SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX > > > pages and memcgs can be protected by min/low. > > OK, this makes some sense to me. The purpose of the direct reclaim is > > to reclaim some memory and throttle the allocation pace. The iterator is > > cached so the next reclaimer on the same hierarchy will simply continue > > so the fairness should be more or less achieved. > > Yes, you are right. I missed this point. > > > > > Btw. is there any reason to keep !global_reclaim() check in place? Why > > is it not sufficient to exclude kswapd? > > Iterating all memcgs in kswapd is still useful to help to reduce those > zombie memcgs. Yes, but for that you do not need to check for global_reclaim right?
On 1/24/19 12:43 AM, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Wed 23-01-19 12:24:38, Yang Shi wrote: >> >> On 1/23/19 1:59 AM, Michal Hocko wrote: >>> On Wed 23-01-19 04:09:42, Yang Shi wrote: >>>> In current implementation, both kswapd and direct reclaim has to iterate >>>> all mem cgroups. It is not a problem before offline mem cgroups could >>>> be iterated. But, currently with iterating offline mem cgroups, it >>>> could be very time consuming. In our workloads, we saw over 400K mem >>>> cgroups accumulated in some cases, only a few hundred are online memcgs. >>>> Although kswapd could help out to reduce the number of memcgs, direct >>>> reclaim still get hit with iterating a number of offline memcgs in some >>>> cases. We experienced the responsiveness problems due to this >>>> occassionally. >>> Can you provide some numbers? >> What numbers do you mean? How long did it take to iterate all the memcgs? >> For now I don't have the exact number for the production environment, but >> the unresponsiveness is visible. > Yeah, I would be interested in the worst case direct reclaim latencies. > You can get that from our vmscan tracepoints quite easily. I wish I could. But I just can't predict when the problem will happen on what machine, and I can't simply run perf on all machines of production environment. I tried to dig into our cluster monitor data history which records some system behaviors. By looking into the data, it seems excessive direct reclaim latency may reach tens of seconds due to excessive memcgs in some cases (the discrepancy depends on the number of memcgs and workload too). And the excessive direct reclaim latency problem has been reduced significantly since the patch was deployed. > >> I had some test number with triggering direct reclaim with 8k memcgs >> artificially, which has just one clean page charged for each memcg, so the >> reclaim is cheaper than real production environment. >> >> perf shows it took around 220ms to iterate 8k memcgs: >> >> dd 13873 [011] 578.542919: >> vmscan:mm_vmscan_direct_reclaim_begin >> dd 13873 [011] 578.758689: >> vmscan:mm_vmscan_direct_reclaim_end >> >> So, iterating 400K would take at least 11s in this artificial case. The >> production environment is much more complicated, so it would take much >> longer in fact. > Having real world numbers would definitely help with the justification. > >>>> Here just break the iteration once it reclaims enough pages as what >>>> memcg direct reclaim does. This may hurt the fairness among memcgs >>>> since direct reclaim may awlays do reclaim from same memcgs. But, it >>>> sounds ok since direct reclaim just tries to reclaim SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX >>>> pages and memcgs can be protected by min/low. >>> OK, this makes some sense to me. The purpose of the direct reclaim is >>> to reclaim some memory and throttle the allocation pace. The iterator is >>> cached so the next reclaimer on the same hierarchy will simply continue >>> so the fairness should be more or less achieved. >> Yes, you are right. I missed this point. >> >>> Btw. is there any reason to keep !global_reclaim() check in place? Why >>> is it not sufficient to exclude kswapd? >> Iterating all memcgs in kswapd is still useful to help to reduce those >> zombie memcgs. > Yes, but for that you do not need to check for global_reclaim right? Aha, yes. You are right. !current_is_kswapd() is good enough. Will fix this in v2. Thanks, Yang
diff --git a/mm/vmscan.c b/mm/vmscan.c index a714c4f..ced5a16 100644 --- a/mm/vmscan.c +++ b/mm/vmscan.c @@ -2764,16 +2764,15 @@ static bool shrink_node(pg_data_t *pgdat, struct scan_control *sc) sc->nr_reclaimed - reclaimed); /* - * Direct reclaim and kswapd have to scan all memory - * cgroups to fulfill the overall scan target for the - * node. + * Kswapd have to scan all memory cgroups to fulfill + * the overall scan target for the node. * * Limit reclaim, on the other hand, only cares about * nr_to_reclaim pages to be reclaimed and it will * retry with decreasing priority if one round over the * whole hierarchy is not sufficient. */ - if (!global_reclaim(sc) && + if ((!global_reclaim(sc) || !current_is_kswapd()) && sc->nr_reclaimed >= sc->nr_to_reclaim) { mem_cgroup_iter_break(root, memcg); break;
In current implementation, both kswapd and direct reclaim has to iterate all mem cgroups. It is not a problem before offline mem cgroups could be iterated. But, currently with iterating offline mem cgroups, it could be very time consuming. In our workloads, we saw over 400K mem cgroups accumulated in some cases, only a few hundred are online memcgs. Although kswapd could help out to reduce the number of memcgs, direct reclaim still get hit with iterating a number of offline memcgs in some cases. We experienced the responsiveness problems due to this occassionally. Here just break the iteration once it reclaims enough pages as what memcg direct reclaim does. This may hurt the fairness among memcgs since direct reclaim may awlays do reclaim from same memcgs. But, it sounds ok since direct reclaim just tries to reclaim SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX pages and memcgs can be protected by min/low. Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> Signed-off-by: Yang Shi <yang.shi@linux.alibaba.com> --- mm/vmscan.c | 7 +++---- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)