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[v15,00/10] mm/demotion: Memory tiers and demotion

Message ID 20220818131042.113280-1-aneesh.kumar@linux.ibm.com (mailing list archive)
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Series mm/demotion: Memory tiers and demotion | expand

Message

Aneesh Kumar K.V Aug. 18, 2022, 1:10 p.m. UTC
The current kernel has the basic memory tiering support: Inactive pages on a
higher tier NUMA node can be migrated (demoted) to a lower tier NUMA node to
make room for new allocations on the higher tier NUMA node. Frequently accessed
pages on a lower tier NUMA node can be migrated (promoted) to a higher tier NUMA
node to improve the performance.

In the current kernel, memory tiers are defined implicitly via a demotion path
relationship between NUMA nodes, which is created during the kernel
initialization and updated when a NUMA node is hot-added or hot-removed. The
current implementation puts all nodes with CPU into the highest tier, and builds the
tier hierarchy tier-by-tier by establishing the per-node demotion targets based
on the distances between nodes.

This current memory tier kernel implementation needs to be improved for several
important use cases:

* The current tier initialization code always initializes each memory-only NUMA
  node into a lower tier. But a memory-only NUMA node may have a high
  performance memory device (e.g. a DRAM-backed memory-only node on a virtual
  machine) and that should be put into a higher tier.

* The current tier hierarchy always puts CPU nodes into the top tier. But on a
  system with HBM (e.g. GPU memory) devices, these memory-only HBM NUMA nodes
  should be in the top tier, and DRAM nodes with CPUs are better to be placed
  into the next lower tier.

* Also because the current tier hierarchy always puts CPU nodes into the top
  tier, when a CPU is hot-added (or hot-removed) and triggers a memory node from
  CPU-less into a CPU node (or vice versa), the memory tier hierarchy gets
  changed, even though no memory node is added or removed. This can make the
  tier hierarchy unstable and make it difficult to support tier-based memory
  accounting.

* A higher tier node can only be demoted to nodes with shortest distance on the
  next lower tier as defined by the demotion path, not any other node from any
  lower tier. This strict, demotion order does not work in all use
  cases (e.g. some use cases may want to allow cross-socket demotion to another
  node in the same demotion tier as a fallback when the preferred demotion node
  is out of space), and has resulted in the feature request for an interface to
  override the system-wide, per-node demotion order from the userspace. This
  demotion order is also inconsistent with the page allocation fallback order
  when all the nodes in a higher tier are out of space: The page allocation can
  fall back to any node from any lower tier, whereas the demotion order doesn't
  allow that.

This patch series make the creation of memory tiers explicit under
the control of device driver.

Memory Tier Initialization
==========================

Linux kernel presents memory devices as NUMA nodes and each memory device is of
a specific type. The memory type of a device is represented by its abstract 
distance. A memory tier corresponds to a range of abstract distance. This allows
for classifying memory devices with a specific performance range into a memory
tier.

By default, all memory nodes are assigned to the default tier with
abstract distance 512.

A device driver can move its memory nodes from the default tier. For example,
PMEM can move its memory nodes below the default tier, whereas GPU can move its
memory nodes above the default tier.

The kernel initialization code makes the decision on which exact tier a memory
node should be assigned to based on the requests from the device drivers as well
as the memory device hardware information provided by the firmware.

Hot-adding/removing CPUs doesn't affect memory tier hierarchy.

Changes from v14
* Add Reviewed-by:
* Address review feedback w.r.t default adistance value

Changes from v13
* Address review feedback.
* Add path dropping memtier from struct memory_dev_type

Changes from v12
* Fix kernel crash on module unload
* Address review feedback.
* Add node_random patch to this series based on review feedback

Changes from v11:
* smaller abstract distance imply faster(higher) memory tier.

Changes from v10:
* rename performance level to abstract distance
* Thanks to all the good feedback from Huang, Ying <ying.huang@intel.com>.
  Updated the patchset to cover most of the review feedback.

Changes from v9:
* Use performance level for initializing memory tiers.

Changes from v8:
* Drop the sysfs interface patches and  related documentation changes.

Changes from v7:
* Fix kernel crash with demotion.
* Improve documentation.

Changes from v6:
* Drop the usage of rank.
* Address other review feedback.

Changes from v5:
* Remove patch supporting N_MEMORY node removal from memory tiers. memory tiers
  are going to be used for features other than demotion. Hence keep all N_MEMORY
  nodes in memory tiers irrespective of whether they want to participate in promotion or demotion.
* Add NODE_DATA->memtier
* Rearrage patches to add sysfs files later.
* Add support to create memory tiers from userspace.
* Address other review feedback.


Changes from v4:
* Address review feedback.
* Reverse the meaning of "rank": higher rank value means higher tier.
* Add "/sys/devices/system/memtier/default_tier".
* Add node_is_toptier

v4:
Add support for explicit memory tiers and ranks.

v3:
- Modify patch 1 subject to make it more specific
- Remove /sys/kernel/mm/numa/demotion_targets interface, use
  /sys/devices/system/node/demotion_targets instead and make
  it writable to override node_states[N_DEMOTION_TARGETS].
- Add support to view per node demotion targets via sysfs

v2:
In v1, only 1st patch of this patch series was sent, which was
implemented to avoid some of the limitations on the demotion
target sharing, however for certain numa topology, the demotion
targets found by that patch was not most optimal, so 1st patch
in this series is modified according to suggestions from Huang
and Baolin. Different examples of demotion list comparasion
between existing implementation and changed implementation can
be found in the commit message of 1st patch.


Aneesh Kumar K.V (9):
  mm/demotion: Add support for explicit memory tiers
  mm/demotion: Move memory demotion related code
  mm/demotion: Add hotplug callbacks to handle new numa node onlined
  mm/demotion/dax/kmem: Set node's abstract distance to
    MEMTIER_DEFAULT_DAX_ADISTANCE
  mm/demotion: Build demotion targets based on explicit memory tiers
  mm/demotion: Add pg_data_t member to track node memory tier details
  mm/demotion: Drop memtier from memtype
  mm/demotion: Update node_is_toptier to work with memory tiers
  lib/nodemask: Optimize node_random for nodemask with single NUMA node

Jagdish Gediya (1):
  mm/demotion: Demote pages according to allocation fallback order

 drivers/dax/kmem.c           |  42 ++-
 include/linux/memory-tiers.h | 102 ++++++
 include/linux/migrate.h      |  15 -
 include/linux/mmzone.h       |   3 +
 include/linux/node.h         |   5 -
 include/linux/nodemask.h     |  15 +-
 mm/Makefile                  |   1 +
 mm/huge_memory.c             |   1 +
 mm/memory-tiers.c            | 645 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 mm/migrate.c                 | 453 +-----------------------
 mm/mprotect.c                |   1 +
 mm/vmscan.c                  |  59 +++-
 mm/vmstat.c                  |   4 -
 13 files changed, 849 insertions(+), 497 deletions(-)
 create mode 100644 include/linux/memory-tiers.h
 create mode 100644 mm/memory-tiers.c

Comments

Bharata B Rao Aug. 19, 2022, 6:27 a.m. UTC | #1
On 8/18/2022 6:40 PM, Aneesh Kumar K.V wrote:
> The current kernel has the basic memory tiering support: Inactive pages on a
> higher tier NUMA node can be migrated (demoted) to a lower tier NUMA node to
> make room for new allocations on the higher tier NUMA node. Frequently accessed
> pages on a lower tier NUMA node can be migrated (promoted) to a higher tier NUMA
> node to improve the performance.
> 
> In the current kernel, memory tiers are defined implicitly via a demotion path
> relationship between NUMA nodes, which is created during the kernel
> initialization and updated when a NUMA node is hot-added or hot-removed. The
> current implementation puts all nodes with CPU into the highest tier, and builds the
> tier hierarchy tier-by-tier by establishing the per-node demotion targets based
> on the distances between nodes.
> 
> This current memory tier kernel implementation needs to be improved for several
> important use cases:
> 
> * The current tier initialization code always initializes each memory-only NUMA
>   node into a lower tier. But a memory-only NUMA node may have a high
>   performance memory device (e.g. a DRAM-backed memory-only node on a virtual
>   machine) and that should be put into a higher tier.
> 
> * The current tier hierarchy always puts CPU nodes into the top tier. But on a
>   system with HBM (e.g. GPU memory) devices, these memory-only HBM NUMA nodes
>   should be in the top tier, and DRAM nodes with CPUs are better to be placed
>   into the next lower tier.
> 
> * Also because the current tier hierarchy always puts CPU nodes into the top
>   tier, when a CPU is hot-added (or hot-removed) and triggers a memory node from
>   CPU-less into a CPU node (or vice versa), the memory tier hierarchy gets
>   changed, even though no memory node is added or removed. This can make the
>   tier hierarchy unstable and make it difficult to support tier-based memory
>   accounting.
> 
> * A higher tier node can only be demoted to nodes with shortest distance on the
>   next lower tier as defined by the demotion path, not any other node from any
>   lower tier. This strict, demotion order does not work in all use
>   cases (e.g. some use cases may want to allow cross-socket demotion to another
>   node in the same demotion tier as a fallback when the preferred demotion node
>   is out of space), and has resulted in the feature request for an interface to
>   override the system-wide, per-node demotion order from the userspace. This
>   demotion order is also inconsistent with the page allocation fallback order
>   when all the nodes in a higher tier are out of space: The page allocation can
>   fall back to any node from any lower tier, whereas the demotion order doesn't
>   allow that.
> 
> This patch series make the creation of memory tiers explicit under
> the control of device driver.
> 
> Memory Tier Initialization
> ==========================
> 
> Linux kernel presents memory devices as NUMA nodes and each memory device is of
> a specific type. The memory type of a device is represented by its abstract 
> distance. A memory tier corresponds to a range of abstract distance. This allows
> for classifying memory devices with a specific performance range into a memory
> tier.
> 
> By default, all memory nodes are assigned to the default tier with
> abstract distance 512.
> 
> A device driver can move its memory nodes from the default tier. For example,
> PMEM can move its memory nodes below the default tier, whereas GPU can move its
> memory nodes above the default tier.
> 
> The kernel initialization code makes the decision on which exact tier a memory
> node should be assigned to based on the requests from the device drivers as well
> as the memory device hardware information provided by the firmware.

I gave this patchset a quick try on two setups:

1. With QEMU, when an nvdimm device is bound to dax kmem driver, I can see
the memory node with pmem getting into a lower tier than DRAM.

2. In an experimental CXL setup that has DRAM as part of CXL memory, I see that
CXL memory node falls into the same tier as the regular DRAM tier. This is
expected for now since there is no code (in low level ACPI driver?) yet to
map the latency or bandwidth info (when available from firmware) into an
abstract distance value, and register a memory type for the same. Guess these
bits can be covered as part of future enhancements.

Regards,
Bharata.
Andrew Morton Aug. 20, 2022, 12:34 a.m. UTC | #2
On Fri, 19 Aug 2022 11:57:18 +0530 Bharata B Rao <bharata@amd.com> wrote:

> > The kernel initialization code makes the decision on which exact tier a memory
> > node should be assigned to based on the requests from the device drivers as well
> > as the memory device hardware information provided by the firmware.
> 
> I gave this patchset a quick try on two setups:
> 
> 1. With QEMU, when an nvdimm device is bound to dax kmem driver, I can see
> the memory node with pmem getting into a lower tier than DRAM.
> 
> 2. In an experimental CXL setup that has DRAM as part of CXL memory, I see that
> CXL memory node falls into the same tier as the regular DRAM tier. This is
> expected for now since there is no code (in low level ACPI driver?) yet to
> map the latency or bandwidth info (when available from firmware) into an
> abstract distance value, and register a memory type for the same. Guess these
> bits can be covered as part of future enhancements.

Should I add your Tested-by:?
Wei Xu Aug. 20, 2022, 1:54 a.m. UTC | #3
Acked-by: Wei Xu <weixugc@google.com>

On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 6:10 AM Aneesh Kumar K.V
<aneesh.kumar@linux.ibm.com> wrote:
>
> The current kernel has the basic memory tiering support: Inactive pages on a
> higher tier NUMA node can be migrated (demoted) to a lower tier NUMA node to
> make room for new allocations on the higher tier NUMA node. Frequently accessed
> pages on a lower tier NUMA node can be migrated (promoted) to a higher tier NUMA
> node to improve the performance.
>
> In the current kernel, memory tiers are defined implicitly via a demotion path
> relationship between NUMA nodes, which is created during the kernel
> initialization and updated when a NUMA node is hot-added or hot-removed. The
> current implementation puts all nodes with CPU into the highest tier, and builds the
> tier hierarchy tier-by-tier by establishing the per-node demotion targets based
> on the distances between nodes.
>
> This current memory tier kernel implementation needs to be improved for several
> important use cases:
>
> * The current tier initialization code always initializes each memory-only NUMA
>   node into a lower tier. But a memory-only NUMA node may have a high
>   performance memory device (e.g. a DRAM-backed memory-only node on a virtual
>   machine) and that should be put into a higher tier.
>
> * The current tier hierarchy always puts CPU nodes into the top tier. But on a
>   system with HBM (e.g. GPU memory) devices, these memory-only HBM NUMA nodes
>   should be in the top tier, and DRAM nodes with CPUs are better to be placed
>   into the next lower tier.
>
> * Also because the current tier hierarchy always puts CPU nodes into the top
>   tier, when a CPU is hot-added (or hot-removed) and triggers a memory node from
>   CPU-less into a CPU node (or vice versa), the memory tier hierarchy gets
>   changed, even though no memory node is added or removed. This can make the
>   tier hierarchy unstable and make it difficult to support tier-based memory
>   accounting.
>
> * A higher tier node can only be demoted to nodes with shortest distance on the
>   next lower tier as defined by the demotion path, not any other node from any
>   lower tier. This strict, demotion order does not work in all use
>   cases (e.g. some use cases may want to allow cross-socket demotion to another
>   node in the same demotion tier as a fallback when the preferred demotion node
>   is out of space), and has resulted in the feature request for an interface to
>   override the system-wide, per-node demotion order from the userspace. This
>   demotion order is also inconsistent with the page allocation fallback order
>   when all the nodes in a higher tier are out of space: The page allocation can
>   fall back to any node from any lower tier, whereas the demotion order doesn't
>   allow that.
>
> This patch series make the creation of memory tiers explicit under
> the control of device driver.
>
> Memory Tier Initialization
> ==========================
>
> Linux kernel presents memory devices as NUMA nodes and each memory device is of
> a specific type. The memory type of a device is represented by its abstract
> distance. A memory tier corresponds to a range of abstract distance. This allows
> for classifying memory devices with a specific performance range into a memory
> tier.
>
> By default, all memory nodes are assigned to the default tier with
> abstract distance 512.
>
> A device driver can move its memory nodes from the default tier. For example,
> PMEM can move its memory nodes below the default tier, whereas GPU can move its
> memory nodes above the default tier.
>
> The kernel initialization code makes the decision on which exact tier a memory
> node should be assigned to based on the requests from the device drivers as well
> as the memory device hardware information provided by the firmware.
>
> Hot-adding/removing CPUs doesn't affect memory tier hierarchy.
>
> Changes from v14
> * Add Reviewed-by:
> * Address review feedback w.r.t default adistance value
>
> Changes from v13
> * Address review feedback.
> * Add path dropping memtier from struct memory_dev_type
>
> Changes from v12
> * Fix kernel crash on module unload
> * Address review feedback.
> * Add node_random patch to this series based on review feedback
>
> Changes from v11:
> * smaller abstract distance imply faster(higher) memory tier.
>
> Changes from v10:
> * rename performance level to abstract distance
> * Thanks to all the good feedback from Huang, Ying <ying.huang@intel.com>.
>   Updated the patchset to cover most of the review feedback.
>
> Changes from v9:
> * Use performance level for initializing memory tiers.
>
> Changes from v8:
> * Drop the sysfs interface patches and  related documentation changes.
>
> Changes from v7:
> * Fix kernel crash with demotion.
> * Improve documentation.
>
> Changes from v6:
> * Drop the usage of rank.
> * Address other review feedback.
>
> Changes from v5:
> * Remove patch supporting N_MEMORY node removal from memory tiers. memory tiers
>   are going to be used for features other than demotion. Hence keep all N_MEMORY
>   nodes in memory tiers irrespective of whether they want to participate in promotion or demotion.
> * Add NODE_DATA->memtier
> * Rearrage patches to add sysfs files later.
> * Add support to create memory tiers from userspace.
> * Address other review feedback.
>
>
> Changes from v4:
> * Address review feedback.
> * Reverse the meaning of "rank": higher rank value means higher tier.
> * Add "/sys/devices/system/memtier/default_tier".
> * Add node_is_toptier
>
> v4:
> Add support for explicit memory tiers and ranks.
>
> v3:
> - Modify patch 1 subject to make it more specific
> - Remove /sys/kernel/mm/numa/demotion_targets interface, use
>   /sys/devices/system/node/demotion_targets instead and make
>   it writable to override node_states[N_DEMOTION_TARGETS].
> - Add support to view per node demotion targets via sysfs
>
> v2:
> In v1, only 1st patch of this patch series was sent, which was
> implemented to avoid some of the limitations on the demotion
> target sharing, however for certain numa topology, the demotion
> targets found by that patch was not most optimal, so 1st patch
> in this series is modified according to suggestions from Huang
> and Baolin. Different examples of demotion list comparasion
> between existing implementation and changed implementation can
> be found in the commit message of 1st patch.
>
>
> Aneesh Kumar K.V (9):
>   mm/demotion: Add support for explicit memory tiers
>   mm/demotion: Move memory demotion related code
>   mm/demotion: Add hotplug callbacks to handle new numa node onlined
>   mm/demotion/dax/kmem: Set node's abstract distance to
>     MEMTIER_DEFAULT_DAX_ADISTANCE
>   mm/demotion: Build demotion targets based on explicit memory tiers
>   mm/demotion: Add pg_data_t member to track node memory tier details
>   mm/demotion: Drop memtier from memtype
>   mm/demotion: Update node_is_toptier to work with memory tiers
>   lib/nodemask: Optimize node_random for nodemask with single NUMA node
>
> Jagdish Gediya (1):
>   mm/demotion: Demote pages according to allocation fallback order
>
>  drivers/dax/kmem.c           |  42 ++-
>  include/linux/memory-tiers.h | 102 ++++++
>  include/linux/migrate.h      |  15 -
>  include/linux/mmzone.h       |   3 +
>  include/linux/node.h         |   5 -
>  include/linux/nodemask.h     |  15 +-
>  mm/Makefile                  |   1 +
>  mm/huge_memory.c             |   1 +
>  mm/memory-tiers.c            | 645 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  mm/migrate.c                 | 453 +-----------------------
>  mm/mprotect.c                |   1 +
>  mm/vmscan.c                  |  59 +++-
>  mm/vmstat.c                  |   4 -
>  13 files changed, 849 insertions(+), 497 deletions(-)
>  create mode 100644 include/linux/memory-tiers.h
>  create mode 100644 mm/memory-tiers.c
>
> --
> 2.37.2
>
Bharata B Rao Aug. 22, 2022, 3:41 a.m. UTC | #4
On 8/20/2022 6:04 AM, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Fri, 19 Aug 2022 11:57:18 +0530 Bharata B Rao <bharata@amd.com> wrote:
> 
>>> The kernel initialization code makes the decision on which exact tier a memory
>>> node should be assigned to based on the requests from the device drivers as well
>>> as the memory device hardware information provided by the firmware.
>>
>> I gave this patchset a quick try on two setups:
>>
>> 1. With QEMU, when an nvdimm device is bound to dax kmem driver, I can see
>> the memory node with pmem getting into a lower tier than DRAM.
>>
>> 2. In an experimental CXL setup that has DRAM as part of CXL memory, I see that
>> CXL memory node falls into the same tier as the regular DRAM tier. This is
>> expected for now since there is no code (in low level ACPI driver?) yet to
>> map the latency or bandwidth info (when available from firmware) into an
>> abstract distance value, and register a memory type for the same. Guess these
>> bits can be covered as part of future enhancements.
> 
> Should I add your Tested-by:?

May be not. I have done only a very minimal testing of specific scenarios
as mentioned above. Thanks for checking.

Regards,
Bharata.
Andrew Morton Sept. 12, 2022, 12:13 a.m. UTC | #5
On Thu, 18 Aug 2022 18:40:32 +0530 "Aneesh Kumar K.V" <aneesh.kumar@linux.ibm.com> wrote:

> This patch series make the creation of memory tiers explicit under
> the control of device driver.

This series has been in mm-unstable for nearly four weeks and
everything has died down, so I'm planning on moving it into mm-stable
late this week unless someone stops me...