[PATCH 0/12] Memory Compaction v3

From: Mel Gorman
Date: Thu Feb 18 2010 - 13:04:35 EST


Changelog since V2
o Move unusable and fragmentation indices to separate proc files
o Express indices as being between 0 and 1
o Update copyright notice for compaction.c
o Avoid infinite loop when split free page fails
o Init compact_resume at least once (impacted x86 testing)
o Fewer pages are isolated during compaction.
o LRU lists are no longer rotated when page is busy
o NR_ISOLATED_* is updated to avoid isolating too many pages
o Update zone LRU stats correctly when isolating pages
o Reference count anon_vma instead of insufficient locking with
use-after-free races in memory compaction
o Watch for unmapped anon pages during migration
o Remove unnecessary parameters on a few functions
o Add Reviewed-by's. Note that I didn't add the Acks and Reviewed
for the proc patches as they have been split out into separate
files and I don't know if the Acks are still valid.

Changelog since V1
o Update help blurb on CONFIG_MIGRATION
o Max unusable free space index is 100, not 1000
o Move blockpfn forward properly during compaction
o Cleanup CONFIG_COMPACTION vs CONFIG_MIGRATION confusion
o Permissions on /proc and /sys files should be 0200
o Reduce verbosity
o Compact all nodes when triggered via /proc
o Add per-node compaction via sysfs
o Move defer_compaction out-of-line
o Fix lock oddities in rmap_walk_anon
o Add documentation

===== CUT HERE =====

This patchset is a memory compaction mechanism that reduces external
fragmentation memory by moving GFP_MOVABLE pages to a fewer number of
pageblocks. The term "compaction" was chosen as there are is a number of
mechanisms that are not mutually exclusive that can be used to defragment
memory. For example, lumpy reclaim is a form of defragmentation as was slub
"defragmentation" (really a form of targeted reclaim). Hence, this is called
"compaction" to distinguish it from other forms of defragmentation.

In this implementation, a full compaction run involves two scanners operating
within a zone - a migration and a free scanner. The migration scanner
starts at the beginning of a zone and finds all movable pages within one
pageblock_nr_pages-sized area and isolates them on a migratepages list. The
free scanner begins at the end of the zone and searches on a per-area
basis for enough free pages to migrate all the pages on the migratepages
list. As each area is respectively migrated or exhausted of free pages,
the scanners are advanced one area. A compaction run completes within a
zone when the two scanners meet.

This method is a bit primitive but is easy to understand and greater
sophistication would require maintenance of counters on a per-pageblock
basis. This would have a big impact on allocator fast-paths to improve
compaction which is a poor trade-off.

It also does not try relocate virtually contiguous pages to be physically
contiguous. However, assuming transparent hugepages were in use, a
hypothetical khugepaged might reuse compaction code to isolate free pages,
split them and relocate userspace pages for promotion.

Memory compaction can be triggered in one of three ways. It may be triggered
explicitly by writing any value to /proc/sys/vm/compact_memory and compacting
all of memory. It can be triggered on a per-node basis by writing any
value to /sys/devices/system/node/nodeN/compact where N is the node ID to
be compacted. When a process fails to allocate a high-order page, it may
compact memory in an attempt to satisfy the allocation instead of entering
direct reclaim. Explicit compaction does not finish until the two scanners
meet and direct compaction ends if a suitable page becomes available that
would meet watermarks.

The series is in 12 patches. The first three are not "core" to the series
but are important pre-requisites.

Patch 1 reference counts anon_vma for rmap_walk_anon(). Without this
patch, it's possible to use anon_vma after free if the caller is
not holding a VMA or mmap_sem for the pages in question. While
there should be no existing user that causes this problem,
it's a requirement for memory compaction to be stable. The patch
is at the start of the series for bisection reasons.
Patch 2 skips over anon pages during migration that are no longer mapped
because there still appeared to be a small window between when
a page was isolated and migration started during which anon_vma
could disappear.
Patch 3 merges the KSM and migrate counts. It could be merged with patch 1
but would be slightly harder to review.
Patch 4 documents pagetypeinfo as the information is expanded later in the
series
Patch 5 allows CONFIG_MIGRATION to be set without CONFIG_NUMA
Patch 6 exports a "unusable free space index" via /proc/pagetypeinfo. It's
a measure of external fragmentation that takes the size of the
allocation request into account. It can also be calculated from
userspace so can be dropped if requested
Patch 7 exports a "fragmentation index" which only has meaning when an
allocation request fails. It determines if an allocation failure
would be due to a lack of memory or external fragmentation.
Patch 8 is the compaction mechanism although it's unreachable at this point
Patch 9 adds a means of compacting all of memory with a proc trgger
Patch 10 adds a means of compacting a specific node with a sysfs trigger
Patch 11 adds "direct compaction" before "direct reclaim" if it is
determined there is a good chance of success.
Patch 12 temporarily disables compaction if an allocation failure occurs
after compaction.

Testing of compaction was in three stages. For the test, debugging, preempt,
the sleep watchdog and lockdep were all enabled but nothing nasty popped
out. min_free_kbytes was tuned as recommended by hugeadm to help fragmentation
avoidance and high-order allocations. It was only tested on X86-64 due to
the lack of availability of an X86 and PPC64 test machine for the moment.

Ths first test represents one of the easiest cases that can be faced for
lumpy reclaim or memory compaction.

1. Machine freshly booted and configured for hugepage usage with
a) hugeadm --create-global-mounts
b) hugeadm --pool-pages-max DEFAULT:8G
c) hugeadm --set-recommended-min_free_kbytes
d) hugeadm --set-recommended-shmmax

The min_free_kbytes here is important. Anti-fragmentation works best
when pageblocks don't mix. hugeadm knows how to calculate a value that
will significantly reduce the worst of external-fragmentation-related
events as reported by the mm_page_alloc_extfrag tracepoint.

2. Load up memory
a) Start updatedb
b) Create in parallel a X files of pagesize*128 in size. Wait
until files are created. By parallel, I mean that 4096 instances
of dd were launched, one after the other using &. The crude
objective being to mix filesystem metadata allocations with
the buffer cache.
c) Delete every second file so that pageblocks are likely to
have holes
d) kill updatedb if it's still running

At this point, the system is quiet, memory is full but it's full with
clean filesystem metadata and clean buffer cache that is unmapped.
This is readily migrated or discarded so you'd expect lumpy reclaim
to have no significant advantage over compaction but this is at
the POC stage.

3. In increments, attempt to allocate 5% of memory as hugepages.
Measure how long it took, how successful it was, how many
direct reclaims took place and how how many compactions. Note
the compaction figures might not fully add up as compactions
can take place for orders other than the hugepage size

X86-64
vanilla compaction
Final page count: 808 893 (attempted 1002)
Total pages reclaimed: 102662 43721
Total blocks compacted: 0 3048
Total compact pages alloced: 0 187

Compaction allocated slightly more pages but reclaimed a lot less - 230MB
of IO.

PPC64
vanilla compaction
Final page count: 86 91 (attempted 110)
Total pages reclaimed: 89297 62562
Total blocks compacted: 0 1335
Total compact pages alloced: 0 22

Similar to X86-64. No more huge pages were allocated byt a lot less was
reclaimed - about 104MB in this case.

The second tests were all performance related - kernbench, netperf, iozone
and sysbench. None showed anything too remarkable.

The last test was a high-order allocation stress test. Many kernel compiles
are started to fill memory with a pressured mix of kernel and movable
allocations. During this, an attempt is made to allocate 90% of memory
as huge pages - one at a time with small delays between attempts to avoid
flooding the IO queue.

vanilla compaction
Percentage of request allocated X86-64 78% 88%
Percentage of request allocated PPC64 54% 73%

Compaction had slightly higher success rates on X86-64 but helped
significantly on PPC64 with the much larger huge pages and greater opportunity
for racers between direct reclaimers and page allocators. The main impact
is expected to be in latencies.

Latencies are seriously reduced but are more or less the same as they were in
v2 which was posted at http://www.csn.ul.ie/~mel/postings/compaction-20100212

Again, the page migration patches need careful review but otherwise, what
obstacles exist to merging?

Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt | 68 +++++-
Documentation/sysctl/vm.txt | 11 +
drivers/base/node.c | 3 +
include/linux/compaction.h | 76 +++++
include/linux/mm.h | 1 +
include/linux/mmzone.h | 7 +
include/linux/rmap.h | 27 ++-
include/linux/swap.h | 6 +
include/linux/vmstat.h | 2 +
kernel/sysctl.c | 11 +
mm/Kconfig | 20 +-
mm/Makefile | 1 +
mm/compaction.c | 548 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
mm/ksm.c | 4 +-
mm/migrate.c | 22 ++
mm/page_alloc.c | 66 +++++
mm/rmap.c | 10 +-
mm/vmscan.c | 5 -
mm/vmstat.c | 217 ++++++++++++++
19 files changed, 1078 insertions(+), 27 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 include/linux/compaction.h
create mode 100644 mm/compaction.c

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/