Re: Detecting page cache trashing state

From: Johannes Weiner
Date: Wed Oct 25 2017 - 13:54:52 EST


Hi Ruslan,

sorry about the delayed response, I missed the new activity in this
older thread.

On Thu, Sep 28, 2017 at 06:49:07PM +0300, Ruslan Ruslichenko -X (rruslich - GLOBALLOGIC INC at Cisco) wrote:
> Hi Johannes,
>
> Hopefully I was able to rebase the patch on top v4.9.26 (latest supported
> version by us right now)
> and test a bit.
> The overall idea definitely looks promising, although I have one question on
> usage.
> Will it be able to account the time which processes spend on handling major
> page faults
> (including fs and iowait time) of refaulting page?

That's the main thing it should measure! :)

The lock_page() and wait_on_page_locked() calls are where iowaits
happen on a cache miss. If those are refaults, they'll be counted.

> As we have one big application which code space occupies big amount of place
> in page cache,
> when the system under heavy memory usage will reclaim some of it, the
> application will
> start constantly thrashing. Since it code is placed on squashfs it spends
> whole CPU time
> decompressing the pages and seem memdelay counters are not detecting this
> situation.
> Here are some counters to indicate this:
>
> 19:02:44 CPU %user %nice %system %iowait %steal %idle
> 19:02:45 all 0.00 0.00 100.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
>
> 19:02:44 pgpgin/s pgpgout/s fault/s majflt/s pgfree/s pgscank/s
> pgscand/s pgsteal/s %vmeff
> 19:02:45 15284.00 0.00 428.00 352.00 19990.00 0.00 0.00
> 15802.00 0.00
>
> And as nobody actively allocating memory anymore looks like memdelay
> counters are not
> actively incremented:
>
> [:~]$ cat /proc/memdelay
> 268035776
> 6.13 5.43 3.58
> 1.90 1.89 1.26

How does it correlate with /proc/vmstat::workingset_activate during
that time? It only counts thrashing time of refaults it can actively
detect.

Btw, how many CPUs does this system have? There is a bug in this
version on how idle time is aggregated across multiple CPUs. The error
compounds with the number of CPUs in the system.

I'm attaching 3 bugfixes that go on top of what you have. There might
be some conflicts, but they should be minor variable naming issues.