Re: [PATCH v3 0/1] xen/blkback: Squeeze page pools if a memory pressure

From: JÃrgen GroÃ
Date: Mon Dec 09 2019 - 05:15:30 EST


On 09.12.19 10:46, Durrant, Paul wrote:
-----Original Message-----
From: JÃrgen Groà <jgross@xxxxxxxx>
Sent: 09 December 2019 09:39
To: Park, Seongjae <sjpark@xxxxxxxxxx>; axboe@xxxxxxxxx;
konrad.wilk@xxxxxxxxxx; roger.pau@xxxxxxxxxx
Cc: linux-block@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Durrant,
Paul <pdurrant@xxxxxxxxxx>; sj38.park@xxxxxxxxx; xen-
devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [PATCH v3 0/1] xen/blkback: Squeeze page pools if a memory
pressure

On 09.12.19 09:58, SeongJae Park wrote:
Each `blkif` has a free pages pool for the grant mapping. The size of
the pool starts from zero and be increased on demand while processing
the I/O requests. If current I/O requests handling is finished or 100
milliseconds has passed since last I/O requests handling, it checks and
shrinks the pool to not exceed the size limit, `max_buffer_pages`.

Therefore, `blkfront` running guests can cause a memory pressure in the
`blkback` running guest by attaching a large number of block devices and
inducing I/O.

I'm having problems to understand how a guest can attach a large number
of block devices without those having been configured by the host admin
before.

If those devices have been configured, dom0 should be ready for that
number of devices, e.g. by having enough spare memory area for ballooned
pages.

So either I'm missing something here or your reasoning for the need of
the patch is wrong.


I think the underlying issue is that persistent grant support is hogging memory in the backends, thereby compromising scalability. IIUC this patch is essentially a band-aid to get back to the scalability that was possible before persistent grant support was added. Ultimately the right answer should be to get rid of persistent grants support and use grant copy, but such a change is clearly more invasive and would need far more testing.

Persistent grants are hogging ballooned pages, which is equivalent to
memory only in case of the backend's domain memory being equal or
rather near to its max memory size.

So configuring the backend domain with enough spare area for ballooned
pages should make this problem much less serious.

Another problem in this area is the amount of maptrack frames configured
for a driver domain, which will limit the number of concurrent foreign
mappings of that domain.

So instead of having a blkback specific solution I'd rather have a
common callback for backends to release foreign mappings in order to
enable a global resource management.


Juergen