Re: [PATCH 4/4] memcg: synchronously enforce memory.high

From: Shakeel Butt
Date: Thu Feb 10 2022 - 18:53:17 EST


On Thu, Feb 10, 2022 at 3:29 PM Roman Gushchin <guro@xxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Feb 10, 2022 at 02:22:36PM -0800, Shakeel Butt wrote:
> > On Thu, Feb 10, 2022 at 12:15 PM Roman Gushchin <guro@xxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > [...]
> > >
> > > Has this approach been extensively tested in the production?
> > >
> > > Injecting sleeps at return-to-userspace moment is safe in terms of priority
> > > inversions: a slowed down task will unlikely affect the rest of the system.
> > >
> > > It way less predictable for a random allocation in the kernel mode, what if
> > > the task is already holding a system-wide resource?
> > >
> > > Someone might argue that it's not better than a system-wide memory shortage
> > > and the same allocation might go into a direct reclaim anyway, but with
> > > the way how memory.high is used it will happen way more often.
> > >
> >
> > Thanks for the review.
> >
> > This patchset is tested in the test environment for now and I do plan
> > to test this in production but that is a slow process and will take
> > some time.
> >
> > Let me answer the main concern you have raised i.e. the safety of
> > throttling a task synchronously in the charge code path. Please note
> > that synchronous memory reclaim and oom-killing can already cause the
> > priority inversion issues you have mentioned. The way we usually
> > tackle such issues are through userspace controllers. For example oomd
> > is the userspace solution for catering such issues related to
> > oom-killing. Here we have a similar userspace daemon monitoring the
> > workload and deciding if it should let the workload grow or kill it.
> >
> > Now should we keep the current high limit enforcement implementation
> > and let it be ineffective for some real workloads or should we make
> > the enforcement more robust and let the userspace tackle some corner
> > case priority inversion issues. I think we should follow the second
> > option as we already have precedence of doing the same for reclaim and
> > oom-killing.
>
> Well, in a theory it sounds good and I have no intention to oppose the
> idea. However in practice we might easily get quite serious problems.
> So I think we should be extra careful here. In the end we don't want to
> pull and then revert this patch.
>
> The difference between the system-wide direct reclaim and this case is that
> usually kswapd is doing a good job of refilling the empty buffer, so we don't
> usually work in the circumstances of the global memory shortage. And when we do,
> often it's not working out quite well, this is why oomd and other similar
> solutions are required.
>.
> Another option is to use your approach only for special cases (e.g. huge
> allocations) and keep the existing approach for most other allocations.
>

These are not necessarily huge allocations and can be a large number
of small allocations. However I think we can make this idea work by
checking current->memcg_nr_pages_over_high. If
order(current->memcg_nr_pages_over_high) is, let's say, larger than
PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER, then throttle synchronously. WDYT?