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Message-ID: <CALYGNiMHAtaZfGovYeud65Eix8v0OSWSx8F=4K+pqF6akQah0A@mail.gmail.com>
Date:	Fri, 19 Feb 2016 09:40:45 +0300
From:	Konstantin Khlebnikov <koct9i@...il.com>
To:	Hugh Dickins <hughd@...gle.com>
Cc:	Johannes Weiner <hannes@...xchg.org>,
	"linux-mm@...ck.org" <linux-mm@...ck.org>,
	Andrew Morton <akpm@...ux-foundation.org>,
	Rik van Riel <riel@...hat.com>, Mel Gorman <mgorman@...e.de>,
	Linux Kernel Mailing List <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
	kernel-team@...com
Subject: Re: [RFC PATCH] proc: do not include shmem and driver pages in /proc/meminfo::Cached

On Fri, Feb 19, 2016 at 1:57 AM, Hugh Dickins <hughd@...gle.com> wrote:
> On Thu, 18 Feb 2016, Johannes Weiner wrote:
>
>> Even before we added MemAvailable, users knew that page cache is
>> easily convertible to free memory on pressure, and estimated their
>> "available" memory by looking at the sum of MemFree, Cached, Buffers.
>> However, "Cached" is calculated using NR_FILE_PAGES, which includes
>> shmem and random driver pages inserted into the page tables; neither
>> of which are easily reclaimable, or reclaimable at all. Reclaiming
>> shmem requires swapping, which is slow. And unlike page cache, which
>> has fairly conservative dirty limits, all of shmem needs to be written
>> out before becoming evictable. Without swap, shmem is not evictable at
>> all. And driver pages certainly never are.
>>
>> Calling these pages "Cached" is misleading and has resulted in broken
>> formulas in userspace. They misrepresent the memory situation and
>> cause either waste or unexpected OOM kills. With 64-bit and per-cpu
>> memory we are way past the point where the relationship between
>> virtual and physical memory is meaningful and users can rely on
>> overcommit protection. OOM kills can not be avoided without wasting
>> enormous amounts of memory this way. This shifts the management burden
>> toward userspace, toward applications monitoring their environment and
>> adjusting their operations. And so where statistics like /proc/meminfo
>> used to be more informational, we have more and more software relying
>> on them to make automated decisions based on utilization.
>>
>> But if userspace is supposed to take over responsibility, it needs a
>> clear and accurate kernel interface to base its judgement on. And one
>> of the requirements is certainly that memory consumers with wildly
>> different reclaimability are not conflated. Adding MemAvailable is a
>> good step in that direction, but there is software like Sigar[1] in
>> circulation that might not get updated anytime soon. And even then,
>> new users will continue to go for the intuitive interpretation of the
>> Cached item. We can't blame them. There are years of tradition behind
>> it, starting with the way free(1) and vmstat(8) have always reported
>> free, buffers, cached. And try as we might, using "Cached" for
>> unevictable memory is never going to be obvious.
>>
>> The semantics of Cached including shmem and kernel pages have been
>> this way forever, dictated by the single-LRU implementation rather
>> than optimal semantics. So it's an uncomfortable proposal to change it
>> now. But what other way to fix this for existing users? What other way
>> to make the interface more intuitive for future users? And what could
>> break by removing it now? I guess somebody who already subtracts Shmem
>> from Cached.
>>
>> What are your thoughts on this?
>
> My thoughts are NAK.  A misleading stat is not so bad as a
> misleading stat whose meaning we change in some random kernel.
>
> By all means improve Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt on Cached.
> By all means promote Active(file)+Inactive(file)-Buffers as often a
> better measure (though Buffers itself is obscure to me - is it intended
> usually to approximate resident FS metadata?).  By all means work on
> /proc/meminfo-v2 (though that may entail dispiritingly long discussions).
>
> We have to assume that Cached has been useful to some people, and that
> they've learnt to subtract Shmem from it, if slow or no swap concerns them.
>
> Added Konstantin to Cc: he's had valuable experience of people learning
> to adapt to the numbers that we put out.
>

I think everything will ok. Subtraction of shmem isn't widespread practice,
more like secret knowledge. This wasn't documented and people who use
this should be aware that this might stop working at any time. So, ACK.

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