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Date:   Fri, 5 Jun 2020 15:05:16 -0700
From:   Yang Shi <shy828301@...il.com>
To:     Greg Thelen <gthelen@...gle.com>
Cc:     Hugh Dickins <hughd@...gle.com>,
        Andrew Morton <akpm@...ux-foundation.org>,
        Kirill Tkhai <ktkhai@...tuozzo.com>,
        Linux MM <linux-mm@...ck.org>,
        Linux Kernel Mailing List <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
        stable@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH] shmem, memcg: enable memcg aware shrinker

On Thu, Jun 4, 2020 at 1:17 AM Greg Thelen <gthelen@...gle.com> wrote:
>
> Yang Shi <shy828301@...il.com> wrote:
>
> > On Sun, May 31, 2020 at 8:22 PM Greg Thelen <gthelen@...gle.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> Since v4.19 commit b0dedc49a2da ("mm/vmscan.c: iterate only over charged
> >> shrinkers during memcg shrink_slab()") a memcg aware shrinker is only
> >> called when the per-memcg per-node shrinker_map indicates that the
> >> shrinker may have objects to release to the memcg and node.
> >>
> >> shmem_unused_huge_count and shmem_unused_huge_scan support the per-tmpfs
> >> shrinker which advertises per memcg and numa awareness.  The shmem
> >> shrinker releases memory by splitting hugepages that extend beyond
> >> i_size.
> >>
> >> Shmem does not currently set bits in shrinker_map.  So, starting with
> >> b0dedc49a2da, memcg reclaim avoids calling the shmem shrinker under
> >> pressure.  This leads to undeserved memcg OOM kills.
> >> Example that reliably sees memcg OOM kill in unpatched kernel:
> >>   FS=/tmp/fs
> >>   CONTAINER=/cgroup/memory/tmpfs_shrinker
> >>   mkdir -p $FS
> >>   mount -t tmpfs -o huge=always nodev $FS
> >>   # Create 1000 MB container, which shouldn't suffer OOM.
> >>   mkdir $CONTAINER
> >>   echo 1000M > $CONTAINER/memory.limit_in_bytes
> >>   echo $BASHPID >> $CONTAINER/cgroup.procs
> >>   # Create 4000 files.  Ideally each file uses 4k data page + a little
> >>   # metadata.  Assume 8k total per-file, 32MB (4000*8k) should easily
> >>   # fit within container's 1000 MB.  But if data pages use 2MB
> >>   # hugepages (due to aggressive huge=always) then files consume 8GB,
> >>   # which hits memcg 1000 MB limit.
> >>   for i in {1..4000}; do
> >>     echo . > $FS/$i
> >>   done
> >
> > It looks all the inodes which have tail THP beyond i_size are on one
> > single list, then the shrinker actually just splits the first
> > nr_to_scan inodes. But since the list is not memcg aware, so it seems
> > it may split the THPs which are not charged to the victim memcg and
> > the victim memcg still may suffer from pre-mature oom, right?
>
> Correct.  shmem_unused_huge_shrink() is not memcg aware.  In response to
> memcg pressure it will split the post-i_size tails of nr_to_scan tmpfs
> inodes regardless of if they're charged to the under-pressure memcg.
> do_shrink_slab() looks like it'll repeatedly call
> shmem_unused_huge_shrink().  So it will split tails of many inodes.  So
> I think it'll avoid the oom by over shrinking.  This is not ideal.  But
> it seems better than undeserved oom kill.
>
> I think the solution (as Kirill Tkhai suggested) a memcg-aware index
> would solve both:
> 1) avoid premature oom by registering shrinker to responding to memcg
>    pressure
> 2) avoid shrinking/splitting inodes unrelated to the under-pressure
>    memcg

I do agree with Kirill. Using list_lru sounds optimal. But, it looks
the memcg index is tricky. The index of memcg which the beyond i_size
THP is charged to should be used instead of the inode's memcg which
may charge to different memcg.

>
> I can certainly look into that (thanks Kirill for the pointers).  In the
> short term I'm still interested in avoiding premature OOMs with the
> original thread (i.e. restore pre-4.19 behavior to shmem shrinker for
> memcg pressure).  I plan to test and repost v2.

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