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Message-ID: <20201203030632.GG1375014@carbon.DHCP.thefacebook.com>
Date: Wed, 2 Dec 2020 19:06:32 -0800
From: Roman Gushchin <guro@...com>
To: Yang Shi <shy828301@...il.com>
CC: <ktkhai@...tuozzo.com>, <shakeelb@...gle.com>,
<david@...morbit.com>, <hannes@...xchg.org>, <mhocko@...e.com>,
<akpm@...ux-foundation.org>, <linux-mm@...ck.org>,
<linux-fsdevel@...r.kernel.org>, <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH 5/9] mm: memcontrol: add per memcg shrinker nr_deferred
On Wed, Dec 02, 2020 at 10:27:21AM -0800, Yang Shi wrote:
> Currently the number of deferred objects are per shrinker, but some slabs, for example,
> vfs inode/dentry cache are per memcg, this would result in poor isolation among memcgs.
>
> The deferred objects typically are generated by __GFP_NOFS allocations, one memcg with
> excessive __GFP_NOFS allocations may blow up deferred objects, then other innocent memcgs
> may suffer from over shrink, excessive reclaim latency, etc.
>
> For example, two workloads run in memcgA and memcgB respectively, workload in B is vfs
> heavy workload. Workload in A generates excessive deferred objects, then B's vfs cache
> might be hit heavily (drop half of caches) by B's limit reclaim or global reclaim.
>
> We observed this hit in our production environment which was running vfs heavy workload
> shown as the below tracing log:
>
> <...>-409454 [016] .... 28286961.747146: mm_shrink_slab_start: super_cache_scan+0x0/0x1a0 ffff9a83046f3458:
> nid: 1 objects to shrink 3641681686040 gfp_flags GFP_HIGHUSER_MOVABLE|__GFP_ZERO pgs_scanned 1 lru_pgs 15721
> cache items 246404277 delta 31345 total_scan 123202138
> <...>-409454 [022] .... 28287105.928018: mm_shrink_slab_end: super_cache_scan+0x0/0x1a0 ffff9a83046f3458:
> nid: 1 unused scan count 3641681686040 new scan count 3641798379189 total_scan 602
> last shrinker return val 123186855
>
> The vfs cache and page cache ration was 10:1 on this machine, and half of caches were dropped.
> This also resulted in significant amount of page caches were dropped due to inodes eviction.
>
> Make nr_deferred per memcg for memcg aware shrinkers would solve the unfairness and bring
> better isolation.
>
> When memcg is not enabled (!CONFIG_MEMCG or memcg disabled), the shrinker's nr_deferred
> would be used. And non memcg aware shrinkers use shrinker's nr_deferred all the time.
>
> Signed-off-by: Yang Shi <shy828301@...il.com>
> ---
> include/linux/memcontrol.h | 9 +++
> mm/memcontrol.c | 112 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
> mm/vmscan.c | 4 ++
> 3 files changed, 123 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/include/linux/memcontrol.h b/include/linux/memcontrol.h
> index 922a7f600465..1b343b268359 100644
> --- a/include/linux/memcontrol.h
> +++ b/include/linux/memcontrol.h
> @@ -92,6 +92,13 @@ struct lruvec_stat {
> long count[NR_VM_NODE_STAT_ITEMS];
> };
>
> +
> +/* Shrinker::id indexed nr_deferred of memcg-aware shrinkers. */
> +struct memcg_shrinker_deferred {
> + struct rcu_head rcu;
> + atomic_long_t nr_deferred[];
> +};
The idea makes total sense to me. But I wonder if we can add nr_deferred to
struct list_lru_one, instead of adding another per-memcg per-shrinker entity?
I guess it can simplify the code quite a lot. What do you think?
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