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authorYosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@google.com>2023-11-29 04:21:53 +0100
committerAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>2023-12-20 23:48:11 +0100
commit7d7ef0a4686abe43cd76a141b340a348f45ecdf2 (patch)
treebd7bba44ff39b1a5cda9394110a6659797d42ed7 /mm/memcontrol.c
parentmm: workingset: move the stats flush into workingset_test_recent() (diff)
downloadlinux-7d7ef0a4686abe43cd76a141b340a348f45ecdf2.tar.xz
linux-7d7ef0a4686abe43cd76a141b340a348f45ecdf2.zip
mm: memcg: restore subtree stats flushing
Stats flushing for memcg currently follows the following rules: - Always flush the entire memcg hierarchy (i.e. flush the root). - Only one flusher is allowed at a time. If someone else tries to flush concurrently, they skip and return immediately. - A periodic flusher flushes all the stats every 2 seconds. The reason this approach is followed is because all flushes are serialized by a global rstat spinlock. On the memcg side, flushing is invoked from userspace reads as well as in-kernel flushers (e.g. reclaim, refault, etc). This approach aims to avoid serializing all flushers on the global lock, which can cause a significant performance hit under high concurrency. This approach has the following problems: - Occasionally a userspace read of the stats of a non-root cgroup will be too expensive as it has to flush the entire hierarchy [1]. - Sometimes the stats accuracy are compromised if there is an ongoing flush, and we skip and return before the subtree of interest is actually flushed, yielding stale stats (by up to 2s due to periodic flushing). This is more visible when reading stats from userspace, but can also affect in-kernel flushers. The latter problem is particulary a concern when userspace reads stats after an event occurs, but gets stats from before the event. Examples: - When memory usage / pressure spikes, a userspace OOM handler may look at the stats of different memcgs to select a victim based on various heuristics (e.g. how much private memory will be freed by killing this). Reading stale stats from before the usage spike in this case may cause a wrongful OOM kill. - A proactive reclaimer may read the stats after writing to memory.reclaim to measure the success of the reclaim operation. Stale stats from before reclaim may give a false negative. - Reading the stats of a parent and a child memcg may be inconsistent (child larger than parent), if the flush doesn't happen when the parent is read, but happens when the child is read. As for in-kernel flushers, they will occasionally get stale stats. No regressions are currently known from this, but if there are regressions, they would be very difficult to debug and link to the source of the problem. This patch aims to fix these problems by restoring subtree flushing, and removing the unified/coalesced flushing logic that skips flushing if there is an ongoing flush. This change would introduce a significant regression with global stats flushing thresholds. With per-memcg stats flushing thresholds, this seems to perform really well. The thresholds protect the underlying lock from unnecessary contention. This patch was tested in two ways to ensure the latency of flushing is up to par, on a machine with 384 cpus: - A synthetic test with 5000 concurrent workers in 500 cgroups doing allocations and reclaim, as well as 1000 readers for memory.stat (variation of [2]). No regressions were noticed in the total runtime. Note that significant regressions in this test are observed with global stats thresholds, but not with per-memcg thresholds. - A synthetic stress test for concurrently reading memcg stats while memory allocation/freeing workers are running in the background, provided by Wei Xu [3]. With 250k threads reading the stats every 100ms in 50k cgroups, 99.9% of reads take <= 50us. Less than 0.01% of reads take more than 1ms, and no reads take more than 100ms. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CABWYdi0c6__rh-K7dcM_pkf9BJdTRtAU08M43KO9ME4-dsgfoQ@mail.gmail.com/ [2] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAJD7tka13M-zVZTyQJYL1iUAYvuQ1fcHbCjcOBZcz6POYTV-4g@mail.gmail.com/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAAPL-u9D2b=iF5Lf_cRnKxUfkiEe0AMDTu6yhrUAzX0b6a6rDg@mail.gmail.com/ [akpm@linux-foundation.org: fix mm/zswap.c] [yosryahmed@google.com: remove stats flushing mutex] Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/CAJD7tkZgP3m-VVPn+fF_YuvXeQYK=tZZjJHj=dzD=CcSSpp2qg@mail.gmail.com Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20231129032154.3710765-6-yosryahmed@google.com Signed-off-by: Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@google.com> Tested-by: Domenico Cerasuolo <cerasuolodomenico@gmail.com> Acked-by: Shakeel Butt <shakeelb@google.com> Cc: Chris Li <chrisl@kernel.org> Cc: Greg Thelen <gthelen@google.com> Cc: Ivan Babrou <ivan@cloudflare.com> Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@kernel.org> Cc: Michal Koutny <mkoutny@suse.com> Cc: Muchun Song <muchun.song@linux.dev> Cc: Roman Gushchin <roman.gushchin@linux.dev> Cc: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> Cc: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com> Cc: Wei Xu <weixugc@google.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'mm/memcontrol.c')
-rw-r--r--mm/memcontrol.c68
1 files changed, 39 insertions, 29 deletions
diff --git a/mm/memcontrol.c b/mm/memcontrol.c
index c5aa0c2cb68b..b08b9cd4a3a8 100644
--- a/mm/memcontrol.c
+++ b/mm/memcontrol.c
@@ -670,7 +670,6 @@ struct memcg_vmstats {
*/
static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w);
static DECLARE_DEFERRABLE_WORK(stats_flush_dwork, flush_memcg_stats_dwork);
-static atomic_t stats_flush_ongoing = ATOMIC_INIT(0);
static u64 flush_last_time;
#define FLUSH_TIME (2UL*HZ)
@@ -731,35 +730,40 @@ static inline void memcg_rstat_updated(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, int val)
}
}
-static void do_flush_stats(void)
+static void do_flush_stats(struct mem_cgroup *memcg)
{
- /*
- * We always flush the entire tree, so concurrent flushers can just
- * skip. This avoids a thundering herd problem on the rstat global lock
- * from memcg flushers (e.g. reclaim, refault, etc).
- */
- if (atomic_read(&stats_flush_ongoing) ||
- atomic_xchg(&stats_flush_ongoing, 1))
- return;
-
- WRITE_ONCE(flush_last_time, jiffies_64);
-
- cgroup_rstat_flush(root_mem_cgroup->css.cgroup);
+ if (mem_cgroup_is_root(memcg))
+ WRITE_ONCE(flush_last_time, jiffies_64);
- atomic_set(&stats_flush_ongoing, 0);
+ cgroup_rstat_flush(memcg->css.cgroup);
}
-void mem_cgroup_flush_stats(void)
+/*
+ * mem_cgroup_flush_stats - flush the stats of a memory cgroup subtree
+ * @memcg: root of the subtree to flush
+ *
+ * Flushing is serialized by the underlying global rstat lock. There is also a
+ * minimum amount of work to be done even if there are no stat updates to flush.
+ * Hence, we only flush the stats if the updates delta exceeds a threshold. This
+ * avoids unnecessary work and contention on the underlying lock.
+ */
+void mem_cgroup_flush_stats(struct mem_cgroup *memcg)
{
- if (memcg_should_flush_stats(root_mem_cgroup))
- do_flush_stats();
+ if (mem_cgroup_disabled())
+ return;
+
+ if (!memcg)
+ memcg = root_mem_cgroup;
+
+ if (memcg_should_flush_stats(memcg))
+ do_flush_stats(memcg);
}
-void mem_cgroup_flush_stats_ratelimited(void)
+void mem_cgroup_flush_stats_ratelimited(struct mem_cgroup *memcg)
{
/* Only flush if the periodic flusher is one full cycle late */
if (time_after64(jiffies_64, READ_ONCE(flush_last_time) + 2*FLUSH_TIME))
- mem_cgroup_flush_stats();
+ mem_cgroup_flush_stats(memcg);
}
static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w)
@@ -768,7 +772,7 @@ static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w)
* Deliberately ignore memcg_should_flush_stats() here so that flushing
* in latency-sensitive paths is as cheap as possible.
*/
- do_flush_stats();
+ do_flush_stats(root_mem_cgroup);
queue_delayed_work(system_unbound_wq, &stats_flush_dwork, FLUSH_TIME);
}
@@ -1643,7 +1647,7 @@ static void memcg_stat_format(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, struct seq_buf *s)
*
* Current memory state:
*/
- mem_cgroup_flush_stats();
+ mem_cgroup_flush_stats(memcg);
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(memory_stats); i++) {
u64 size;
@@ -4193,7 +4197,7 @@ static int memcg_numa_stat_show(struct seq_file *m, void *v)
int nid;
struct mem_cgroup *memcg = mem_cgroup_from_seq(m);
- mem_cgroup_flush_stats();
+ mem_cgroup_flush_stats(memcg);
for (stat = stats; stat < stats + ARRAY_SIZE(stats); stat++) {
seq_printf(m, "%s=%lu", stat->name,
@@ -4274,7 +4278,7 @@ static void memcg1_stat_format(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, struct seq_buf *s)
BUILD_BUG_ON(ARRAY_SIZE(memcg1_stat_names) != ARRAY_SIZE(memcg1_stats));
- mem_cgroup_flush_stats();
+ mem_cgroup_flush_stats(memcg);
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(memcg1_stats); i++) {
unsigned long nr;
@@ -4770,7 +4774,7 @@ void mem_cgroup_wb_stats(struct bdi_writeback *wb, unsigned long *pfilepages,
struct mem_cgroup *memcg = mem_cgroup_from_css(wb->memcg_css);
struct mem_cgroup *parent;
- mem_cgroup_flush_stats();
+ mem_cgroup_flush_stats(memcg);
*pdirty = memcg_page_state(memcg, NR_FILE_DIRTY);
*pwriteback = memcg_page_state(memcg, NR_WRITEBACK);
@@ -6865,7 +6869,7 @@ static int memory_numa_stat_show(struct seq_file *m, void *v)
int i;
struct mem_cgroup *memcg = mem_cgroup_from_seq(m);
- mem_cgroup_flush_stats();
+ mem_cgroup_flush_stats(memcg);
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(memory_stats); i++) {
int nid;
@@ -8096,7 +8100,11 @@ bool obj_cgroup_may_zswap(struct obj_cgroup *objcg)
break;
}
- cgroup_rstat_flush(memcg->css.cgroup);
+ /*
+ * mem_cgroup_flush_stats() ignores small changes. Use
+ * do_flush_stats() directly to get accurate stats for charging.
+ */
+ do_flush_stats(memcg);
pages = memcg_page_state(memcg, MEMCG_ZSWAP_B) / PAGE_SIZE;
if (pages < max)
continue;
@@ -8161,8 +8169,10 @@ void obj_cgroup_uncharge_zswap(struct obj_cgroup *objcg, size_t size)
static u64 zswap_current_read(struct cgroup_subsys_state *css,
struct cftype *cft)
{
- cgroup_rstat_flush(css->cgroup);
- return memcg_page_state(mem_cgroup_from_css(css), MEMCG_ZSWAP_B);
+ struct mem_cgroup *memcg = mem_cgroup_from_css(css);
+
+ mem_cgroup_flush_stats(memcg);
+ return memcg_page_state(memcg, MEMCG_ZSWAP_B);
}
static int zswap_max_show(struct seq_file *m, void *v)