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author | Roman Gushchin <guro@fb.com> | 2021-04-08 05:57:36 +0200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Dennis Zhou <dennis@kernel.org> | 2021-04-21 20:17:40 +0200 |
commit | f183324133ea535db4127f9fad3e19725ca88bf3 (patch) | |
tree | 48bc58b1cdba83266620226fd7d9340851a26eba /mm/percpu-vm.c | |
parent | percpu: use pcpu_free_slot instead of pcpu_nr_slots - 1 (diff) | |
download | linux-f183324133ea535db4127f9fad3e19725ca88bf3.tar.xz linux-f183324133ea535db4127f9fad3e19725ca88bf3.zip |
percpu: implement partial chunk depopulation
From Roman ("percpu: partial chunk depopulation"):
In our [Facebook] production experience the percpu memory allocator is
sometimes struggling with returning the memory to the system. A typical
example is a creation of several thousands memory cgroups (each has
several chunks of the percpu data used for vmstats, vmevents,
ref counters etc). Deletion and complete releasing of these cgroups
doesn't always lead to a shrinkage of the percpu memory, so that
sometimes there are several GB's of memory wasted.
The underlying problem is the fragmentation: to release an underlying
chunk all percpu allocations should be released first. The percpu
allocator tends to top up chunks to improve the utilization. It means
new small-ish allocations (e.g. percpu ref counters) are placed onto
almost filled old-ish chunks, effectively pinning them in memory.
This patchset solves this problem by implementing a partial depopulation
of percpu chunks: chunks with many empty pages are being asynchronously
depopulated and the pages are returned to the system.
To illustrate the problem the following script can be used:
--
cd /sys/fs/cgroup
mkdir percpu_test
echo "+memory" > percpu_test/cgroup.subtree_control
cat /proc/meminfo | grep Percpu
for i in `seq 1 1000`; do
mkdir percpu_test/cg_"${i}"
for j in `seq 1 10`; do
mkdir percpu_test/cg_"${i}"_"${j}"
done
done
cat /proc/meminfo | grep Percpu
for i in `seq 1 1000`; do
for j in `seq 1 10`; do
rmdir percpu_test/cg_"${i}"_"${j}"
done
done
sleep 10
cat /proc/meminfo | grep Percpu
for i in `seq 1 1000`; do
rmdir percpu_test/cg_"${i}"
done
rmdir percpu_test
--
It creates 11000 memory cgroups and removes every 10 out of 11.
It prints the initial size of the percpu memory, the size after
creating all cgroups and the size after deleting most of them.
Results:
vanilla:
./percpu_test.sh
Percpu: 7488 kB
Percpu: 481152 kB
Percpu: 481152 kB
with this patchset applied:
./percpu_test.sh
Percpu: 7488 kB
Percpu: 481408 kB
Percpu: 135552 kB
The total size of the percpu memory was reduced by more than 3.5 times.
This patch:
This patch implements partial depopulation of percpu chunks.
As of now, a chunk can be depopulated only as a part of the final
destruction, if there are no more outstanding allocations. However
to minimize a memory waste it might be useful to depopulate a
partially filed chunk, if a small number of outstanding allocations
prevents the chunk from being fully reclaimed.
This patch implements the following depopulation process: it scans
over the chunk pages, looks for a range of empty and populated pages
and performs the depopulation. To avoid races with new allocations,
the chunk is previously isolated. After the depopulation the chunk is
sidelined to a special list or freed. New allocations prefer using
active chunks to sidelined chunks. If a sidelined chunk is used, it is
reintegrated to the active lists.
The depopulation is scheduled on the free path if the chunk is all of
the following:
1) has more than 1/4 of total pages free and populated
2) the system has enough free percpu pages aside of this chunk
3) isn't the reserved chunk
4) isn't the first chunk
If it's already depopulated but got free populated pages, it's a good
target too. The chunk is moved to a special slot,
pcpu_to_depopulate_slot, chunk->isolated is set, and the balance work
item is scheduled. On isolation, these pages are removed from the
pcpu_nr_empty_pop_pages. It is constantly replaced to the
to_depopulate_slot when it meets these qualifications.
pcpu_reclaim_populated() iterates over the to_depopulate_slot until it
becomes empty. The depopulation is performed in the reverse direction to
keep populated pages close to the beginning. Depopulated chunks are
sidelined to preferentially avoid them for new allocations. When no
active chunk can suffice a new allocation, sidelined chunks are first
checked before creating a new chunk.
Signed-off-by: Roman Gushchin <guro@fb.com>
Co-developed-by: Dennis Zhou <dennis@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dennis Zhou <dennis@kernel.org>
Tested-by: Pratik Sampat <psampat@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Dennis Zhou <dennis@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'mm/percpu-vm.c')
-rw-r--r-- | mm/percpu-vm.c | 30 |
1 files changed, 30 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/mm/percpu-vm.c b/mm/percpu-vm.c index e46f7a6917f9..c75f6f24f2d5 100644 --- a/mm/percpu-vm.c +++ b/mm/percpu-vm.c @@ -377,3 +377,33 @@ static int __init pcpu_verify_alloc_info(const struct pcpu_alloc_info *ai) /* no extra restriction */ return 0; } + +/** + * pcpu_should_reclaim_chunk - determine if a chunk should go into reclaim + * @chunk: chunk of interest + * + * This is the entry point for percpu reclaim. If a chunk qualifies, it is then + * isolated and managed in separate lists at the back of pcpu_slot: sidelined + * and to_depopulate respectively. The to_depopulate list holds chunks slated + * for depopulation. They no longer contribute to pcpu_nr_empty_pop_pages once + * they are on this list. Once depopulated, they are moved onto the sidelined + * list which enables them to be pulled back in for allocation if no other chunk + * can suffice the allocation. + */ +static bool pcpu_should_reclaim_chunk(struct pcpu_chunk *chunk) +{ + /* do not reclaim either the first chunk or reserved chunk */ + if (chunk == pcpu_first_chunk || chunk == pcpu_reserved_chunk) + return false; + + /* + * If it is isolated, it may be on the sidelined list so move it back to + * the to_depopulate list. If we hit at least 1/4 pages empty pages AND + * there is no system-wide shortage of empty pages aside from this + * chunk, move it to the to_depopulate list. + */ + return ((chunk->isolated && chunk->nr_empty_pop_pages) || + (pcpu_nr_empty_pop_pages[pcpu_chunk_type(chunk)] > + PCPU_EMPTY_POP_PAGES_HIGH + chunk->nr_empty_pop_pages && + chunk->nr_empty_pop_pages >= chunk->nr_pages / 4)); +} |