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From: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
To: Michal Hocko <mhocko@kernel.org>
Cc: Minchan Kim <minchan@kernel.org>,
	Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>,
	LKML <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
	linux-mm <linux-mm@kvack.org>,
	Miguel de Dios <migueldedios@google.com>,
	Wei Wang <wvw@google.com>,
	Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net>,
	Nicholas Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [RFC PATCH] mm: drop mark_page_access from the unmap path
Date: Tue, 27 Aug 2019 12:00:26 -0400	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20190827160026.GA27686@cmpxchg.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20190826120630.GI7538@dhcp22.suse.cz>

On Mon, Aug 26, 2019 at 02:06:30PM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote:
> On Tue 13-08-19 12:51:43, Michal Hocko wrote:
> > On Mon 12-08-19 11:07:25, Johannes Weiner wrote:
> > > On Mon, Aug 12, 2019 at 10:09:47AM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote:
> [...]
> > > > > Maybe the refaults will be fine - but latency expectations around
> > > > > mapped page cache certainly are a lot higher than unmapped cache.
> > > > >
> > > > > So I'm a bit reluctant about this patch. If Minchan can be happy with
> > > > > the lock batching, I'd prefer that.
> > > > 
> > > > Yes, it seems that the regular lock drop&relock helps in Minchan's case
> > > > but this is a kind of change that might have other subtle side effects.
> > > > E.g. will-it-scale has noticed a regression [1], likely because the
> > > > critical section is shorter and the overal throughput of the operation
> > > > decreases. Now, the w-i-s is an artificial benchmark so I wouldn't lose
> > > > much sleep over it normally but we have already seen real regressions
> > > > when the locking pattern has changed in the past so I would by a bit
> > > > cautious.
> > > 
> > > I'm much more concerned about fundamentally changing the aging policy
> > > of mapped page cache then about the lock breaking scheme. With locking
> > > we worry about CPU effects; with aging we worry about additional IO.
> > 
> > But the later is observable and debuggable little bit easier IMHO.
> > People are quite used to watch for major faults from my experience
> > as that is an easy metric to compare.

Rootcausing additional (re)faults is really difficult. We're talking
about a slight trend change in caching behavior in a sea of millions
of pages. There could be so many factors causing this, and for most
you have to patch debugging stuff into the kernel to rule them out.

A CPU regression you can figure out with perf.

> > > > As I've said, this RFC is mostly to open a discussion. I would really
> > > > like to weigh the overhead of mark_page_accessed and potential scenario
> > > > when refaults would be visible in practice. I can imagine that a short
> > > > lived statically linked applications have higher chance of being the
> > > > only user unlike libraries which are often being mapped via several
> > > > ptes. But the main problem to evaluate this is that there are many other
> > > > external factors to trigger the worst case.
> > > 
> > > We can discuss the pros and cons, but ultimately we simply need to
> > > test it against real workloads to see if changing the promotion rules
> > > regresses the amount of paging we do in practice.
> > 
> > Agreed. Do you see other option than to try it out and revert if we see
> > regressions? We would get a workload description which would be helpful
> > for future regression testing when touching this area. We can start
> > slower and keep it in linux-next for a release cycle to catch any
> > fallouts early.
> > 
> > Thoughts?
> 
> ping...

Personally, I'm not convinced by this patch. I think it's a pretty
drastic change in aging heuristics just to address a CPU overhead
problem that has simpler, easier to verify, alternative solutions.

It WOULD be great to clarify and improve the aging model for mapped
cache, to make it a bit easier to reason about. But this patch does
not really get there either. Instead of taking a serious look at
mapped cache lifetime and usage scenarios, the changelog is more in
"let's see what breaks if we take out this screw here" territory.

So I'm afraid I don't think the patch & changelog in its current shape
should go upstream.


  reply	other threads:[~2019-08-27 16:00 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 25+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2019-07-29  7:10 [PATCH] mm: release the spinlock on zap_pte_range Minchan Kim
2019-07-29  7:45 ` Michal Hocko
2019-07-29  8:20   ` Minchan Kim
2019-07-29  8:35     ` Michal Hocko
2019-07-30 12:11       ` Minchan Kim
2019-07-30 12:32         ` Michal Hocko
2019-07-30 12:39           ` Minchan Kim
2019-07-30 12:57             ` Michal Hocko
2019-07-31  5:44               ` Minchan Kim
2019-07-31  7:21                 ` Michal Hocko
2019-08-06 10:55                   ` Minchan Kim
2019-08-09 12:43                     ` [RFC PATCH] mm: drop mark_page_access from the unmap path Michal Hocko
2019-08-09 17:57                       ` Mel Gorman
2019-08-09 18:34                       ` Johannes Weiner
2019-08-12  8:09                         ` Michal Hocko
2019-08-12 15:07                           ` Johannes Weiner
2019-08-13 10:51                             ` Michal Hocko
2019-08-26 12:06                               ` Michal Hocko
2019-08-27 16:00                                 ` Johannes Weiner [this message]
2019-08-27 18:41                                   ` Michal Hocko
2019-07-30 19:42     ` [PATCH] mm: release the spinlock on zap_pte_range Andrew Morton
2019-07-31  6:14       ` Minchan Kim
2019-08-06  7:05 ` [mm] 755d6edc1a: will-it-scale.per_process_ops -4.1% regression kernel test robot
     [not found]   ` <20190806080415.GG11812@dhcp22.suse.cz>
2019-08-06 11:00     ` Minchan Kim
2019-08-06 11:11       ` Michal Hocko

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