* RFC: OOM detection rework v1 @ 2015-10-29 15:17 mhocko 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection mhocko ` (3 more replies) 0 siblings, 4 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: mhocko @ 2015-10-29 15:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-mm Cc: Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML Hi, as pointed by Linus [1][2] relying on zone_reclaimable as a way to communicate the reclaim progress is rater dubious. I tend to agree, not only it is really obscure, it is not hard to imagine cases where a single page freed in the loop keeps all the reclaimers looping without getting any progress because their gfp_mask wouldn't allow to get that page anyway (e.g. single GFP_ATOMIC alloc and free loop). This is rather rare so it doesn't happen in the practice but the current logic which we have is rather obscure and hard to follow a also non-deterministic. This is an attempt to make the OOM detection more deterministic and easier to follow because each reclaimer basically tracks its own progress which is implemented at the page allocator layer rather spread out between the allocator and the reclaim. The more on the implementation is described in the first patch. I have tested several different scenarios but it should be clear that testing OOM killer is quite hard to be representative. There is usually a tiny gap between almost OOM and full blown OOM which is often time sensitive. Anyway, I have tested the following 3 scenarios and I would appreciate if there are more to test. Testing environment: a virtual machine with 2G of RAM and 2CPUs without any swap to make the OOM more deterministic. 1) 2 writers (each doing dd with 4M blocks to an xfs partition with 1G size, removes the files and starts over again) running in parallel for 10s to build up a lot of dirty pages when 100 parallel mem_eaters (anon private populated mmap which waits until it gets signal) with 80M each. This causes an OOM flood of course and I have compared both patched and unpatched kernels. The test is considered finished after there are no OOM conditions detected. This should tell us whether there are any excessive kills or some of them premature: * base kernel $ grep "Killed process" base-oom-run.log | tail -n1 [ 836.589319] Killed process 3035 (mem_eater) total-vm:85852kB, anon-rss:81996kB, file-rss:344kB $ grep "invoked oom-killer" base-oom-run.log | wc -l 78 $ grep "DMA32.*all_unreclaimable? no" base-oom-run.log | wc -l 0 * patched kernel $ grep "Killed process" patched-oom-run.log | tail -n1 [ 843.281009] Killed process 2998 (mem_eater) total-vm:85852kB, anon-rss:82000kB, file-rss:4kB $ grep "invoked oom-killer" patched-oom-run.log | wc -l 77 $ grep "DMA32.*all_unreclaimable? no" patched-oom-run.log | wc -l 0 So they have finished in a comparable time and killed the very similar number of processes and there doesn't seem to be any case where the patched kernel would have DMA32 zone considered reclaimable. 2) 2 writers again with 10s of run and then 10 mem_eaters to consume as much memory as possible without triggering the OOM killer. This required a lot of tuning but I've considered 3 consecutive runs without OOM as a success. * base kernel size=$(awk '/MemFree/{printf "%dK", ($2/10)-(14*1024)}' /proc/meminfo) * patched kernel size=$(awk '/MemFree/{printf "%dK", ($2/10)-(7500)}' /proc/meminfo) So it seems that the patched kernel handled the low mem conditions better and fired OOM killer later. 3) Costly high-order allocations with a limited amount of memory. Start 10 memeaters in parallel each with size=$(awk '/MemTotal/{printf "%d\n", $2/10}' /proc/meminfo) This will cause an OOM killer which will kill one of them which will free up 200M and then try to use all the remaining space for hugetlb pages. See how many of them will pass kill everything, wait 2s and try again. This tests whether we do not fail __GFP_REPEAT costly allocations too early now. * base kernel $ sort base-hugepages.log | uniq -c 1 66 19 67 20 Trying to allocate 74 * patched kernel $ sort patched-hugepages.log | uniq -c 1 66 19 67 20 Trying to allocate 74 This also doesn't look very bad but this particular test is quite timing sensitive. The above results do seem optimistic but more loads should be tested obviously. I would really appreciate a feedback on the approach I have chosen before I go into more tuning. Is this viable way to go? [1] http://lkml.kernel.org/r/CA+55aFwapaED7JV6zm-NVkP-jKie+eQ1vDXWrKD=SkbshZSgmw@mail.gmail.com [2] http://lkml.kernel.org/r/CA+55aFxwg=vS2nrXsQhAUzPQDGb8aQpZi0M7UUh21ftBo-z46Q@mail.gmail.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-29 15:17 RFC: OOM detection rework v1 mhocko @ 2015-10-29 15:17 ` mhocko 2015-10-30 4:10 ` Hillf Danton ` (2 more replies) 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages mhocko ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 3 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: mhocko @ 2015-10-29 15:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-mm Cc: Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML, Michal Hocko From: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> __alloc_pages_slowpath has traditionally relied on the direct reclaim and did_some_progress as an indicator that it makes sense to retry allocation rather than declaring OOM. shrink_zones had to rely on zone_reclaimable if shrink_zone didn't make any progress to prevent from pre mature OOM killer invocation - the LRU might be full of dirty or writeback pages and direct reclaim cannot clean those up. zone_reclaimable will allow to rescan the reclaimable lists several times and restart if a page is freed. This is really subtle behavior and it might lead to a livelock when a single freed page keeps allocator looping but the current task will not be able to allocate that single page. OOM killer would be more appropriate than looping without any progress for unbounded amount of time. This patch changes OOM detection logic and pulls it out from shrink_zone which is too low to be appropriate for any high level decisions such as OOM which is per zonelist property. It is __alloc_pages_slowpath which knows how many attempts have been done and what was the progress so far therefore it is more appropriate to implement this logic. The new heuristic tries to be more deterministic and easier to follow. Retrying makes sense only if the currently reclaimable memory + free pages would allow the current allocation request to succeed (as per __zone_watermark_ok) at least for one zone in the usable zonelist. This alone wouldn't be sufficient, though, because the writeback might get stuck and reclaimable pages might be pinned for a really long time or even depend on the current allocation context. Therefore there is a feedback mechanism implemented which reduces the reclaim target after each reclaim round without any progress. This means that we should eventually converge to only NR_FREE_PAGES as the target and fail on the wmark check and proceed to OOM. The backoff is simple and linear with 1/16 of the reclaimable pages for each round without any progress. We are optimistic and reset counter for successful reclaim rounds. Costly high order pages mostly preserve their semantic and those without __GFP_REPEAT fail right away while those which have the flag set will back off after the amount of reclaimable pages reaches equivalent of the requested order. The only difference is that if there was no progress during the reclaim we rely on zone watermark check. This is more logical thing to do than previous 1<<order attempts which were a result of zone_reclaimable faking the progress. Signed-off-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> --- include/linux/swap.h | 1 + mm/page_alloc.c | 69 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ mm/vmscan.c | 10 +------- 3 files changed, 64 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) diff --git a/include/linux/swap.h b/include/linux/swap.h index 9c7c4b418498..8298e1dc20f9 100644 --- a/include/linux/swap.h +++ b/include/linux/swap.h @@ -317,6 +317,7 @@ extern void lru_cache_add_active_or_unevictable(struct page *page, struct vm_area_struct *vma); /* linux/mm/vmscan.c */ +extern unsigned long zone_reclaimable_pages(struct zone *zone); extern unsigned long try_to_free_pages(struct zonelist *zonelist, int order, gfp_t gfp_mask, nodemask_t *mask); extern int __isolate_lru_page(struct page *page, isolate_mode_t mode); diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c index c73913648357..9c0abb75ad53 100644 --- a/mm/page_alloc.c +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c @@ -2972,6 +2972,13 @@ static inline bool is_thp_gfp_mask(gfp_t gfp_mask) return (gfp_mask & (GFP_TRANSHUGE | __GFP_KSWAPD_RECLAIM)) == GFP_TRANSHUGE; } +/* + * Number of backoff steps for potentially reclaimable pages if the direct reclaim + * cannot make any progress. Each step will reduce 1/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF of the + * reclaimable memory. + */ +#define MAX_STALL_BACKOFF 16 + static inline struct page * __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, struct alloc_context *ac) @@ -2984,6 +2991,9 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, enum migrate_mode migration_mode = MIGRATE_ASYNC; bool deferred_compaction = false; int contended_compaction = COMPACT_CONTENDED_NONE; + struct zone *zone; + struct zoneref *z; + int stall_backoff = 0; /* * In the slowpath, we sanity check order to avoid ever trying to @@ -3135,13 +3145,56 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, if (gfp_mask & __GFP_NORETRY) goto noretry; - /* Keep reclaiming pages as long as there is reasonable progress */ + /* + * Do not retry high order allocations unless they are __GFP_REPEAT + * and even then do not retry endlessly. + */ pages_reclaimed += did_some_progress; - if ((did_some_progress && order <= PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) || - ((gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) && pages_reclaimed < (1 << order))) { - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ - wait_iff_congested(ac->preferred_zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); - goto retry; + if (order > PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) { + if (!(gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) || pages_reclaimed >= (1<<order)) + goto noretry; + + if (did_some_progress) + goto retry; + } + + /* + * Be optimistic and consider all pages on reclaimable LRUs as usable + * but make sure we converge to OOM if we cannot make any progress after + * multiple consecutive failed attempts. + */ + if (did_some_progress) + stall_backoff = 0; + else + stall_backoff = min(stall_backoff+1, MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); + + /* + * Keep reclaiming pages while there is a chance this will lead somewhere. + * If none of the target zones can satisfy our allocation request even + * if all reclaimable pages are considered then we are screwed and have + * to go OOM. + */ + for_each_zone_zonelist_nodemask(zone, z, ac->zonelist, ac->high_zoneidx, ac->nodemask) { + unsigned long free = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FREE_PAGES); + unsigned long reclaimable; + unsigned long target; + + reclaimable = zone_reclaimable_pages(zone) + + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_FILE) + + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_ANON); + target = reclaimable; + target -= stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); + target += free; + + /* + * Would the allocation succeed if we reclaimed the whole target? + */ + if (__zone_watermark_ok(zone, order, min_wmark_pages(zone), + ac->high_zoneidx, alloc_flags, target)) { + /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ + wait_iff_congested(zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); + goto retry; + } } /* Reclaim has failed us, start killing things */ @@ -3150,8 +3203,10 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, goto got_pg; /* Retry as long as the OOM killer is making progress */ - if (did_some_progress) + if (did_some_progress) { + stall_backoff = 0; goto retry; + } noretry: /* diff --git a/mm/vmscan.c b/mm/vmscan.c index c88d74ad9304..bc14217acd47 100644 --- a/mm/vmscan.c +++ b/mm/vmscan.c @@ -193,7 +193,7 @@ static bool sane_reclaim(struct scan_control *sc) } #endif -static unsigned long zone_reclaimable_pages(struct zone *zone) +unsigned long zone_reclaimable_pages(struct zone *zone) { unsigned long nr; @@ -2639,10 +2639,6 @@ static bool shrink_zones(struct zonelist *zonelist, struct scan_control *sc) if (shrink_zone(zone, sc, zone_idx(zone) == classzone_idx)) reclaimable = true; - - if (global_reclaim(sc) && - !reclaimable && zone_reclaimable(zone)) - reclaimable = true; } /* @@ -2734,10 +2730,6 @@ static unsigned long do_try_to_free_pages(struct zonelist *zonelist, goto retry; } - /* Any of the zones still reclaimable? Don't OOM. */ - if (zones_reclaimable) - return 1; - return 0; } -- 2.6.1 ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection mhocko @ 2015-10-30 4:10 ` Hillf Danton 2015-10-30 8:36 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 5:23 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 2015-11-12 12:39 ` Michal Hocko 2 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Hillf Danton @ 2015-10-30 4:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: mhocko, linux-mm Cc: 'Andrew Morton', 'Linus Torvalds', 'Mel Gorman', 'Johannes Weiner', 'Rik van Riel', 'David Rientjes', 'Tetsuo Handa', 'LKML', 'Michal Hocko' > +/* > + * Number of backoff steps for potentially reclaimable pages if the direct reclaim > + * cannot make any progress. Each step will reduce 1/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF of the > + * reclaimable memory. > + */ > +#define MAX_STALL_BACKOFF 16 > + > static inline struct page * > __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > struct alloc_context *ac) > @@ -2984,6 +2991,9 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > enum migrate_mode migration_mode = MIGRATE_ASYNC; > bool deferred_compaction = false; > int contended_compaction = COMPACT_CONTENDED_NONE; > + struct zone *zone; > + struct zoneref *z; > + int stall_backoff = 0; > > /* > * In the slowpath, we sanity check order to avoid ever trying to > @@ -3135,13 +3145,56 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > if (gfp_mask & __GFP_NORETRY) > goto noretry; > > - /* Keep reclaiming pages as long as there is reasonable progress */ > + /* > + * Do not retry high order allocations unless they are __GFP_REPEAT > + * and even then do not retry endlessly. > + */ > pages_reclaimed += did_some_progress; > - if ((did_some_progress && order <= PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) || > - ((gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) && pages_reclaimed < (1 << order))) { > - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > - wait_iff_congested(ac->preferred_zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > - goto retry; > + if (order > PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) { > + if (!(gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) || pages_reclaimed >= (1<<order)) > + goto noretry; > + > + if (did_some_progress) > + goto retry; > + } > + > + /* > + * Be optimistic and consider all pages on reclaimable LRUs as usable > + * but make sure we converge to OOM if we cannot make any progress after > + * multiple consecutive failed attempts. > + */ > + if (did_some_progress) > + stall_backoff = 0; > + else > + stall_backoff = min(stall_backoff+1, MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > + > + /* > + * Keep reclaiming pages while there is a chance this will lead somewhere. > + * If none of the target zones can satisfy our allocation request even > + * if all reclaimable pages are considered then we are screwed and have > + * to go OOM. > + */ > + for_each_zone_zonelist_nodemask(zone, z, ac->zonelist, ac->high_zoneidx, ac->nodemask) { > + unsigned long free = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FREE_PAGES); > + unsigned long reclaimable; > + unsigned long target; > + > + reclaimable = zone_reclaimable_pages(zone) + > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_FILE) + > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_ANON); > + target = reclaimable; > + target -= stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); target = reclaimable - stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); = reclaimable - stall_backoff - stall_backoff * (target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); then the first stall_backoff looks unreasonable. I guess you mean target = reclaimable - target * (stall_backoff/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); = reclaimable - stall_back * (target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > + target += free; > + > + /* > + * Would the allocation succeed if we reclaimed the whole target? > + */ > + if (__zone_watermark_ok(zone, order, min_wmark_pages(zone), > + ac->high_zoneidx, alloc_flags, target)) { > + /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > + wait_iff_congested(zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > + goto retry; > + } > } > [...] /* > @@ -2734,10 +2730,6 @@ static unsigned long do_try_to_free_pages(struct zonelist *zonelist, > goto retry; > } > > - /* Any of the zones still reclaimable? Don't OOM. */ > - if (zones_reclaimable) > - return 1; > - Looks cleanup of zones_reclaimable left. > return 0; > } > > -- > 2.6.1 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-30 4:10 ` Hillf Danton @ 2015-10-30 8:36 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 10:14 ` Michal Hocko 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 8:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hillf Danton Cc: linux-mm, 'Andrew Morton', 'Linus Torvalds', 'Mel Gorman', 'Johannes Weiner', 'Rik van Riel', 'David Rientjes', 'Tetsuo Handa', 'LKML' On Fri 30-10-15 12:10:15, Hillf Danton wrote: [...] > > + for_each_zone_zonelist_nodemask(zone, z, ac->zonelist, ac->high_zoneidx, ac->nodemask) { > > + unsigned long free = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FREE_PAGES); > > + unsigned long reclaimable; > > + unsigned long target; > > + > > + reclaimable = zone_reclaimable_pages(zone) + > > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_FILE) + > > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_ANON); > > + target = reclaimable; > > + target -= stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > target = reclaimable - stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > = reclaimable - stall_backoff - stall_backoff * (target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > then the first stall_backoff looks unreasonable. First stall_backoff is off by 1 but that shouldn't make any difference. > I guess you mean > target = reclaimable - target * (stall_backoff/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > = reclaimable - stall_back * (target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); No the reason I used the bias is to converge for MAX_STALL_BACKOFF. If you have target which is not divisible by MAX_STALL_BACKOFF then the rounding would get target > 0 and so we wouldn't converge. With the +1 you underflow which is MAX_STALL_BACKOFF in maximum which should be fixed up by the free memory. Maybe a check for free < MAX_STALL_BACKOFF would be good but I didn't get that far with this. [...] > /* > > @@ -2734,10 +2730,6 @@ static unsigned long do_try_to_free_pages(struct zonelist *zonelist, > > goto retry; > > } > > > > - /* Any of the zones still reclaimable? Don't OOM. */ > > - if (zones_reclaimable) > > - return 1; > > - > > Looks cleanup of zones_reclaimable left. Removed. Thanks! -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-30 8:36 ` Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 10:14 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 13:32 ` Tetsuo Handa 2015-10-31 3:57 ` Hillf Danton 0 siblings, 2 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 10:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hillf Danton Cc: linux-mm, 'Andrew Morton', 'Linus Torvalds', 'Mel Gorman', 'Johannes Weiner', 'Rik van Riel', 'David Rientjes', 'Tetsuo Handa', 'LKML' On Fri 30-10-15 09:36:26, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Fri 30-10-15 12:10:15, Hillf Danton wrote: > [...] > > > + for_each_zone_zonelist_nodemask(zone, z, ac->zonelist, ac->high_zoneidx, ac->nodemask) { > > > + unsigned long free = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FREE_PAGES); > > > + unsigned long reclaimable; > > > + unsigned long target; > > > + > > > + reclaimable = zone_reclaimable_pages(zone) + > > > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_FILE) + > > > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_ANON); > > > + target = reclaimable; > > > + target -= stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > > > target = reclaimable - stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > = reclaimable - stall_backoff - stall_backoff * (target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > > > then the first stall_backoff looks unreasonable. > > First stall_backoff is off by 1 but that shouldn't make any difference. > > > I guess you mean > > target = reclaimable - target * (stall_backoff/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > = reclaimable - stall_back * (target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > No the reason I used the bias is to converge for MAX_STALL_BACKOFF. If > you have target which is not divisible by MAX_STALL_BACKOFF then the > rounding would get target > 0 and so we wouldn't converge. With the +1 > you underflow which is MAX_STALL_BACKOFF in maximum which should be > fixed up by the free memory. Maybe a check for free < MAX_STALL_BACKOFF > would be good but I didn't get that far with this. I've ended up with the following after all. It uses ceiling for the division this should be underflow safe albeit less readable (at least for me). --- diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c index 0dc1ca9b1219..c9a4e62f234e 100644 --- a/mm/page_alloc.c +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c @@ -3176,7 +3176,7 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_FILE) + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_ANON); target = reclaimable; - target -= stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); + target -= (stall_backoff * target + MAX_STALL_BACKOFF - 1) / MAX_STALL_BACKOFF; target += free; /* diff --git a/mm/vmscan.c b/mm/vmscan.c index bc14217acd47..0b3ec972ec7a 100644 --- a/mm/vmscan.c +++ b/mm/vmscan.c @@ -2672,7 +2672,6 @@ static unsigned long do_try_to_free_pages(struct zonelist *zonelist, int initial_priority = sc->priority; unsigned long total_scanned = 0; unsigned long writeback_threshold; - bool zones_reclaimable; retry: delayacct_freepages_start(); @@ -2683,7 +2682,7 @@ static unsigned long do_try_to_free_pages(struct zonelist *zonelist, vmpressure_prio(sc->gfp_mask, sc->target_mem_cgroup, sc->priority); sc->nr_scanned = 0; - zones_reclaimable = shrink_zones(zonelist, sc); + shrink_zones(zonelist, sc); total_scanned += sc->nr_scanned; if (sc->nr_reclaimed >= sc->nr_to_reclaim) -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-30 10:14 ` Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 13:32 ` Tetsuo Handa 2015-10-30 14:55 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-31 3:57 ` Hillf Danton 1 sibling, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Tetsuo Handa @ 2015-10-30 13:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: mhocko Cc: hillf.zj, linux-mm, akpm, torvalds, mgorman, hannes, riel, rientjes, linux-kernel Michal Hocko wrote: > + target -= (stall_backoff * target + MAX_STALL_BACKOFF - 1) / MAX_STALL_BACKOFF; target -= DIV_ROUND_UP(stall_backoff * target, MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); Michal Hocko wrote: > This alone wouldn't be sufficient, though, because the writeback might > get stuck and reclaimable pages might be pinned for a really long time > or even depend on the current allocation context. Is this a dependency which I worried at http://lkml.kernel.org/r/201510262044.BAI43236.FOMSFFOtOVLJQH@I-love.SAKURA.ne.jp ? > Therefore there is a > feedback mechanism implemented which reduces the reclaim target after > each reclaim round without any progress. If yes, this feedback mechanism will help avoiding infinite wait loop. > This means that we should > eventually converge to only NR_FREE_PAGES as the target and fail on the > wmark check and proceed to OOM. What if all in-flight allocation requests are !__GFP_NOFAIL && !__GFP_FS ? (In other words, either "no __GFP_FS allocations are in-flight" or "all __GFP_FS allocations are in-flight but are either waiting for completion of operations which depend on !__GFP_FS allocations with a lock held or waiting for that lock to be released".) Don't we need to call out_of_memory() even though !__GFP_FS allocations? > The backoff is simple and linear with > 1/16 of the reclaimable pages for each round without any progress. We > are optimistic and reset counter for successful reclaim rounds. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-30 13:32 ` Tetsuo Handa @ 2015-10-30 14:55 ` Michal Hocko 0 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 14:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Tetsuo Handa Cc: hillf.zj, linux-mm, akpm, torvalds, mgorman, hannes, riel, rientjes, linux-kernel On Fri 30-10-15 22:32:27, Tetsuo Handa wrote: > Michal Hocko wrote: > > + target -= (stall_backoff * target + MAX_STALL_BACKOFF - 1) / MAX_STALL_BACKOFF; > target -= DIV_ROUND_UP(stall_backoff * target, MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); Ohh, we have a macro for that. Good to know. Thanks. It sure looks much easier to follow. > Michal Hocko wrote: > > This alone wouldn't be sufficient, though, because the writeback might > > get stuck and reclaimable pages might be pinned for a really long time > > or even depend on the current allocation context. > > Is this a dependency which I worried at > http://lkml.kernel.org/r/201510262044.BAI43236.FOMSFFOtOVLJQH@I-love.SAKURA.ne.jp ? Yes, I had restricted allocation contexts in mind here. > > Therefore there is a > > feedback mechanism implemented which reduces the reclaim target after > > each reclaim round without any progress. > > If yes, this feedback mechanism will help avoiding infinite wait loop. > > > This means that we should > > eventually converge to only NR_FREE_PAGES as the target and fail on the > > wmark check and proceed to OOM. > > What if all in-flight allocation requests are !__GFP_NOFAIL && !__GFP_FS ? Then we will loop like crazy hoping that _something_ will reclaim memory for us. Same as we do now. > (In other words, either "no __GFP_FS allocations are in-flight" or "all > __GFP_FS allocations are in-flight but are either waiting for completion > of operations which depend on !__GFP_FS allocations with a lock held or > waiting for that lock to be released".) > > Don't we need to call out_of_memory() even though !__GFP_FS allocations? I do not think this is in scope of this patch series. I am trying to normalize the OOM detection and GFP_FS is a separate beast and we do not have enough counters to decide the whether OOM killer would be premature or not (e.g. we do not know how much memory is unreclaimable just because of NOFS context). I am convinced that GFP_FS simply has to fail the allocation as I've suggested quite some time ago and plan to revisit it soon(ish). I consider the two orthogonal. Thanks! -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-30 10:14 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 13:32 ` Tetsuo Handa @ 2015-10-31 3:57 ` Hillf Danton 1 sibling, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Hillf Danton @ 2015-10-31 3:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 'Michal Hocko' Cc: linux-mm, 'Andrew Morton', 'Linus Torvalds', 'Mel Gorman', 'Johannes Weiner', 'Rik van Riel', 'David Rientjes', 'Tetsuo Handa', 'LKML' > On Fri 30-10-15 09:36:26, Michal Hocko wrote: > > On Fri 30-10-15 12:10:15, Hillf Danton wrote: > > [...] > > > > + for_each_zone_zonelist_nodemask(zone, z, ac->zonelist, ac->high_zoneidx, ac->nodemask) { > > > > + unsigned long free = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FREE_PAGES); > > > > + unsigned long reclaimable; > > > > + unsigned long target; > > > > + > > > > + reclaimable = zone_reclaimable_pages(zone) + > > > > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_FILE) + > > > > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_ANON); > > > > + target = reclaimable; > > > > + target -= stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > > > > > target = reclaimable - stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > > = reclaimable - stall_backoff - stall_backoff * (target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > > > > > then the first stall_backoff looks unreasonable. > > > > First stall_backoff is off by 1 but that shouldn't make any difference. > > > > > I guess you mean > > > target = reclaimable - target * (stall_backoff/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > > = reclaimable - stall_back * (target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > > > > No the reason I used the bias is to converge for MAX_STALL_BACKOFF. If > > you have target which is not divisible by MAX_STALL_BACKOFF then the > > rounding would get target > 0 and so we wouldn't converge. With the +1 > > you underflow which is MAX_STALL_BACKOFF in maximum which should be > > fixed up by the free memory. Maybe a check for free < MAX_STALL_BACKOFF > > would be good but I didn't get that far with this. > > I've ended up with the following after all. It uses ceiling for the > division this should be underflow safe albeit less readable (at least > for me). Looks good, thanks. Acked-by: Hillf Danton <hillf.zj@alibaba-inc.com> > --- > diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c > index 0dc1ca9b1219..c9a4e62f234e 100644 > --- a/mm/page_alloc.c > +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c > @@ -3176,7 +3176,7 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_FILE) + > zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_ANON); > target = reclaimable; > - target -= stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > + target -= (stall_backoff * target + MAX_STALL_BACKOFF - 1) / MAX_STALL_BACKOFF; > target += free; > > /* > diff --git a/mm/vmscan.c b/mm/vmscan.c > index bc14217acd47..0b3ec972ec7a 100644 > --- a/mm/vmscan.c > +++ b/mm/vmscan.c > @@ -2672,7 +2672,6 @@ static unsigned long do_try_to_free_pages(struct zonelist *zonelist, > int initial_priority = sc->priority; > unsigned long total_scanned = 0; > unsigned long writeback_threshold; > - bool zones_reclaimable; > retry: > delayacct_freepages_start(); > > @@ -2683,7 +2682,7 @@ static unsigned long do_try_to_free_pages(struct zonelist *zonelist, > vmpressure_prio(sc->gfp_mask, sc->target_mem_cgroup, > sc->priority); > sc->nr_scanned = 0; > - zones_reclaimable = shrink_zones(zonelist, sc); > + shrink_zones(zonelist, sc); > > total_scanned += sc->nr_scanned; > if (sc->nr_reclaimed >= sc->nr_to_reclaim) > -- > Michal Hocko > SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection mhocko 2015-10-30 4:10 ` Hillf Danton @ 2015-10-30 5:23 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 2015-10-30 8:23 ` Michal Hocko 2015-11-12 12:39 ` Michal Hocko 2 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Kamezawa Hiroyuki @ 2015-10-30 5:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: mhocko, linux-mm Cc: Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML, Michal Hocko On 2015/10/30 0:17, mhocko@kernel.org wrote: > From: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> > > __alloc_pages_slowpath has traditionally relied on the direct reclaim > and did_some_progress as an indicator that it makes sense to retry > allocation rather than declaring OOM. shrink_zones had to rely on > zone_reclaimable if shrink_zone didn't make any progress to prevent > from pre mature OOM killer invocation - the LRU might be full of dirty > or writeback pages and direct reclaim cannot clean those up. > > zone_reclaimable will allow to rescan the reclaimable lists several > times and restart if a page is freed. This is really subtle behavior > and it might lead to a livelock when a single freed page keeps allocator > looping but the current task will not be able to allocate that single > page. OOM killer would be more appropriate than looping without any > progress for unbounded amount of time. > > This patch changes OOM detection logic and pulls it out from shrink_zone > which is too low to be appropriate for any high level decisions such as OOM > which is per zonelist property. It is __alloc_pages_slowpath which knows > how many attempts have been done and what was the progress so far > therefore it is more appropriate to implement this logic. > > The new heuristic tries to be more deterministic and easier to follow. > Retrying makes sense only if the currently reclaimable memory + free > pages would allow the current allocation request to succeed (as per > __zone_watermark_ok) at least for one zone in the usable zonelist. > > This alone wouldn't be sufficient, though, because the writeback might > get stuck and reclaimable pages might be pinned for a really long time > or even depend on the current allocation context. Therefore there is a > feedback mechanism implemented which reduces the reclaim target after > each reclaim round without any progress. This means that we should > eventually converge to only NR_FREE_PAGES as the target and fail on the > wmark check and proceed to OOM. The backoff is simple and linear with > 1/16 of the reclaimable pages for each round without any progress. We > are optimistic and reset counter for successful reclaim rounds. > > Costly high order pages mostly preserve their semantic and those without > __GFP_REPEAT fail right away while those which have the flag set will > back off after the amount of reclaimable pages reaches equivalent of the > requested order. The only difference is that if there was no progress > during the reclaim we rely on zone watermark check. This is more logical > thing to do than previous 1<<order attempts which were a result of > zone_reclaimable faking the progress. > > Signed-off-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> > --- > include/linux/swap.h | 1 + > mm/page_alloc.c | 69 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ > mm/vmscan.c | 10 +------- > 3 files changed, 64 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/include/linux/swap.h b/include/linux/swap.h > index 9c7c4b418498..8298e1dc20f9 100644 > --- a/include/linux/swap.h > +++ b/include/linux/swap.h > @@ -317,6 +317,7 @@ extern void lru_cache_add_active_or_unevictable(struct page *page, > struct vm_area_struct *vma); > > /* linux/mm/vmscan.c */ > +extern unsigned long zone_reclaimable_pages(struct zone *zone); > extern unsigned long try_to_free_pages(struct zonelist *zonelist, int order, > gfp_t gfp_mask, nodemask_t *mask); > extern int __isolate_lru_page(struct page *page, isolate_mode_t mode); > diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c > index c73913648357..9c0abb75ad53 100644 > --- a/mm/page_alloc.c > +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c > @@ -2972,6 +2972,13 @@ static inline bool is_thp_gfp_mask(gfp_t gfp_mask) > return (gfp_mask & (GFP_TRANSHUGE | __GFP_KSWAPD_RECLAIM)) == GFP_TRANSHUGE; > } > > +/* > + * Number of backoff steps for potentially reclaimable pages if the direct reclaim > + * cannot make any progress. Each step will reduce 1/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF of the > + * reclaimable memory. > + */ > +#define MAX_STALL_BACKOFF 16 > + > static inline struct page * > __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > struct alloc_context *ac) > @@ -2984,6 +2991,9 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > enum migrate_mode migration_mode = MIGRATE_ASYNC; > bool deferred_compaction = false; > int contended_compaction = COMPACT_CONTENDED_NONE; > + struct zone *zone; > + struct zoneref *z; > + int stall_backoff = 0; > > /* > * In the slowpath, we sanity check order to avoid ever trying to > @@ -3135,13 +3145,56 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > if (gfp_mask & __GFP_NORETRY) > goto noretry; > > - /* Keep reclaiming pages as long as there is reasonable progress */ > + /* > + * Do not retry high order allocations unless they are __GFP_REPEAT > + * and even then do not retry endlessly. > + */ > pages_reclaimed += did_some_progress; > - if ((did_some_progress && order <= PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) || > - ((gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) && pages_reclaimed < (1 << order))) { > - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > - wait_iff_congested(ac->preferred_zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > - goto retry; > + if (order > PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) { > + if (!(gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) || pages_reclaimed >= (1<<order)) > + goto noretry; > + > + if (did_some_progress) > + goto retry; why directly retry here ? > + } > + > + /* > + * Be optimistic and consider all pages on reclaimable LRUs as usable > + * but make sure we converge to OOM if we cannot make any progress after > + * multiple consecutive failed attempts. > + */ > + if (did_some_progress) > + stall_backoff = 0; > + else > + stall_backoff = min(stall_backoff+1, MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > + > + /* > + * Keep reclaiming pages while there is a chance this will lead somewhere. > + * If none of the target zones can satisfy our allocation request even > + * if all reclaimable pages are considered then we are screwed and have > + * to go OOM. > + */ > + for_each_zone_zonelist_nodemask(zone, z, ac->zonelist, ac->high_zoneidx, ac->nodemask) { > + unsigned long free = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FREE_PAGES); > + unsigned long reclaimable; > + unsigned long target; > + > + reclaimable = zone_reclaimable_pages(zone) + > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_FILE) + > + zone_page_state(zone, NR_ISOLATED_ANON); > + target = reclaimable; > + target -= stall_backoff * (1 + target/MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); > + target += free; > + > + /* > + * Would the allocation succeed if we reclaimed the whole target? > + */ > + if (__zone_watermark_ok(zone, order, min_wmark_pages(zone), > + ac->high_zoneidx, alloc_flags, target)) { > + /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > + wait_iff_congested(zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > + goto retry; > + } > } > > /* Reclaim has failed us, start killing things */ > @@ -3150,8 +3203,10 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > goto got_pg; > > /* Retry as long as the OOM killer is making progress */ > - if (did_some_progress) > + if (did_some_progress) { > + stall_backoff = 0; > goto retry; > + } Umm ? I'm sorry that I didn't notice page allocation may fail even if order < PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER. I thought old logic ignores did_some_progress. It seems a big change. So, now, 0-order page allocation may fail in a OOM situation ? Thanks, -Kame ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-30 5:23 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki @ 2015-10-30 8:23 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 9:41 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 8:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Kamezawa Hiroyuki Cc: linux-mm, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML On Fri 30-10-15 14:23:59, KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki wrote: > On 2015/10/30 0:17, mhocko@kernel.org wrote: [...] > > @@ -3135,13 +3145,56 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > > if (gfp_mask & __GFP_NORETRY) > > goto noretry; > > > > - /* Keep reclaiming pages as long as there is reasonable progress */ > > + /* > > + * Do not retry high order allocations unless they are __GFP_REPEAT > > + * and even then do not retry endlessly. > > + */ > > pages_reclaimed += did_some_progress; > > - if ((did_some_progress && order <= PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) || > > - ((gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) && pages_reclaimed < (1 << order))) { > > - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > > - wait_iff_congested(ac->preferred_zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > > - goto retry; > > + if (order > PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) { > > + if (!(gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) || pages_reclaimed >= (1<<order)) > > + goto noretry; > > + > > + if (did_some_progress) > > + goto retry; > > why directly retry here ? Because I wanted to preserve the previous logic for GFP_REPEAT as much as possible here and do an incremental change in the later patch. [...] > > @@ -3150,8 +3203,10 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > > goto got_pg; > > > > /* Retry as long as the OOM killer is making progress */ > > - if (did_some_progress) > > + if (did_some_progress) { > > + stall_backoff = 0; > > goto retry; > > + } > > Umm ? I'm sorry that I didn't notice page allocation may fail even > if order < PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER. I thought old logic ignores > did_some_progress. It seems a big change. __alloc_pages_may_oom will set did_some_progress > So, now, 0-order page allocation may fail in a OOM situation ? No they don't normally and this patch doesn't change the logic here. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-30 8:23 ` Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 9:41 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 2015-10-30 10:18 ` Michal Hocko 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Kamezawa Hiroyuki @ 2015-10-30 9:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michal Hocko Cc: linux-mm, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML On 2015/10/30 17:23, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Fri 30-10-15 14:23:59, KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki wrote: >> On 2015/10/30 0:17, mhocko@kernel.org wrote: > [...] >>> @@ -3135,13 +3145,56 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, >>> if (gfp_mask & __GFP_NORETRY) >>> goto noretry; >>> >>> - /* Keep reclaiming pages as long as there is reasonable progress */ >>> + /* >>> + * Do not retry high order allocations unless they are __GFP_REPEAT >>> + * and even then do not retry endlessly. >>> + */ >>> pages_reclaimed += did_some_progress; >>> - if ((did_some_progress && order <= PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) || >>> - ((gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) && pages_reclaimed < (1 << order))) { >>> - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ >>> - wait_iff_congested(ac->preferred_zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); >>> - goto retry; >>> + if (order > PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) { >>> + if (!(gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) || pages_reclaimed >= (1<<order)) >>> + goto noretry; >>> + >>> + if (did_some_progress) >>> + goto retry; >> >> why directly retry here ? > > Because I wanted to preserve the previous logic for GFP_REPEAT as much > as possible here and do an incremental change in the later patch. > I see. > [...] > >>> @@ -3150,8 +3203,10 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, >>> goto got_pg; >>> >>> /* Retry as long as the OOM killer is making progress */ >>> - if (did_some_progress) >>> + if (did_some_progress) { >>> + stall_backoff = 0; >>> goto retry; >>> + } >> >> Umm ? I'm sorry that I didn't notice page allocation may fail even >> if order < PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER. I thought old logic ignores >> did_some_progress. It seems a big change. > > __alloc_pages_may_oom will set did_some_progress > >> So, now, 0-order page allocation may fail in a OOM situation ? > > No they don't normally and this patch doesn't change the logic here. > I understand your patch doesn't change the behavior. Looking into __alloc_pages_may_oom(), *did_some_progress is finally set by if (out_of_memory(&oc) || WARN_ON_ONCE(gfp_mask & __GFP_NOFAIL)) *did_some_progress = 1; ...depends on out_of_memory() return value. Now, allocation may fail if oom-killer is disabled.... Isn't it complicated ? Shouldn't we have if (order < PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) goto retry; here ? Thanks, -Kame ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-30 9:41 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki @ 2015-10-30 10:18 ` Michal Hocko 0 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 10:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Kamezawa Hiroyuki Cc: linux-mm, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML On Fri 30-10-15 18:41:30, KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki wrote: [...] > >>So, now, 0-order page allocation may fail in a OOM situation ? > > > >No they don't normally and this patch doesn't change the logic here. > > > > I understand your patch doesn't change the behavior. > Looking into __alloc_pages_may_oom(), *did_some_progress is finally set by > > if (out_of_memory(&oc) || WARN_ON_ONCE(gfp_mask & __GFP_NOFAIL)) > *did_some_progress = 1; > > ...depends on out_of_memory() return value. > Now, allocation may fail if oom-killer is disabled.... Isn't it complicated ? Yes and there shouldn't be any allocations after OOM killer has been disabled. The userspace is already frozen and there shouldn't be any other memory activity. > Shouldn't we have > > if (order < PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) > goto retry; > > here ? How could we move on during the suspend if the reclaim doesn't proceed and we cannot really kill anything to free up memory resources. We are simply past the moment any userspace can be woken up. Anyway this is tangent to this particular patch series. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection mhocko 2015-10-30 4:10 ` Hillf Danton 2015-10-30 5:23 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki @ 2015-11-12 12:39 ` Michal Hocko 2 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Michal Hocko @ 2015-11-12 12:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-mm Cc: Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML On Thu 29-10-15 16:17:13, mhocko@kernel.org wrote: [...] > @@ -3135,13 +3145,56 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > if (gfp_mask & __GFP_NORETRY) > goto noretry; > > - /* Keep reclaiming pages as long as there is reasonable progress */ > + /* > + * Do not retry high order allocations unless they are __GFP_REPEAT > + * and even then do not retry endlessly. > + */ > pages_reclaimed += did_some_progress; > - if ((did_some_progress && order <= PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) || > - ((gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) && pages_reclaimed < (1 << order))) { > - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > - wait_iff_congested(ac->preferred_zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > - goto retry; > + if (order > PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) { > + if (!(gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) || pages_reclaimed >= (1<<order)) > + goto noretry; This is not correct because we could fail __GFP_NOFAIL allocation. It should do if (!(gfp_mask & __GFP_NOFAIL) && (!(gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) || pages_reclaimed >= (1<<order))) goto noretry; It looks rather ugly but it will get much better with patch3 which reorganizes the code a bit > + > + if (did_some_progress) > + goto retry; > + } -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages 2015-10-29 15:17 RFC: OOM detection rework v1 mhocko 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection mhocko @ 2015-10-29 15:17 ` mhocko 2015-10-30 4:18 ` Hillf Danton 2015-10-30 5:48 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 3/3] mm: use watermak checks for __GFP_REPEAT high order allocations mhocko 2015-11-12 12:44 ` RFC: OOM detection rework v1 Michal Hocko 3 siblings, 2 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: mhocko @ 2015-10-29 15:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-mm Cc: Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML, Michal Hocko From: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> wait_iff_congested has been used to throttle allocator before it retried another round of direct reclaim to allow the writeback to make some progress and prevent reclaim from looping over dirty/writeback pages without making any progress. We used to do congestion_wait before 0e093d99763e ("writeback: do not sleep on the congestion queue if there are no congested BDIs or if significant congestion is not being encountered in the current zone") but that led to undesirable stalls and sleeping for the full timeout even when the BDI wasn't congested. Hence wait_iff_congested was used instead. But it seems that even wait_iff_congested doesn't work as expected. We might have a small file LRU list with all pages dirty/writeback and yet the bdi is not congested so this is just a cond_resched in the end and can end up triggering pre mature OOM. This patch replaces the unconditional wait_iff_congested by congestion_wait which is executed only if we _know_ that the last round of direct reclaim didn't make any progress and dirty+writeback pages are more than a half of the reclaimable pages on the zone which might be usable for our target allocation. This shouldn't reintroduce stalls fixed by 0e093d99763e because congestion_wait is called only when we are getting hopeless when sleeping is a better choice than OOM with many pages under IO. Signed-off-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> --- mm/page_alloc.c | 19 +++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 17 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c index 9c0abb75ad53..0518ca6a9776 100644 --- a/mm/page_alloc.c +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c @@ -3191,8 +3191,23 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, */ if (__zone_watermark_ok(zone, order, min_wmark_pages(zone), ac->high_zoneidx, alloc_flags, target)) { - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ - wait_iff_congested(zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); + unsigned long writeback = zone_page_state(zone, NR_WRITEBACK), + dirty = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FILE_DIRTY); + + if (did_some_progress) + goto retry; + + /* + * If we didn't make any progress and have a lot of + * dirty + writeback pages then we should wait for + * an IO to complete to slow down the reclaim and + * prevent from pre mature OOM + */ + if (2*(writeback + dirty) > reclaimable) + congestion_wait(BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/10); + else + cond_resched(); + goto retry; } } -- 2.6.1 ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages mhocko @ 2015-10-30 4:18 ` Hillf Danton 2015-10-30 8:37 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 5:48 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 1 sibling, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Hillf Danton @ 2015-10-30 4:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: mhocko, linux-mm Cc: 'Andrew Morton', 'Linus Torvalds', 'Mel Gorman', 'Johannes Weiner', 'Rik van Riel', 'David Rientjes', 'Tetsuo Handa', 'LKML', 'Michal Hocko', Christoph Lameter > --- a/mm/page_alloc.c > +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c > @@ -3191,8 +3191,23 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > */ > if (__zone_watermark_ok(zone, order, min_wmark_pages(zone), > ac->high_zoneidx, alloc_flags, target)) { > - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > - wait_iff_congested(zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > + unsigned long writeback = zone_page_state(zone, NR_WRITEBACK), > + dirty = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FILE_DIRTY); > + > + if (did_some_progress) > + goto retry; > + > + /* > + * If we didn't make any progress and have a lot of > + * dirty + writeback pages then we should wait for > + * an IO to complete to slow down the reclaim and > + * prevent from pre mature OOM > + */ > + if (2*(writeback + dirty) > reclaimable) > + congestion_wait(BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/10); > + else > + cond_resched(); > + Looks the vmstat updater issue is not addressed. > goto retry; > } > } > -- > 2.6.1 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages 2015-10-30 4:18 ` Hillf Danton @ 2015-10-30 8:37 ` Michal Hocko 0 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 8:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hillf Danton Cc: linux-mm, 'Andrew Morton', 'Linus Torvalds', 'Mel Gorman', 'Johannes Weiner', 'Rik van Riel', 'David Rientjes', 'Tetsuo Handa', 'LKML', Christoph Lameter On Fri 30-10-15 12:18:50, Hillf Danton wrote: > > > --- a/mm/page_alloc.c > > +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c > > @@ -3191,8 +3191,23 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > > */ > > if (__zone_watermark_ok(zone, order, min_wmark_pages(zone), > > ac->high_zoneidx, alloc_flags, target)) { > > - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > > - wait_iff_congested(zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > > + unsigned long writeback = zone_page_state(zone, NR_WRITEBACK), > > + dirty = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FILE_DIRTY); > > + > > + if (did_some_progress) > > + goto retry; > > + > > + /* > > + * If we didn't make any progress and have a lot of > > + * dirty + writeback pages then we should wait for > > + * an IO to complete to slow down the reclaim and > > + * prevent from pre mature OOM > > + */ > > + if (2*(writeback + dirty) > reclaimable) > > + congestion_wait(BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/10); > > + else > > + cond_resched(); > > + > > Looks the vmstat updater issue is not addressed. This is not the aim of this patch set. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages mhocko 2015-10-30 4:18 ` Hillf Danton @ 2015-10-30 5:48 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 2015-10-30 8:38 ` Michal Hocko 1 sibling, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Kamezawa Hiroyuki @ 2015-10-30 5:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: mhocko, linux-mm Cc: Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML, Michal Hocko On 2015/10/30 0:17, mhocko@kernel.org wrote: > From: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> > > wait_iff_congested has been used to throttle allocator before it retried > another round of direct reclaim to allow the writeback to make some > progress and prevent reclaim from looping over dirty/writeback pages > without making any progress. We used to do congestion_wait before > 0e093d99763e ("writeback: do not sleep on the congestion queue if > there are no congested BDIs or if significant congestion is not being > encountered in the current zone") but that led to undesirable stalls > and sleeping for the full timeout even when the BDI wasn't congested. > Hence wait_iff_congested was used instead. But it seems that even > wait_iff_congested doesn't work as expected. We might have a small file > LRU list with all pages dirty/writeback and yet the bdi is not congested > so this is just a cond_resched in the end and can end up triggering pre > mature OOM. > > This patch replaces the unconditional wait_iff_congested by > congestion_wait which is executed only if we _know_ that the last round > of direct reclaim didn't make any progress and dirty+writeback pages are > more than a half of the reclaimable pages on the zone which might be > usable for our target allocation. This shouldn't reintroduce stalls > fixed by 0e093d99763e because congestion_wait is called only when we > are getting hopeless when sleeping is a better choice than OOM with many > pages under IO. > > Signed-off-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> > --- > mm/page_alloc.c | 19 +++++++++++++++++-- > 1 file changed, 17 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c > index 9c0abb75ad53..0518ca6a9776 100644 > --- a/mm/page_alloc.c > +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c > @@ -3191,8 +3191,23 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > */ > if (__zone_watermark_ok(zone, order, min_wmark_pages(zone), > ac->high_zoneidx, alloc_flags, target)) { > - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > - wait_iff_congested(zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > + unsigned long writeback = zone_page_state(zone, NR_WRITEBACK), > + dirty = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FILE_DIRTY); > + > + if (did_some_progress) > + goto retry; > + > + /* > + * If we didn't make any progress and have a lot of > + * dirty + writeback pages then we should wait for > + * an IO to complete to slow down the reclaim and > + * prevent from pre mature OOM > + */ > + if (2*(writeback + dirty) > reclaimable) Doesn't this add unnecessary latency if other zones have enough clean memory ? Thanks, -Kame ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages 2015-10-30 5:48 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki @ 2015-10-30 8:38 ` Michal Hocko 0 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Michal Hocko @ 2015-10-30 8:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Kamezawa Hiroyuki Cc: linux-mm, Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML On Fri 30-10-15 14:48:40, KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki wrote: [...] > > @@ -3191,8 +3191,23 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, > > */ > > if (__zone_watermark_ok(zone, order, min_wmark_pages(zone), > > ac->high_zoneidx, alloc_flags, target)) { > > - /* Wait for some write requests to complete then retry */ > > - wait_iff_congested(zone, BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); > > + unsigned long writeback = zone_page_state(zone, NR_WRITEBACK), > > + dirty = zone_page_state(zone, NR_FILE_DIRTY); > > + > > + if (did_some_progress) > > + goto retry; > > + > > + /* > > + * If we didn't make any progress and have a lot of > > + * dirty + writeback pages then we should wait for > > + * an IO to complete to slow down the reclaim and > > + * prevent from pre mature OOM > > + */ > > + if (2*(writeback + dirty) > reclaimable) > > Doesn't this add unnecessary latency if other zones have enough clean memory ? We know we haven't made any progress the last reclaim round so any zone with a clean memory is rather unlikely. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* [RFC 3/3] mm: use watermak checks for __GFP_REPEAT high order allocations 2015-10-29 15:17 RFC: OOM detection rework v1 mhocko 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection mhocko 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages mhocko @ 2015-10-29 15:17 ` mhocko 2015-11-12 12:44 ` RFC: OOM detection rework v1 Michal Hocko 3 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: mhocko @ 2015-10-29 15:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-mm Cc: Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML, Michal Hocko From: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> __alloc_pages_slowpath retries costly allocations until at least order worth of pages were reclaimed or the watermark check for at least one zone would succeed after all reclaiming all pages if the reclaim hasn't made any progress. The first condition was added by a41f24ea9fd6 ("page allocator: smarter retry of costly-order allocations) and it assumed that lumpy reclaim could have created a page of the sufficient order. Lumpy reclaim, has been removed quite some time ago so the assumption doesn't hold anymore. It would be more appropriate to check the compaction progress instead but this patch simply removes the check and relies solely on the watermark check. To prevent from too many retries the stall_backoff is not reseted after a reclaim which made progress because we cannot assume it helped high order situation. Signed-off-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> --- mm/page_alloc.c | 21 +++++++-------------- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c index 0518ca6a9776..0dc1ca9b1219 100644 --- a/mm/page_alloc.c +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c @@ -2986,7 +2986,6 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, bool can_direct_reclaim = gfp_mask & __GFP_DIRECT_RECLAIM; struct page *page = NULL; int alloc_flags; - unsigned long pages_reclaimed = 0; unsigned long did_some_progress; enum migrate_mode migration_mode = MIGRATE_ASYNC; bool deferred_compaction = false; @@ -3145,25 +3144,19 @@ __alloc_pages_slowpath(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned int order, if (gfp_mask & __GFP_NORETRY) goto noretry; - /* - * Do not retry high order allocations unless they are __GFP_REPEAT - * and even then do not retry endlessly. - */ - pages_reclaimed += did_some_progress; - if (order > PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) { - if (!(gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT) || pages_reclaimed >= (1<<order)) - goto noretry; - - if (did_some_progress) - goto retry; - } + /* Do not retry high order allocations unless they are __GFP_REPEAT */ + if (order > PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER && !(gfp_mask & __GFP_REPEAT)) + goto noretry; /* * Be optimistic and consider all pages on reclaimable LRUs as usable * but make sure we converge to OOM if we cannot make any progress after * multiple consecutive failed attempts. + * Costly __GFP_REPEAT allocations might have made a progress but this + * doesn't mean their order will become available due to high fragmentation + * so do not reset the backoff for them */ - if (did_some_progress) + if (did_some_progress && order <= PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER) stall_backoff = 0; else stall_backoff = min(stall_backoff+1, MAX_STALL_BACKOFF); -- 2.6.1 ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: RFC: OOM detection rework v1 2015-10-29 15:17 RFC: OOM detection rework v1 mhocko ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 3/3] mm: use watermak checks for __GFP_REPEAT high order allocations mhocko @ 2015-11-12 12:44 ` Michal Hocko 3 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Michal Hocko @ 2015-11-12 12:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-mm Cc: Andrew Morton, Linus Torvalds, Mel Gorman, Johannes Weiner, Rik van Riel, David Rientjes, Tetsuo Handa, LKML Just a heads up. I plan to repost this with changes reflecting the feedback so far after merge window closes. There were only few minor style fixes and one bug fixe (GFP_NOFAIL vs. costly high order allocations). I know people are busy with the merge window now and I hope that the future post will be a better basis for further discussion. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2015-11-12 12:44 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 20+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2015-10-29 15:17 RFC: OOM detection rework v1 mhocko 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 1/3] mm, oom: refactor oom detection mhocko 2015-10-30 4:10 ` Hillf Danton 2015-10-30 8:36 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 10:14 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 13:32 ` Tetsuo Handa 2015-10-30 14:55 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-31 3:57 ` Hillf Danton 2015-10-30 5:23 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 2015-10-30 8:23 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 9:41 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 2015-10-30 10:18 ` Michal Hocko 2015-11-12 12:39 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 2/3] mm: throttle on IO only when there are too many dirty and writeback pages mhocko 2015-10-30 4:18 ` Hillf Danton 2015-10-30 8:37 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-30 5:48 ` Kamezawa Hiroyuki 2015-10-30 8:38 ` Michal Hocko 2015-10-29 15:17 ` [RFC 3/3] mm: use watermak checks for __GFP_REPEAT high order allocations mhocko 2015-11-12 12:44 ` RFC: OOM detection rework v1 Michal Hocko
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