On Tue, Jan 17, 2023 at 10:49 PM Yafang Shao <laoar.shao@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > I just don't want to add many if-elses or switch-cases into > > > bpf_map_memory_footprint(), because I think it is a little ugly. > > > Introducing a new map ops could make it more clear. For example, > > > static unsigned long bpf_map_memory_footprint(const struct bpf_map *map) > > > { > > > unsigned long size; > > > > > > if (map->ops->map_mem_footprint) > > > return map->ops->map_mem_footprint(map); > > > > > > size = round_up(map->key_size + bpf_map_value_size(map), 8); > > > return round_up(map->max_entries * size, PAGE_SIZE); > > > } > > > > It is also ugly, because bpf_map_value_size() already has if-stmt. > > I prefer to keep all estimates in one place. > > There is no need to be 100% accurate. > > Per my investigation, it can be almost accurate with little effort. > Take the htab for example, > static unsigned long htab_mem_footprint(const struct bpf_map *map) > { > struct bpf_htab *htab = container_of(map, struct bpf_htab, map); > unsigned long size = 0; > > if (!htab_is_prealloc(htab)) { > size += htab_elements_size(htab); > } > size += kvsize(htab->elems); > size += percpu_size(htab->extra_elems); > size += kvsize(htab->buckets); > size += bpf_mem_alloc_size(&htab->pcpu_ma); > size += bpf_mem_alloc_size(&htab->ma); > if (htab->use_percpu_counter) > size += percpu_size(htab->pcount.counters); > size += percpu_size(htab->map_locked[i]) * HASHTAB_MAP_LOCK_COUNT; > size += kvsize(htab); > return size; > } Please don't. Above doesn't look maintainable. Look at kvsize(htab). Do you really care about hundred bytes? Just accept that there will be a small constant difference between what show_fdinfo reports and the real memory. You cannot make it 100%. There is kfence that will allocate 4k though you asked kmalloc(8). > We just need to get the real memory size from the pointer instead of > calculating the size again. > For non-preallocated htab, it is a little trouble to get the element > size (not the unit_size), but it won't be a big deal. You'd have to convince mm folks that kvsize() is worth doing. I don't think it will be easy. > > With a callback devs will start thinking that this is somehow > > a requirement to report precise memory. > > > > > > > > bpf side tracks all of its allocation. There is no need to do that > > > > > > in generic mm side. > > > > > > Exposing an aggregated single number if /proc/meminfo also looks wrong. > > > > > > > > > > Do you mean that we shouldn't expose it in /proc/meminfo ? > > > > > > > > We should not because it helps one particular use case only. > > > > Somebody else might want map mem info per container, > > > > then somebody would need it per user, etc. > > > > > > It seems we should show memcg info and user info in bpftool map show. > > > > Show memcg info? What do you have in mind? > > > > Each bpf map is charged to a memcg. If we know a bpf map belongs to > which memcg, we can know the map mem info per container. > Currently we can get the memcg info from the process which loads it, > but it can't apply to pinned-bpf-map. > So it would be better if we can show it in bpftool-map-show. That sounds useful. Have you looked at bpf iterators and how bpftool is using them to figure out which process loaded bpf prog and created particular map?