On Mon, Aug 07, 2023 at 09:04:34AM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Mon 07-08-23 10:21:09, Chuyi Zhou wrote: > > > > > > 在 2023/8/4 21:34, Michal Hocko 写道: > > > On Fri 04-08-23 21:15:57, Chuyi Zhou wrote: > > > [...] > > > > > + switch (bpf_oom_evaluate_task(task, oc, &points)) { > > > > > + case -EOPNOTSUPP: break; /* No BPF policy */ > > > > > + case -EBUSY: goto abort; /* abort search process */ > > > > > + case 0: goto next; /* ignore process */ > > > > > + default: goto select; /* note the task */ > > > > > + } To be honest, I can't say I like it. IMO it's not really using the full bpf potential and is too attached to the current oom implementation. First, I'm a bit concerned about implicit restrictions we apply to bpf programs which will be executed potentially thousands times under a very heavy memory pressure. We will need to make sure that they don't allocate (much) memory, don't take any locks which might deadlock with other memory allocations etc. It will potentially require hard restrictions on what these programs can and can't do and this is something that the bpf community will have to maintain long-term. Second, if we're introducing bpf here (which I'm not yet convinced), IMO we should use it in a more generic and expressive way. Instead of adding hooks into the existing oom killer implementation, we can call a bpf program before invoking the in-kernel oom killer and let it do whatever it takes to free some memory. E.g. we can provide it with an API to kill individual tasks as well as all tasks in a cgroup. This approach is more generic and will allow to solve certain problems which can't be solved by the current oom killer, e.g. deleting files from a tmpfs instead of killing tasks. So I think the alternative approach is to provide some sort of an interface to pre-select oom victims in advance. E.g. on memcg level it can look like: echo PID >> memory.oom.victim_proc If the list is empty, the default oom killer is invoked. If there are tasks, the first one is killed on OOM. A similar interface can exist to choose between sibling cgroups: echo CGROUP_NAME >> memory.oom.victim_cgroup This is just a rough idea. Thanks!