On Wed, Apr 04, 2018 at 10:08:55AM -0400, Johannes Weiner wrote: > On Sat, Mar 24, 2018 at 09:08:59AM -0700, Tejun Heo wrote: > > @@ -91,6 +91,9 @@ struct mem_cgroup_stat_cpu { > > unsigned long events[MEMCG_NR_EVENTS]; > > unsigned long nr_page_events; > > unsigned long targets[MEM_CGROUP_NTARGETS]; > > + > > + /* for cgroup rstat delta calculation */ > > + unsigned long last_events[MEMCG_NR_EVENTS]; > > }; > > > > struct mem_cgroup_reclaim_iter { > > @@ -233,7 +236,11 @@ struct mem_cgroup { > > > > struct mem_cgroup_stat_cpu __percpu *stat_cpu; > > atomic_long_t stat[MEMCG_NR_STAT]; > > - atomic_long_t events[MEMCG_NR_EVENTS]; > > + > > + /* events is managed by cgroup rstat */ > > + unsigned long long events[MEMCG_NR_EVENTS]; /* local */ > > + unsigned long long tree_events[MEMCG_NR_EVENTS]; /* subtree */ > > + unsigned long long pending_events[MEMCG_NR_EVENTS];/* propagation */ > > The lazy updates are neat, but I'm a little concerned at the memory > footprint. On a 64-cpu machine for example, this adds close to 9000 > words to struct mem_cgroup. And we really only need the accuracy for > the 4 cgroup items in memory.events, not all VM events and stats. > > Why not restrict the patch to those? It would also get rid of the > weird sharing between VM and cgroup enums. In fact, I wonder if we need per-cpuness for MEMCG_LOW, MEMCG_HIGH etc. in the first place. They describe super high-level reclaim and OOM events, so they're not nearly as hot as other VM events and stats. We could probably just have a per-memcg array of atomics. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe cgroups" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html