Re: [PATCH v2 0/5] Introduce memcg_stock_pcp remote draining

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On Thu, 2023-01-26 at 15:19 -0300, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 25, 2023 at 03:14:48PM -0800, Roman Gushchin wrote:
> > On Wed, Jan 25, 2023 at 03:22:00PM -0300, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
> > > On Wed, Jan 25, 2023 at 08:06:46AM -0300, Leonardo Brás wrote:
> > > > On Wed, 2023-01-25 at 09:33 +0100, Michal Hocko wrote:
> > > > > On Wed 25-01-23 04:34:57, Leonardo Bras wrote:
> > > > > > Disclaimer:
> > > > > > a - The cover letter got bigger than expected, so I had to split it in
> > > > > >     sections to better organize myself. I am not very confortable with it.
> > > > > > b - Performance numbers below did not include patch 5/5 (Remove flags
> > > > > >     from memcg_stock_pcp), which could further improve performance for
> > > > > >     drain_all_stock(), but I could only notice the optimization at the
> > > > > >     last minute.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > 0 - Motivation:
> > > > > > On current codebase, when drain_all_stock() is ran, it will schedule a
> > > > > > drain_local_stock() for each cpu that has a percpu stock associated with a
> > > > > > descendant of a given root_memcg.
> > 
> > Do you know what caused those drain_all_stock() calls? I wonder if we should look
> > into why we have many of them and whether we really need them?
> > 
> > It's either some user's actions (e.g. reducing memory.max), either some memcg
> > is entering pre-oom conditions. In the latter case a lot of drain calls can be
> > scheduled without a good reason (assuming the cgroup contain multiple tasks running
> > on multiple cpus). Essentially each cpu will try to grab the remains of the memory quota
> > and move it locally. I wonder in such circumstances if we need to disable the pcp-caching
> > on per-cgroup basis.
> > 
> > Generally speaking, draining of pcpu stocks is useful only if an idle cpu is holding some
> > charges/memcg references (it might be not completely idle, but running some very special
> > workload which is not doing any kernel allocations or a process belonging to the root memcg).
> > In all other cases pcpu stock will be either drained naturally by an allocation from another
> > memcg or an allocation from the same memcg will "restore" it, making draining useless.
> > 
> > We also can into drain_all_pages() opportunistically, without waiting for the result.
> > On a busy system it's most likely useless, we might oom before scheduled works will be executed.
> > 
> > I admit I planned to do some work around and even started, but then never had enough time to
> > finish it.
> > 
> > Overall I'm somewhat resistant to an idea of making generic allocation & free paths slower
> > for an improvement of stock draining. It's not a strong objection, but IMO we should avoid
> > doing this without a really strong reason.
> 
> The expectation would be that cache locking should not cause slowdown of
> the allocation and free paths:
> 
> https://manualsbrain.com/en/manuals/1246877/?page=313
> 
> For the P6 and more recent processor families, if the area of memory being locked 
> during a LOCK operation is cached in the processor that is performing the LOCK oper-
> ation as write-back memory and is completely contained in a cache line, the 
> processor may not assert the LOCK# signal on the bus. Instead, it will modify the 
> memory location internally and allow it’s cache coherency mechanism to insure that 
> the operation is carried out atomically. This operation is called “cache locking.” The 
> cache coherency mechanism automatically prevents two or more processors that ...
> 
> 

Just to keep the info easily available: the protected structure (struct
memcg_stock_pcp) fits in 48 Bytes, which is less than the usual 64B cacheline. 

struct memcg_stock_pcp {
	spinlock_t                 stock_lock;           /*     0     4 */
	unsigned int               nr_pages;             /*     4     4 */
	struct mem_cgroup *        cached;               /*     8     8 */
	struct obj_cgroup *        cached_objcg;         /*    16     8 */
	struct pglist_data *       cached_pgdat;         /*    24     8 */
	unsigned int               nr_bytes;             /*    32     4 */
	int                        nr_slab_reclaimable_b; /*    36     4 */
	int                        nr_slab_unreclaimable_b; /*    40     4 */

	/* size: 48, cachelines: 1, members: 8 */
	/* padding: 4 */
	/* last cacheline: 48 bytes */
};

(It got smaller after patches 3/5, 4/5 and 5/5, which remove holes, work_struct
and flags respectively.)

On top of that, patch 1/5 makes sure the percpu allocation is aligned to
cacheline size.





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