Re: [PATCH 1/2] memcg, oom: unmark under_oom after the oom killer is done

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On Mon 25-09-23 17:03:05, Haifeng Xu wrote:
> 
> 
> On 2023/9/25 15:57, Michal Hocko wrote:
> > On Fri 22-09-23 07:05:28, Haifeng Xu wrote:
> >> When application in userland receives oom notification from kernel
> >> and reads the oom_control file, it's confusing that under_oom is 0
> >> though the omm killer hasn't finished. The reason is that under_oom
> >> is cleared before invoking mem_cgroup_out_of_memory(), so move the
> >> action that unmark under_oom after completing oom handling. Therefore,
> >> the value of under_oom won't mislead users.
> > 
> > I do not really remember why are we doing it this way but trying to track
> > this down shows that we have been doing that since fb2a6fc56be6 ("mm:
> > memcg: rework and document OOM waiting and wakeup"). So this is an
> > established behavior for 10 years now. Do we really need to change it
> > now? The interface is legacy and hopefully no new workloads are
> > emerging.
> > 
> > I agree that the placement is surprising but I would rather not change
> > that unless there is a very good reason for that. Do you have any actual
> > workload which depends on the ordering? And if yes, how do you deal with
> > timing when the consumer of the notification just gets woken up after
> > mem_cgroup_out_of_memory completes?
> 
> yes, when the oom event is triggered, we check the under_oom every 10 seconds. If it
> is cleared, then we create a new process with less memory allocation to avoid oom again.

OK, I do understand what you mean and I could have made myself
more clear previously. Even if the state is cleared _after_
mem_cgroup_out_of_memory then you won't get what you need I am
afraid. The memcg stays under OOM until a memory is freed (uncharged)
from that memcg. mem_cgroup_out_of_memory itself doesn't really free
any memory on its own. It relies on the task to wake up and die or
oom_reaper to do the work on its behalf. All of that is time dependent.
under_oom would have to be reimplemented to be cleared when a memory is
unchanrged to meet your demands. Something that has never really been
the semantic.

Btw. is this something new that you are developing on top of v1? And if
yes, why don't you use v2?

-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs



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