Re: [RFC PATCH 0/4] Introduce PMC(PER-MEMCG-CACHE)

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在 2024/7/4 6:59, T.J. Mercier 写道:
On Tue, Jul 2, 2024 at 7:23 PM Huan Yang <link@xxxxxxxx> wrote:

在 2024/7/3 3:27, Roman Gushchin 写道:
On Tue, Jul 02, 2024 at 04:44:03PM +0800, Huan Yang wrote:
This patchset like to talk abount a idea about PMC(PER-MEMCG-CACHE).

Background
===

Modern computer systems always have performance gaps between hardware,
such as the performance differences between CPU, memory, and disk.
Due to the principle of locality of reference in data access:

    Programs often access data that has been accessed before
    Programs access the next set of data after accessing a particular data
As a result:
    1. CPU cache is used to speed up the access of already accessed data
       in memory
    2. Disk prefetching techniques are used to prepare the next set of data
       to be accessed in advance (to avoid direct disk access)
The basic utilization of locality greatly enhances computer performance.

PMC (per-MEMCG-cache) is similar, utilizing a principle of locality to enhance
program performance.

In modern computers, especially in smartphones, services are provided to
users on a per-application basis (such as Camera, Chat, etc.),
where an application is composed of multiple processes working together to
provide services.

The basic unit for managing resources in a computer is the process,
which in turn uses threads to share memory and accomplish tasks.
Memory is shared among threads within a process.

However, modern computers have the following issues, with a locality deficiency:

    1. Different forms of memory exist and are not interconnected (anonymous
       pages, file pages, special memory such as DMA-BUF, various memory alloc in
       kernel mode, etc.)
    2. Memory isolation exists between processes, and apart from specific
       shared memory, they do not communicate with each other.
    3. During the transition of functionality within an application, a process
       usually releases memory, while another process requests memory, and in
       this process, memory has to be obtained from the lowest level through
       competition.

For example abount camera application:

Camera applications typically provide photo capture services as well as photo
preview services.
The photo capture process usually utilizes DMA-BUF to facilitate the sharing
of image data between the CPU and DMA devices.
When it comes to image preview, multiple algorithm processes are typically
involved in processing the image data, which may also involve heap memory
and other resources.

During the switch between photo capture and preview, the application typically
needs to release DMA-BUF memory and then the algorithms need to allocate
heap memory. The flow of system memory during this process is managed by
the PCP-BUDDY system.

However, the PCP and BUDDY systems are shared, and subsequently requested
memory may not be available due to previously allocated memory being used
(such as for file reading), requiring a competitive (memory reclamation)
process to obtain it.

So, if it is possible to allow the released memory to be allocated with
high priority within the application, then this can meet the locality
requirement, improve performance, and avoid unnecessary memory reclaim.

PMC solutions are similar to PCP, as they both establish cache pools according
to certain rules.

Why base on MEMCG?
===

The MEMCG container can allocate selected processes to a MEMCG based on certain
grouping strategies (typical examples include grouping by app or UID).
Processes within the same MEMCG can then be used for statistics, upper limit
restrictions, and reclamation control.

All processes within a MEMCG are considered as a single memory unit,
sharing memory among themselves. As a result, when one process releases
memory, another process within the same group can obtain it with the
highest priority, fully utilizing the locality of memory allocation
characteristics within the MEMCG (such as APP grouping).

In addition, MEMCG provides feature interfaces that can be dynamically toggled
and are fully controllable by the policy.This provides greater flexibility
and does not impact performance when not enabled (controlled through static key).


Abount PMC implement
===
Here, a cache switch is provided for each MEMCG(not on root).
When the user enables the cache, processes within the MEMCG will share memory
through this cache.

The cache pool is positioned before the PCP. All order0 page released by
processes in MEMCG will be released to the cache pool first, and when memory
is requested, it will also be prioritized to be obtained from the cache pool.

`memory.cache` is the sole entry point for controlling PMC, here are some
nested keys to control PMC:
    1. "enable=[y|n]" to enable or disable targeted MEMCG's cache
    2. "keys=nid=%d,watermark=%u,reaper_time=%u,limit=%u" to control already
    enabled PMC's behavior.
      a) `nid` to targeted a node to change it's key. or else all node.
      b) The `watermark` is used to control cache behavior, caching only when
         zone free pages above the zone's high water mark + this watermark is
         exceeded during memory release. (unit byte, default 50MB,
         min 10MB per-node-all-zone)
      c) `reaper_time` to control reaper gap, if meet, reaper all cache in this
          MEMCG(unit us, default 5s, 0 is disable.)
      d) `limit` is to limit the maximum memory used by the cache pool(unit bytes,
         default 100MB, max 500MB per-node-all-zone)

Performance
===
PMC is based on MEMCG and requires performance measurement through the
sharing of complex workloads between application processes.
Therefore, at the moment, we unable to provide a better testing solution
for this patchset.

Here is the internal testing situation we provide, using the camera
application as an example. (1-NODE-1-ZONE-8GRAM)

Test Case: Capture in rear portrait HDR mode
1. Test mode: rear portrait HDR mode. This scene needs more than 800M ram
     which memory types including dmabuf(470M), PSS(150M) and APU(200M)
2. Test steps: take a photo, then click thumbnail to view the full image

The overall performance benefit from click shutter button to showing whole
image improves 500ms, and the total slowpath cost of all camera threads reduced
from 958ms to 495ms.
Especially for the shot2shot in this mode, the preview dealy of each frame have
a significant improve.
Hello Huan,

thank you for sharing your work.
thanks
Some high-level thoughts:
1) Naming is hard, but it took me quite a while to realize that you're talking
Haha, sorry for my pool english
about free memory. Cache is obviously an overloaded term, but per-memcg-cache
can mean absolutely anything (pagecache? cpu cache? ...), so maybe it's not
Currently, my idea is that all memory released by processes under memcg
will go into the `cache`,

and the original attributes will be ignored, and can be freely requested
by processes under memcg.

(so, dma-buf\page cache\heap\driver, so on). Maybe named PMP more
friendly? :)

the best choice.
2) Overall an idea to have a per-memcg free memory pool makes sense to me,
especially if we talk 2MB or 1GB pages (or order > 0 in general).
I like it too :)
3) You absolutely have to integrate the reclaim mechanism with a generic
memory reclaim mechanism, which is driven by the memory pressure.
Yes, I all think about it.
4) You claim a ~50% performance win in your workload, which is a lot. It's not
clear to me where it's coming from. It's hard to believe the page allocation/release
paths are taking 50% of the cpu time. Please, clarify.
Let me describe it more specifically. In our test scenario, we have 8GB
of RAM, and our camera application

has a complex set of algorithms, with a peak memory requirement of up to
3GB.

Therefore, in a multi-application background scenario, starting the
camera and taking photos will create a

very high memory pressure. In this scenario, any released memory will be
quickly used by other processes (such as file pages).

So, during the process of switching from camera capture to preview,
DMA-BUF memory will be released,

while the memory used for the preview algorithm will be simultaneously
requested.

We need to take a lot of slow path routes to obtain enough memory for
the preview algorithm, and it seems that the

just released DMA-BUF memory does not provide much help.

Hi Huan,
HI T.J.

I find this part surprising. Assuming the dmabuf memory doesn't first
go into a page pool (used for some buffers, not all) and actually does
Actually, when PMC enabled, we let page free avoid free into page pool.
get freed synchronously with fput, this would mean it gets sucked up
by other supposedly background processes before it can be allocated by
the preview process. I thought the preview process was the one most
desperate for memory? You mention file pages, but where is this
newly-freed memory actually going if not to the preview process? My
This was discovered through the meminfo observation program.
When the dma-buf is released, there is a noticeable increase in cache.

This may be triggered by pagecache when loading the algorithm model.

Additionally, the algorithm heap memory cannot benefit from the release of the dma-buf. I believe this is related to the migratetype. The stack/heap cannot obtain priority access to
the dma-buf memory released by the kernel.(HIGHUSER_MOVABLE)

So, PMC break it, share each memory. Even if it's incorrect :)(If my understanding of the
fragmentation issue is incorrect, please correct me.)

initial reaction was the same as Roman's that the PMC should be hooked
up to reclaim instead of depending on the reaper. But I think this
might suggest that wouldn't work because the system is under such high
memory pressure that it'd be likely reclaim would have emptied the
PMCs before the preview process could use it.
The point you raised is indeed very likely to happen, as there is immense
memory pressure.
Currently, we only open the PMC when the application is in the foreground,
and close it when it goes to the background.
It is indeed unnecessary to drain the PMC when the application is in the foreground, and a longer reaper timeout would be more useful.(Thanks for the flexibility provided by memcg.)

One more thing I find odd is that for this to work a significant
portion of your dmabuf pages would have to be order 0, but we're
talking about a ~500M buffer. Does whatever exports this buffer not
try to use higher order pages like here?
Yes, actually our heap configured order 8 4 0, but In our practical application and observation processes, it is often difficult to meet the high-order memory allocation, so falling back to order 0 is the most common.
Therefore, for our MID_ORDER allocation, we use LOW_ORDER_GFP.
Just like the testing scenario I mentioned earlier, with 8GB of RAM and the camera peaking at around 3GB,

the fragmentation at this point will cause most of the DMA-BUF allocations to fall back to order 0. The use of PMC is for real-world, high-load applications. I don't think it's very practical for regular applications.

Thanks
HY

https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/drivers/dma-buf/heaps/system_heap.c?h=v6.9#n54

Thanks!
-T.J.

But using PMC (let's call it that for now), we are able to quickly meet
the memory needs of the subsequent preview process

with the just released DMA-BUF memory, without having to go through the
slow path, resulting in a significant performance improvement.

(of course, break migrate type may not good.)

There are a lot of other questions, and you highlighted some of them below
(and these are indeed right questions to ask), but let's start with something.

Thanks
Thanks





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