On Thu, May 19, 2022 at 06:56:54PM -0700, Yosry Ahmed wrote: > On Fri, May 13, 2022 at 10:14 AM Shakeel Butt <shakeelb@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Fri, May 13, 2022 at 9:12 AM Sean Christopherson <seanjc@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > [...] > > > > > > It was mostly an honest question, I too am trying to understand what userspace > > > wants to do with this information. I was/am also trying to understand the benefits > > > of doing the tracking through page_state and not a dedicated KVM stat. E.g. KVM > > > already has specific stats for the number of leaf pages mapped into a VM, why not > > > do the same for non-leaf pages? > > > > Let me answer why a more general stat is useful and the potential > > userspace reaction: > > > > For a memory type which is significant enough, it is useful to expose > > it in the general interfaces, so that the general data/stat collection > > infra can collect them instead of having workload dependent stat > > collectors. In addition, not necessarily that stat has to have a > > userspace reaction in an online fashion. We do collect stats for > > offline analysis which greatly influence the priority order of > > optimization workitems. > > > > Next the question is do we really need a separate stat item > > (secondary_pagetable instead of just plain pagetable) exposed in the > > stable API? To me secondary_pagetable is general (not kvm specific) > > enough and can be significant, so having a separate dedicated stat > > should be ok. Though I am ok with lump it with pagetable stat for now > > but we do want it to be accounted somewhere. > > Any thoughts on this? Johannes? I agree that this memory should show up in vmstat/memory.stat in some form or another. The arguments on whether this should be part of NR_PAGETABLE or a separate entry seem a bit vague to me. I was hoping somebody more familiar with KVM could provide a better picture of memory consumption in that area. Sean had mentioned that these allocations already get tracked through GFP_KERNEL_ACCOUNT. That's good, but if they are significant enough to track, they should be represented in memory.stat in some form. Sean also pointed out though that those allocations tend to scale rather differently than the page tables, so it probably makes sense to keep those two things separate at least. Any thoughts on putting shadow page tables and iommu page tables into the existing NR_PAGETABLE item? If not, what are the cons? And creating (maybe later) a separate NR_VIRT for the other GPF_KERNEL_ACCOUNT allocations in kvm?