On Thu, Jun 27, 2019 at 04:57:50PM -0400, Waiman Long wrote: > On 6/26/19 4:19 PM, Roman Gushchin wrote: > >> > >> +#ifdef CONFIG_MEMCG_KMEM > >> +static void kmem_cache_shrink_memcg(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, > >> + void __maybe_unused *arg) > >> +{ > >> + struct kmem_cache *s; > >> + > >> + if (memcg == root_mem_cgroup) > >> + return; > >> + mutex_lock(&slab_mutex); > >> + list_for_each_entry(s, &memcg->kmem_caches, > >> + memcg_params.kmem_caches_node) { > >> + kmem_cache_shrink(s); > >> + } > >> + mutex_unlock(&slab_mutex); > >> + cond_resched(); > >> +} > > A couple of questions: > > 1) how about skipping already offlined kmem_caches? They are already shrunk, > > so you probably won't get much out of them. Or isn't it true? > > I have been thinking about that. This patch is based on the linux tree > and so don't have an easy to find out if the kmem caches have been > shrinked. Rebasing this on top of linux-next, I can use the > SLAB_DEACTIVATED flag as a marker for skipping the shrink. > > With all the latest patches, I am still seeing 121 out of a total of 726 > memcg kmem caches (1/6) that are deactivated caches after system bootup > one of the test systems. My system is still using cgroup v1 and so the > number may be different in a v2 setup. The next step is probably to > figure out why those deactivated caches are still there. It's not a secret: these kmem_caches are holding objects, which are in use. It's a drawback of the current slab accounting implementation: every object holds a whole page and the corresponding kmem_cache. It's optimized for a large number of objects, which are created and destroyed within the life of the cgroup (e.g. task_structs), and it works worse for long-living objects like vfs cache. Long-term I think we need a different implementation for long-living objects, so that objects belonging to different memory cgroups can share the same page and kmem_caches. It's a fairly big change though. > > > 2) what's your long-term vision here? do you think that we need to shrink > > kmem_caches periodically, depending on memory pressure? how a user > > will use this new sysctl? > Shrinking the kmem caches under extreme memory pressure can be one way > to free up extra pages, but the effect will probably be temporary. > > What's the problem you're trying to solve in general? > > At least for the slub allocator, shrinking the caches allow the number > of active objects reported in slabinfo to be more accurate. In addition, > this allow to know the real slab memory consumption. I have been working > on a BZ about continuous memory leaks with a container based workloads. > The ability to shrink caches allow us to get a more accurate memory > consumption picture. Another alternative is to turn on slub_debug which > will then disables all the per-cpu slabs. I see... I agree with Michal here, that extending drop_caches sysctl isn't the best idea. Isn't it possible to achieve the same effect using slub sysfs? Thanks!