On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 01:55:59PM +0100, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 12:04:44PM +0200, peterz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 10:27:37AM +0100, Chris Down wrote: > > > peterz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx writes: > > > > On Mon, Aug 17, 2020 at 10:08:23AM -0400, Waiman Long wrote: > > > > > Memory controller can be used to control and limit the amount of > > > > > physical memory used by a task. When a limit is set in "memory.high" in > > > > > a v2 non-root memory cgroup, the memory controller will try to reclaim > > > > > memory if the limit has been exceeded. Normally, that will be enough > > > > > to keep the physical memory consumption of tasks in the memory cgroup > > > > > to be around or below the "memory.high" limit. > > > > > > > > > > Sometimes, memory reclaim may not be able to recover memory in a rate > > > > > that can catch up to the physical memory allocation rate. In this case, > > > > > the physical memory consumption will keep on increasing. > > > > > > > > Then slow down the allocator? That's what we do for dirty pages too, we > > > > slow down the dirtier when we run against the limits. > > > > > > We already do that since v5.4. I'm wondering whether Waiman's customer is > > > just running with a too-old kernel without 0e4b01df865 ("mm, memcg: throttle > > > allocators when failing reclaim over memory.high") backported. > > > > That commit is fundamentally broken, it doesn't guarantee anything. > > > > Please go read how the dirty throttling works (unless people wrecked > > that since..). > > Of course they did. > > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/ce7975cd-6353-3f29-b52c-7a81b1d07caa@xxxxxxxxx/ Different thing. That's memory reclaim throttling, not dirty page throttling. balance_dirty_pages() still works just fine as it does not look at device congestion. page cleaning rate is accounted in test_clear_page_writeback(), page dirtying rate is accounted directly in balance_dirty_pages(). That feedback loop has not been broken... And I compeltely agree with Peter here - the control theory we applied to the dirty throttling problem is still 100% valid and so the algorithm still just works all these years later. I've only been saying that allocation should use the same feedback model for reclaim throttling since ~2011... Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx