+David Rientjes On Tue, May 16, 2023 at 8:20 PM chengkaitao <chengkaitao@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Establish a new OOM score algorithm, supports the cgroup level OOM > protection mechanism. When an global/memcg oom event occurs, we treat > all processes in the cgroup as a whole, and OOM killers need to select > the process to kill based on the protection quota of the cgroup. > > Here is a more detailed comparison and introduction of the old > oom_score_adj mechanism and the new oom_protect mechanism, > > 1. The regulating granularity of oom_protect is smaller than that of > oom_score_adj. On a 512G physical machine, the minimum granularity > adjusted by oom_score_adj is 512M, and the minimum granularity > adjusted by oom_protect is one page (4K) > 2. It may be simple to create a lightweight parent process and uniformly > set the oom_score_adj of some important processes, but it is not a > simple matter to make multi-level settings for tens of thousands of > processes on the physical machine through the lightweight parent > processes. We may need a huge table to record the value of oom_score_adj > maintained by all lightweight parent processes, and the user process > limited by the parent process has no ability to change its own > oom_score_adj, because it does not know the details of the huge > table. on the other hand, we have to set the common parent process' > oom_score_adj, before it forks all children processes. We must strictly > follow this setting sequence, and once oom_score_adj is set, it cannot > be changed. To sum up, it is very difficult to apply oom_score_adj in > other situations. The new patch adopts the cgroup mechanism. It does not > need any parent process to manage oom_score_adj. the settings between > each memcg are independent of each other, making it easier to plan the > OOM order of all processes. Due to the unique nature of memory > resources, current Service cloud vendors are not oversold in memory > planning. I would like to use the new patch to try to achieve the > possibility of oversold memory resources. > 3. I conducted a test and deployed an excessive number of containers on > a physical machine, By setting the oom_score_adj value of all processes > in the container to a positive number through dockerinit, even processes > that occupy very little memory in the container are easily killed, > resulting in a large number of invalid kill behaviors. If dockerinit is > also killed unfortunately, it will trigger container self-healing, and > the container will rebuild, resulting in more severe memory > oscillations. The new patch abandons the behavior of adding an equal > amount of oom_score_adj to each process in the container and adopts a > shared oom_protect quota for all processes in the container. If a > process in the container is killed, the remaining other processes will > receive more oom_protect quota, making it more difficult for the > remaining processes to be killed. In my test case, the new patch reduced > the number of invalid kill behaviors by 70%. > 4. oom_score_adj is a global configuration that cannot achieve a kill > order that only affects a certain memcg-oom-killer. However, the > oom_protect mechanism inherits downwards (If the oom_protect quota of > the parent cgroup is less than the sum of sub-cgroups oom_protect quota, > the oom_protect quota of each sub-cgroup will be proportionally reduced. > If the oom_protect quota of the parent cgroup is greater than the sum of > sub-cgroups oom_protect quota, the oom_protect quota of each sub-cgroup > will be proportionally increased). The purpose of doing so is that users > can set oom_protect quota according to their own needs, and the system > management process can set appropriate oom_protect quota on the parent > memcg as the final cover. If the oom_protect of the parent cgroup is 0, > the kill order of memcg-oom or global-ooms will not be affected by user > specific settings. > 5. Per-process accounting does not count shared memory, similar to > active page cache, which also increases the probability of OOM-kill. > However, the memcg accounting may be more reasonable, as its memory > statistics are more comprehensive. In the new patch, all the shared > memory will also consume the oom_protect quota of the memcg, and the > process's oom_protect quota of the memcg will decrease, the probability > of they being killed will increase. > 6. In the final discussion of patch v2, we discussed that although the > adjustment range of oom_score_adj is [-1000,1000], but essentially it > only allows two usecases(OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MIN, OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MAX) reliably. > Everything in between is clumsy at best. In order to solve this problem > in the new patch, I introduced a new indicator oom_kill_inherit, which > counts the number of times the local and child cgroups have been > selected by the OOM killer of the ancestor cgroup. oom_kill_inherit > maintains a negative correlation with memory.oom.protect, so we have a > ruler to measure the optimal value of memory.oom.protect. By observing > the proportion of oom_kill_inherit in the parent cgroup, I can > effectively adjust the value of oom_protect to achieve the best. > > Changelog: > v4: > * Fix warning: overflow in expression. (patch 1) > * Supplementary commit information. (patch 0) > v3: > * Add "auto" option for memory.oom.protect. (patch 1) > * Fix division errors. (patch 1) > * Add observation indicator oom_kill_inherit. (patch 2) > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20230506114948.6862-1-chengkaitao@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > v2: > * Modify the formula of the process request memcg protection quota. > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20221208034644.3077-1-chengkaitao@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > v1: > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20221130070158.44221-1-chengkaitao@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > > chengkaitao (2): > mm: memcontrol: protect the memory in cgroup from being oom killed > memcg: add oom_kill_inherit event indicator > > Documentation/admin-guide/cgroup-v2.rst | 29 ++++- > fs/proc/base.c | 17 ++- > include/linux/memcontrol.h | 46 +++++++- > include/linux/oom.h | 3 +- > include/linux/page_counter.h | 6 + > mm/memcontrol.c | 199 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > mm/oom_kill.c | 25 ++-- > mm/page_counter.c | 30 +++++ > 8 files changed, 334 insertions(+), 21 deletions(-) > > -- > 2.14.1 > > Perhaps this is only slightly relevant, but at Google we do have a different per-memcg approach to protect from OOM kills, or more specifically tell the kernel how we would like the OOM killer to behave. We define an interface called memory.oom_score_badness, and we also allow it to be specified per-process through a procfs interface, similar to oom_score_adj. These scores essentially tell the OOM killer the order in which we prefer memcgs to be OOM'd, and the order in which we want processes in the memcg to be OOM'd. By default, all processes and memcgs start with the same score. Ties are broken based on the rss of the process or the usage of the memcg (prefer to kill the process/memcg that will free more memory) -- similar to the current OOM killer. This has been brought up before in other discussions without much interest [1], but just thought it may be relevant here. [1]https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAHS8izN3ej1mqUpnNQ8c-1Bx5EeO7q5NOkh0qrY_4PLqc8rkHA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/#t