On Fri 24-02-17 17:09:13, Vitaly Kuznetsov wrote: > Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > On Fri 24-02-17 16:05:18, Vitaly Kuznetsov wrote: > >> Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> > >> > On Fri 24-02-17 15:10:29, Vitaly Kuznetsov wrote: > > [...] > >> >> Just did a quick (and probably dirty) test, increasing guest memory from > >> >> 4G to 8G (32 x 128mb blocks) require 68Mb of memory, so it's roughly 2Mb > >> >> per block. It's really easy to trigger OOM for small guests. > >> > > >> > So we need ~1.5% of the added memory. That doesn't sound like something > >> > to trigger OOM killer too easily. Assuming that increase is not way too > >> > large. Going from 256M (your earlier example) to 8G looks will eat half > >> > the memory which is still quite far away from the OOM. > >> > >> And if the kernel itself takes 128Mb of ram (which is not something > >> extraordinary with many CPUs) we have zero left. Go to something bigger > >> than 8G and you die. > > > > Again, if you have 128M and jump to 8G then your memory balancing is > > most probably broken. > > > > I don't understand what balancing you're talking about. balancing = dynamic memory resizing depending on the demand both internal (inside guest) and outside (on the host to balance memory between different guests). > I have a small > guest and I want to add more memory to it and the result is ... OOM. Not > something I expected. Which is not all that unexpected if you use a technology which has to allocated in order to add more memory. > >> > I would call such > >> > an increase a bad memory balancing, though, to be honest. A more > >> > reasonable memory balancing would go and double the available memory > >> > IMHO. Anway, I still think that hotplug is a terrible way to do memory > >> > ballooning. > >> > >> That's what we have in *all* modern hypervisors. And I don't see why > >> it's bad. > > > > Go and re-read the original thread. Dave has given many good arguments. > > > > Are we discussing taking away the memory hotplug feature from all > hypervisors here? No. I just consider it a bad idea because it has many problems and will never be 100% reliable. [...] > >> I don't understand why CONFIG_MEMORY_HOTPLUG_DEFAULT_ONLINE is > > > > Because this is something a user has to think about and doesn't have a > > reasonable way to decide. Our config space is also way too large! > > Config space is for distros, not users. Maybe you haven't noticed but there are people compiling their kernels as well. But even distros are not really in a great position to answer this question because it depends on the specific usecase. > >> disturbing and why do we need to take this choice away from distros. I > >> don't understand what we're gaining by replacing it with > >> per-memory-add-technology defaults. > > > > Because those technologies know that they want to have the memory online > > as soon as possible. Jeez, just look at the hv code. It waits for the > > userspace to online memory before going further. Why would it ever want > > to have the tunable in "offline" state? This just doesn't make any > > sense. Look at how things get simplified if we get rid of this clutter > > While this will most probably work for me I still disagree with the > concept of 'one size fits all' here and the default 'false' for ACPI, > we're taking away the feature from KVM/Vmware folks so they'll again > come up with the udev rule which has known issues. Well, AFAIU acpi_memory_device_add is a standard way how to announce physical memory added to the system. Where does the KVM/VMware depend on this to do memory ballooning? -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>