On Thu 05-10-17 13:32:14, Roman Gushchin wrote: > On Thu, Oct 05, 2017 at 02:06:49PM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote: > > On Wed 04-10-17 16:46:36, Roman Gushchin wrote: > > > The cgroup-aware OOM killer treats leaf memory cgroups as memory > > > consumption entities and performs the victim selection by comparing > > > them based on their memory footprint. Then it kills the biggest task > > > inside the selected memory cgroup. > > > > > > But there are workloads, which are not tolerant to a such behavior. > > > Killing a random task may leave the workload in a broken state. > > > > > > To solve this problem, memory.oom_group knob is introduced. > > > It will define, whether a memory group should be treated as an > > > indivisible memory consumer, compared by total memory consumption > > > with other memory consumers (leaf memory cgroups and other memory > > > cgroups with memory.oom_group set), and whether all belonging tasks > > > should be killed if the cgroup is selected. > > > > > > If set on memcg A, it means that in case of system-wide OOM or > > > memcg-wide OOM scoped to A or any ancestor cgroup, all tasks, > > > belonging to the sub-tree of A will be killed. If OOM event is > > > scoped to a descendant cgroup (A/B, for example), only tasks in > > > that cgroup can be affected. OOM killer will never touch any tasks > > > outside of the scope of the OOM event. > > > > > > Also, tasks with oom_score_adj set to -1000 will not be killed. > > > > I would extend the last sentence with an explanation. What about the > > following: > > " > > Also, tasks with oom_score_adj set to -1000 will not be killed because > > this has been a long established way to protect a particular process > > from seeing an unexpected SIGKILL from the oom killer. Ignoring this > > user defined configuration might lead to data corruptions or other > > misbehavior. > > " > > Added, thanks! > > > > > few mostly nit picks below but this looks good other than that. Once the > > fix mentioned in patch 3 is folded I will ack this. > > > > [...] > > > > > static void select_victim_memcg(struct mem_cgroup *root, struct oom_control *oc) > > > { > > > - struct mem_cgroup *iter; > > > + struct mem_cgroup *iter, *group = NULL; > > > + long group_score = 0; > > > > > > oc->chosen_memcg = NULL; > > > oc->chosen_points = 0; > > > > > > /* > > > + * If OOM is memcg-wide, and the memcg has the oom_group flag set, > > > + * all tasks belonging to the memcg should be killed. > > > + * So, we mark the memcg as a victim. > > > + */ > > > + if (oc->memcg && mem_cgroup_oom_group(oc->memcg)) { > > > > we have is_memcg_oom() helper which is esier to read and understand than > > the explicit oc->memcg check > > It's defined in oom_kill.c and not exported, so I'm not sure. putting it to oom.h shouldn't be a big deal. > > > + oc->chosen_memcg = oc->memcg; > > > + css_get(&oc->chosen_memcg->css); > > > + return; > > > + } > > > + > > > + /* > > > * The oom_score is calculated for leaf memory cgroups (including > > > * the root memcg). > > > + * Non-leaf oom_group cgroups accumulating score of descendant > > > + * leaf memory cgroups. > > > */ > > > rcu_read_lock(); > > > for_each_mem_cgroup_tree(iter, root) { > > > long score; > > > > > > + /* > > > + * We don't consider non-leaf non-oom_group memory cgroups > > > + * as OOM victims. > > > + */ > > > + if (memcg_has_children(iter) && !mem_cgroup_oom_group(iter)) > > > + continue; > > > + > > > + /* > > > + * If group is not set or we've ran out of the group's sub-tree, > > > + * we should set group and reset group_score. > > > + */ > > > + if (!group || group == root_mem_cgroup || > > > + !mem_cgroup_is_descendant(iter, group)) { > > > + group = iter; > > > + group_score = 0; > > > + } > > > + > > > > hmm, I thought you would go with a recursive oom_evaluate_memcg > > implementation that would result in a more readable code IMHO. It is > > true that we would traverse oom_group more times. But I do not expect > > we would have very deep memcg hierarchies in the majority of workloads > > and even if we did then this is a cold path which should focus on > > readability more than a performance. Also implementing > > mem_cgroup_iter_skip_subtree shouldn't be all that hard if this ever > > turns out a real problem. > > I've tried to go this way, but I didn't like the result. These both > loops will share a lot of code (e.g. breaking on finding a previous victim, > skipping non-leaf non-oom-group memcgs, etc), so the result is more messy. > And actually it's strange to start a new loop to iterate exactly over > the same sub-tree, which you want to skip in the first loop. As I've said, I will not insist. It just makes more sense to me to do the hierarchical behavior in a single place rather than open code it in the main loop. > > Anyway this is nothing really fundamental so I will leave the decision > > on you. > > > > > +static bool oom_kill_memcg_victim(struct oom_control *oc) > > > +{ > > > if (oc->chosen_memcg == NULL || oc->chosen_memcg == INFLIGHT_VICTIM) > > > return oc->chosen_memcg; > > > > > > - /* Kill a task in the chosen memcg with the biggest memory footprint */ > > > - oc->chosen_points = 0; > > > - oc->chosen_task = NULL; > > > - mem_cgroup_scan_tasks(oc->chosen_memcg, oom_evaluate_task, oc); > > > - > > > - if (oc->chosen_task == NULL || oc->chosen_task == INFLIGHT_VICTIM) > > > - goto out; > > > - > > > - __oom_kill_process(oc->chosen_task); > > > + /* > > > + * If memory.oom_group is set, kill all tasks belonging to the sub-tree > > > + * of the chosen memory cgroup, otherwise kill the task with the biggest > > > + * memory footprint. > > > + */ > > > + if (mem_cgroup_oom_group(oc->chosen_memcg)) { > > > + mem_cgroup_scan_tasks(oc->chosen_memcg, oom_kill_memcg_member, > > > + NULL); > > > + /* We have one or more terminating processes at this point. */ > > > + oc->chosen_task = INFLIGHT_VICTIM; > > > > it took me a while to realize we need this because of return > > !!oc->chosen_task in out_of_memory. Subtle... Also a reason to hate > > oc->chosen_* thingy. As I've said in other reply, don't worry about this > > I will probably turn my hate into a patch ;) > > > > > + } else { > > > + oc->chosen_points = 0; > > > + oc->chosen_task = NULL; > > > + mem_cgroup_scan_tasks(oc->chosen_memcg, oom_evaluate_task, oc); > > > + > > > + if (oc->chosen_task == NULL || > > > + oc->chosen_task == INFLIGHT_VICTIM) > > > + goto out; > > > > How can this happen? There shouldn't be any INFLIGHT_VICTIM in our memcg > > because we have checked for that already. I can see how we do not find > > any task because those can terminate by the time we get here but no new > > oom victim should appear we are under the oom_lock. > > You're probably right, but I would prefer to have this check in place, > rather then get a panic on attempt to kill an INFLIGHT_VICTIM task one day. This would be a bug which you just paper over. -- 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>