On Thu, 7 Mar 2019 08:56:32 -0800 Greg Thelen <gthelen@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Since commit a983b5ebee57 ("mm: memcontrol: fix excessive complexity in > memory.stat reporting") memcg dirty and writeback counters are managed > as: > 1) per-memcg per-cpu values in range of [-32..32] > 2) per-memcg atomic counter > When a per-cpu counter cannot fit in [-32..32] it's flushed to the > atomic. Stat readers only check the atomic. > Thus readers such as balance_dirty_pages() may see a nontrivial error > margin: 32 pages per cpu. > Assuming 100 cpus: > 4k x86 page_size: 13 MiB error per memcg > 64k ppc page_size: 200 MiB error per memcg > Considering that dirty+writeback are used together for some decisions > the errors double. > > This inaccuracy can lead to undeserved oom kills. One nasty case is > when all per-cpu counters hold positive values offsetting an atomic > negative value (i.e. per_cpu[*]=32, atomic=n_cpu*-32). > balance_dirty_pages() only consults the atomic and does not consider > throttling the next n_cpu*32 dirty pages. If the file_lru is in the > 13..200 MiB range then there's absolutely no dirty throttling, which > burdens vmscan with only dirty+writeback pages thus resorting to oom > kill. > > It could be argued that tiny containers are not supported, but it's more > subtle. It's the amount the space available for file lru that matters. > If a container has memory.max-200MiB of non reclaimable memory, then it > will also suffer such oom kills on a 100 cpu machine. > > ... > > Make balance_dirty_pages() and wb_over_bg_thresh() work harder to > collect exact per memcg counters when a memcg is close to the > throttling/writeback threshold. This avoids the aforementioned oom > kills. > > This does not affect the overhead of memory.stat, which still reads the > single atomic counter. > > Why not use percpu_counter? memcg already handles cpus going offline, > so no need for that overhead from percpu_counter. And the > percpu_counter spinlocks are more heavyweight than is required. > > It probably also makes sense to include exact dirty and writeback > counters in memcg oom reports. But that is saved for later. Nice changelog, thanks. > Signed-off-by: Greg Thelen <gthelen@xxxxxxxxxx> Did you consider cc:stable for this? We may as well - the stablebots backport everything which might look slightly like a fix anyway :( > --- a/include/linux/memcontrol.h > +++ b/include/linux/memcontrol.h > @@ -573,6 +573,22 @@ static inline unsigned long memcg_page_state(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, > return x; > } > > +/* idx can be of type enum memcg_stat_item or node_stat_item */ > +static inline unsigned long > +memcg_exact_page_state(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, int idx) > +{ > + long x = atomic_long_read(&memcg->stat[idx]); > +#ifdef CONFIG_SMP > + int cpu; > + > + for_each_online_cpu(cpu) > + x += per_cpu_ptr(memcg->stat_cpu, cpu)->count[idx]; > + if (x < 0) > + x = 0; > +#endif > + return x; > +} This looks awfully heavyweight for an inline function. Why not make it a regular function and avoid the bloat and i-cache consumption? Also, did you instead consider making this spill the percpu counters into memcg->stat[idx]? That might be more useful for potential future callers. It would become a little more expensive though.