Re: [RFC 0/2] opportunistic memory reclaim of a killed process

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On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 6:51 AM Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Wed 10-04-19 18:43:51, Suren Baghdasaryan wrote:
> [...]
> > Proposed solution uses existing oom-reaper thread to increase memory
> > reclaim rate of a killed process and to make this rate more deterministic.
> > By no means the proposed solution is considered the best and was chosen
> > because it was simple to implement and allowed for test data collection.
> > The downside of this solution is that it requires additional “expedite”
> > hint for something which has to be fast in all cases. Would be great to
> > find a way that does not require additional hints.
>
> I have to say I do not like this much. It is abusing an implementation
> detail of the OOM implementation and makes it an official API. Also
> there are some non trivial assumptions to be fullfilled to use the
> current oom_reaper. First of all all the process groups that share the
> address space have to be killed. How do you want to guarantee/implement
> that with a simply kill to a thread/process group?

Will task_will_free_mem() not bail out in such cases because of
process_shares_mm() returning true? AFAIU, Suren's patch calls that.
Also, if I understand correctly, this patch is opportunistic and knows
what it may not be possible to reap in advance this way in all cases.
        /*
         * Make sure that all tasks which share the mm with the given tasks
         * are dying as well to make sure that a) nobody pins its mm and
         * b) the task is also reapable by the oom reaper.
         */
        rcu_read_lock();
        for_each_process(p) {
                if (!process_shares_mm(p, mm))

> > Other possible approaches include:
> > - Implementing a dedicated syscall to perform opportunistic reclaim in the
> > context of the process waiting for the victim’s death. A natural boost
> > bonus occurs if the waiting process has high or RT priority and is not
> > limited by cpuset cgroup in its CPU choices.
> > - Implement a mechanism that would perform opportunistic reclaim if it’s
> > possible unconditionally (similar to checks in task_will_free_mem()).
> > - Implement opportunistic reclaim that uses shrinker interface, PSI or
> > other memory pressure indications as a hint to engage.
>
> I would question whether we really need this at all? Relying on the exit
> speed sounds like a fundamental design problem of anything that relies
> on it. Sure task exit might be slow, but async mm tear down is just a
> mere optimization this is not guaranteed to really help in speading
> things up. OOM killer uses it as a guarantee for a forward progress in a
> finite time rather than as soon as possible.

Per the data collected by Suren, it does speed things up. It would be
nice if we can reuse this mechanism, or come up with a similar
mechanism.

thanks,

 - Joel





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