On Mon 06-05-19 19:16:22, Sultan Alsawaf wrote: > This is a complete low memory killer solution for Android that is small > and simple. Processes are killed according to the priorities that > Android gives them, so that the least important processes are always > killed first. Processes are killed until memory deficits are satisfied, > as observed from kswapd struggling to free up pages. Simple LMK stops > killing processes when kswapd finally goes back to sleep. > > The only tunables are the desired amount of memory to be freed per > reclaim event and desired frequency of reclaim events. Simple LMK tries > to free at least the desired amount of memory per reclaim and waits > until all of its victims' memory is freed before proceeding to kill more > processes. Why do we need something like that in the kernel? I really do not like an idea of having two OOM killer implementations in the kernel. As already pointed out newer kernels can do PSI and older kernels can live with an out of tree code to achieve what they need. I do not see why we really need this code in the upstream kernel. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs