On Thu, May 23, 2019 at 11:49:41AM -0700, Shakeel Butt wrote: > On Thu, May 23, 2019 at 11:37 AM Matthew Wilcox <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Thu, May 23, 2019 at 01:43:49PM -0400, Johannes Weiner wrote: > > > I noticed that recent upstream kernels don't account the xarray nodes > > > of the page cache to the allocating cgroup, like we used to do for the > > > radix tree nodes. > > > > > > This results in broken isolation for cgrouped apps, allowing them to > > > escape their containment and harm other cgroups and the system with an > > > excessive build-up of nonresident information. > > > > > > It also breaks thrashing/refault detection because the page cache > > > lives in a different domain than the xarray nodes, and so the shadow > > > shrinker can reclaim nonresident information way too early when there > > > isn't much cache in the root cgroup. > > > > > > I'm not quite sure how to fix this, since the xarray code doesn't seem > > > to have per-tree gfp flags anymore like the radix tree did. We cannot > > > add SLAB_ACCOUNT to the radix_tree_node_cachep slab cache. And the > > > xarray api doesn't seem to really support gfp flags, either (xas_nomem > > > does, but the optimistic internal allocations have fixed gfp flags). > > > > Would it be a problem to always add __GFP_ACCOUNT to the fixed flags? > > I don't really understand cgroups. > > Does xarray cache allocated nodes, something like radix tree's: > > static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct radix_tree_preload, radix_tree_preloads) = { 0, }; > > For the cached one, no __GFP_ACCOUNT flag. No. That was the point of the XArray conversion; no cached nodes. > Also some users of xarray may not want __GFP_ACCOUNT. That's the > reason we had __GFP_ACCOUNT for page cache instead of hard coding it > in radix tree. This is what I don't understand -- why would someone not want __GFP_ACCOUNT? For a shared resource? But the page cache is a shared resource. So what is a good example of a time when an allocation should _not_ be accounted to the cgroup?