On Mon, Oct 07, 2019 at 04:30:30PM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Mon 07-10-19 16:19:59, Vlastimil Babka wrote: > > On 10/2/19 10:43 AM, Michal Hocko wrote: > > > On Wed 02-10-19 06:16:43, Yang Shi wrote: > > >> The commit 87eaceb3faa59b9b4d940ec9554ce251325d83fe ("mm: thp: make > > >> deferred split shrinker memcg aware") makes deferred split queue per > > >> memcg to resolve memcg pre-mature OOM problem. But, all nodes end up > > >> sharing the same queue instead of one queue per-node before the commit. > > >> It is not a big deal for memcg limit reclaim, but it may cause global > > >> kswapd shrink THPs from a different node. > > >> > > >> And, 0-day testing reported -19.6% regression of stress-ng's madvise > > >> test [1]. I didn't see that much regression on my test box (24 threads, > > >> 48GB memory, 2 nodes), with the same test (stress-ng --timeout 1 > > >> --metrics-brief --sequential 72 --class vm --exclude spawn,exec), I saw > > >> average -3% (run the same test 10 times then calculate the average since > > >> the test itself may have most 15% variation according to my test) > > >> regression sometimes (not every time, sometimes I didn't see regression > > >> at all). > > >> > > >> This might be caused by deferred split queue lock contention. With some > > >> configuration (i.e. just one root memcg) the lock contention my be worse > > >> than before (given 2 nodes, two locks are reduced to one lock). > > >> > > >> So, moving deferred split queue to memcg's nodeinfo to make it NUMA > > >> aware again. > > >> > > >> With this change stress-ng's madvise test shows average 4% improvement > > >> sometimes and I didn't see degradation anymore. > > > > > > My concern about this getting more and more complex > > > (http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20191002084014.GH15624@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) holds > > > here even more. Can we step back and reconsider the whole thing please? > > > > What about freeing immediately after split via workqueue and also have a > > synchronous version called before going oom? Maybe there would be also > > other things that would benefit from this scheme instead of traditional > > reclaim and shrinkers? > > That is exactly what we have discussed some time ago. Yes, I've posted the patch: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20190827125911.boya23eowxhqmopa@box But I still not sure that the approach is right. I expect it to trigger performance regressions. For system with pleanty of free memory, we will just pay split cost for nothing in many cases. -- Kirill A. Shutemov