On Thu, Oct 17, 2019 at 7:26 AM Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 10/16/19 8:45 PM, Shakeel Butt wrote: > > On Wed, Oct 16, 2019 at 3:49 PM Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> This set implements a solution to these problems. At the end of the > >> reclaim process in shrink_page_list() just before the last page > >> refcount is dropped, the page is migrated to persistent memory instead > >> of being dropped. > ..> The memory cgroup part of the story is missing here. Since PMEM is > > treated as slow DRAM, shouldn't its usage be accounted to the > > corresponding memcg's memory/memsw counters and the migration should > > not happen for memcg limit reclaim? Otherwise some jobs can hog the > > whole PMEM. > > My expectation (and I haven't confirmed this) is that the any memory use > is accounted to the owning cgroup, whether it is DRAM or PMEM. memcg > limit reclaim and global reclaim both end up doing migrations and > neither should have a net effect on the counters. > Hmm I didn't see the memcg charge migration in the code on demotion. So, in the code [patch 3] the counters are being decremented as DRAM is freed but not incremented for PMEM. > There is certainly a problem here because DRAM is a more valuable > resource vs. PMEM, and memcg accounts for them as if they were equally > valuable. I really want to see memcg account for this cost discrepancy > at some point, but I'm not quite sure what form it would take. Any > feedback from you heavy memcg users out there would be much appreciated. > There are two apparent use-cases i.e. explicit (apps moving their pages to PMEM to reduce cost) and implicit (admin moves cold pages to PMEM transparently to the apps) for the PMEM. In the implicit case, I see both DRAM and PMEM as same resource from the perspective of memcg limits i.e. same memcg counter, something like cgroup v1's memsw). For the explicit case, maybe separate counters make sense like cgroup v2's memory and swap. > > Also what happens when PMEM is full? Can the memory migrated to PMEM > > be reclaimed (or discarded)? > > Yep. The "migration path" can be as long as you want, but once the data > hits a "terminal node" it will stop getting migrated and normal discard > at the end of reclaim happens. I might have missed it but I didn't see the migrated pages inserted back to LRUs. If they are not in LRU, the reclaimer will never see them.