On Thu 10-12-20 06:21:57, Johannes Weiner wrote: > On Wed, Dec 09, 2020 at 10:18:22AM +0100, Vlastimil Babka wrote: > > On 12/9/20 2:24 AM, Yu Zhao wrote: > > > We are capable of SetPageWorkingset based on refault distances after > > > commit aae466b0052e ("mm/swap: implement workingset detection for anonymous LRU") > > > This is done by workingset_refault(), which is right above the > > > unconditional SetPageWorkingset deleted by this patch. > > > > > > The unconditional SetPageWorkingset miscategorizes pages that are > > > read ahead or never belonged to the working set (e.g., tmpfs pages > > > accessed by fd). When those pages are swapped in (after they were > > > swapped out) for the first time, they skew PSI (when using > > > async swap). When this happens again, depending on their refault > > > distances, they might skew workingset_restore_anon counter in > > > addition to PSI because their shadows say they were part of the > > > working set. > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Yu Zhao <yuzhao@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > Acked-by: Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@xxxxxxx> > > > > Makes sense, especially now that we have anonymous LRU support. The flag setting > > in this context seems to go back all the way to 1899ad18c607 ("mm: workingset: > > tell cache transitions from workingset thrashing") where I'm not sure why it was > > even used on the anonymous page, when workingset was only implemented for the > > page cache. Maybe Johannes remembers? > > I just double checked that commit and the changelog is indeed > incomplete and doesn't mention the swap aspect. :( > > That patch was part of the psi series. It was meant to mark incoming > pages under IO with SetPageWorkingset when waiting for them > constituted a memory stall. > > On the page cache side, because we HAVE workingset detection, this was > specific to recently evicted pages that had been active in their > previous life. On the anon side, the aging algorithm had no > distinction between workingset and sporadically used pages. Given the > choice between a) no swapin stalls are pressure and b) all swapin > stalls are pressure, I went with the latter in order to detect swap > storms. The false positive case - high rate of swapin without severe > memory pressure - was relatively unlikely, because we tried to avoid > swapping until everything was completely on fire in the first place. > > With the lru balancing rework, more prevalent use of proactive reclaim > etc. the distinction between hot and cold swapins became more > important. Thankfully, Joonsoo's patches made that possible. This is a useful information, thanks! Yu Zhao can you make it into the changelog so that we have it for a future reference please? Feel free to add Acked-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxx> -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs