On 4/21/21 4:29 PM, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Wed 21-04-21 06:57:43, Shakeel Butt wrote: >> On Wed, Apr 21, 2021 at 12:16 AM Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >> [...] >>>> To decide when to kill, the oom-killer has to read a lot of metrics. >>>> It has to open a lot of files to read them and there will definitely >>>> be new allocations involved in those operations. For example reading >>>> memory.stat does a page size allocation. Similarly, to perform action >>>> the oom-killer may have to read cgroup.procs file which again has >>>> allocation inside it. >>> True but many of those can be avoided by opening the file early. At >>> least seq_file based ones will not allocate later if the output size >>> doesn't increase. Which should be the case for many. I think it is a >>> general improvement to push those who allocate during read to an open >>> time allocation. >>> >> I agree that this would be a general improvement but it is not always >> possible (see below). > It would be still great to invest into those improvements. And I would > be really grateful to learn about bottlenecks from the existing kernel > interfaces you have found on the way. > >>>> Regarding sophisticated oom policy, I can give one example of our >>>> cluster level policy. For robustness, many user facing jobs run a lot >>>> of instances in a cluster to handle failures. Such jobs are tolerant >>>> to some amount of failures but they still have requirements to not let >>>> the number of running instances below some threshold. Normally killing >>>> such jobs is fine but we do want to make sure that we do not violate >>>> their cluster level agreement. So, the userspace oom-killer may >>>> dynamically need to confirm if such a job can be killed. >>> What kind of data do you need to examine to make those decisions? >>> >> Most of the time the cluster level scheduler pushes the information to >> the node controller which transfers that information to the >> oom-killer. However based on the freshness of the information the >> oom-killer might request to pull the latest information (IPC and RPC). > I cannot imagine any OOM handler to be reliable if it has to depend on > other userspace component with a lower resource priority. OOM handlers > are fundamentally complex components which has to reduce their > dependencies to the bare minimum. I think we very much need a OOM killer that can help out, but it is essential that it also play with android rules. This is RFC patch that interact with OOM >From 09f3a2e401d4ed77e95b7cea7edb7c5c3e6a0c62 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Peter Enderborg <peter.enderborg@xxxxxxxx> Date: Thu, 22 Apr 2021 14:15:46 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] mm/oom: Android oomhelper This is proff of concept of a pre-oom-killer that kill task strictly on oom-score-adj order if the score is positive. It act as lifeline when userspace does not have optimal performance. --- drivers/staging/Makefile | 1 + drivers/staging/oomhelper/Makefile | 2 + drivers/staging/oomhelper/oomhelper.c | 65 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++ mm/oom_kill.c | 4 +- 4 files changed, 70 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) create mode 100644 drivers/staging/oomhelper/Makefile create mode 100644 drivers/staging/oomhelper/oomhelper.c diff --git a/drivers/staging/Makefile b/drivers/staging/Makefile index 2245059e69c7..4a5449b42568 100644 --- a/drivers/staging/Makefile +++ b/drivers/staging/Makefile @@ -47,3 +47,4 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_QLGE) += qlge/ obj-$(CONFIG_WIMAX) += wimax/ obj-$(CONFIG_WFX) += wfx/ obj-y += hikey9xx/ +obj-y += oomhelper/ diff --git a/drivers/staging/oomhelper/Makefile b/drivers/staging/oomhelper/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..ee9b361957f8 --- /dev/null +++ b/drivers/staging/oomhelper/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 +obj-y += oomhelper.o diff --git a/drivers/staging/oomhelper/oomhelper.c b/drivers/staging/oomhelper/oomhelper.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..5a3fe0270cb8 --- /dev/null +++ b/drivers/staging/oomhelper/oomhelper.c @@ -0,0 +1,65 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 +/* prof of concept of android aware oom killer */ +/* Author: peter.enderborg@xxxxxxxx */ + +#include <linux/kernel.h> +#include <linux/mm.h> +#include <linux/slab.h> +#include <linux/oom.h> +void wake_oom_reaper(struct task_struct *tsk); /* need to public ... */ +void __oom_kill_process(struct task_struct *victim, const char *message); + +static int oomhelper_oom_notify(struct notifier_block *self, + unsigned long notused, void *param) +{ + struct task_struct *tsk; + struct task_struct *selected = NULL; + int highest = 0; + + pr_info("invited"); + rcu_read_lock(); + for_each_process(tsk) { + struct task_struct *candidate; + if (tsk->flags & PF_KTHREAD) + continue; + + /* Ignore task if coredump in progress */ + if (tsk->mm && tsk->mm->core_state) + continue; + candidate = find_lock_task_mm(tsk); + if (!candidate) + continue; + + if (highest < candidate->signal->oom_score_adj) { + /* for test dont kill level 0 */ + highest = candidate->signal->oom_score_adj; + selected = candidate; + pr_info("new selected %d %d", selected->pid, + selected->signal->oom_score_adj); + } + task_unlock(candidate); + } + if (selected) { + get_task_struct(selected); + } + rcu_read_unlock(); + if (selected) { + pr_info("oomhelper killing: %d", selected->pid); + __oom_kill_process(selected, "oomhelper"); + } + + return NOTIFY_OK; +} + +static struct notifier_block oomhelper_oom_nb = { + .notifier_call = oomhelper_oom_notify +}; + +int __init oomhelper_register_oom_notifier(void) +{ + register_oom_notifier(&oomhelper_oom_nb); + pr_info("oomhelper installed"); + return 0; +} + +subsys_initcall(oomhelper_register_oom_notifier); diff --git a/mm/oom_kill.c b/mm/oom_kill.c index fa1cf18bac97..a5f7299af9a3 100644 --- a/mm/oom_kill.c +++ b/mm/oom_kill.c @@ -658,7 +658,7 @@ static int oom_reaper(void *unused) return 0; } -static void wake_oom_reaper(struct task_struct *tsk) +void wake_oom_reaper(struct task_struct *tsk) { /* mm is already queued? */ if (test_and_set_bit(MMF_OOM_REAP_QUEUED, &tsk->signal->oom_mm->flags)) @@ -856,7 +856,7 @@ static bool task_will_free_mem(struct task_struct *task) return ret; } -static void __oom_kill_process(struct task_struct *victim, const char *message) +void __oom_kill_process(struct task_struct *victim, const char *message) { struct task_struct *p; struct mm_struct *mm; -- 2.17.1 Is that something that might be accepted? It uses the notifications and that is no problem a guess. But it also calls some oom-kill functions that is not exported. > >> [...] >>>> I was thinking of simply prctl(SET_MEMPOOL, bytes) to assign mempool >>>> to a thread (not shared between threads) and prctl(RESET_MEMPOOL) to >>>> free the mempool. >>> I am not a great fan of prctl. It has become a dumping ground for all >>> mix of unrelated functionality. But let's say this is a minor detail at >>> this stage. >> I agree this does not have to be prctl(). >> >>> So you are proposing to have a per mm mem pool that would be >> I was thinking of per-task_struct instead of per-mm_struct just for simplicity. >> >>> used as a fallback for an allocation which cannot make a forward >>> progress, right? >> Correct >> >>> Would that pool be preallocated and sitting idle? >> Correct >> >>> What kind of allocations would be allowed to use the pool? >> I was thinking of any type of allocation from the oom-killer (or >> specific threads). Please note that the mempool is the backup and only >> used in the slowpath. >> >>> What if the pool is depleted? >> This would mean that either the estimate of mempool size is bad or >> oom-killer is buggy and leaking memory. >> >> I am open to any design directions for mempool or some other way where >> we can provide a notion of memory guarantee to oom-killer. > OK, thanks for clarification. There will certainly be hard problems to > sort out[1] but the overall idea makes sense to me and it sounds like a > much better approach than a OOM specific solution. > > > [1] - how the pool is going to be replenished without hitting all > potential reclaim problems (thus dependencies on other all tasks > directly/indirectly) yet to not rely on any background workers to do > that on the task behalf without a proper accounting etc...