Hey Shakeel, Sorry about the delay. On Tue, Jun 15, 2021 at 02:52:37PM -0700, Shakeel Butt wrote: > On Tue, Jun 15, 2021 at 12:29 PM Johannes Weiner <hannes@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > The way the global vmstat implementation manages error is doing both: > > ratelimiting and timelimiting. It uses percpu batching to limit the > > error when it gets busy, and periodic flushing to limit the length of > > time consumers of those stats could be stuck trying to reach a state > > that the batching would otherwise prevent from being reflected. > > > > Maybe we can use a combination of ratelimiting and timelimiting too? > > > > We shouldn't flush on every fault, but what about a percpu ratelimit > > that would at least bound the error to NR_CPU instead of nr_cgroups? > > > > Couple questions here: > > First, to convert the error bound to NR_CPU from nr_cgroups, I think > we have to move from (delta > threshold) comparison to > (num_update_events > threshold). Previously an increment event > followed by decrement would keep the delta to 0 (or same) but after > this change num_update_events would be 2. Is that ok? Yeah, I think that's fine. Or at least I can't think of a real-world application that would inc and dec the same counter over and over and so would do much better with delta spilling over event ratelimiting. And the ratelimiting should already ensure by itself that the cost is at least acceptable when continuously updating and reading counters. > Second, do we want to synchronously flush the stats when we cross the > threshold on update or asynchronously by queuing the flush with zero > delay? I think flushing by worker is better because we can see updates from all sorts of contexts with all sorts of locks held. That could make for some difficult dependencies and latency sources when serializing those on cgroup_rstat_lock.