Re: [PATCH v3 00/14] KVM: s390: pv: implement lazy destroy

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On 06.08.21 15:44, Claudio Imbrenda wrote:
On Fri, 6 Aug 2021 13:30:21 +0200
David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

[...]

When the system runs out of memory, if a guest has terminated and
its memory is being cleaned asynchronously, the OOM killer will
wait a little and then see if memory has been freed. This has the
practical effect of slowing down memory allocations when the
system is out of memory to give the cleanup thread time to
cleanup and free memory, and avoid an actual OOM situation.

... and this sound like the kind of arch MM hacks that will bite us
in the long run. Of course, I might be wrong, but already doing
excessive GFP_ATOMIC allocations or messing with the OOM killer
that

they are GFP_ATOMIC but they should not put too much weight on the
memory and can also fail without consequences, I used:

GFP_ATOMIC | __GFP_NOMEMALLOC | __GFP_NOWARN

also notice that after every page allocation a page gets freed, so
this is only temporary.

Correct me if I'm wrong: you're allocating unmovable pages for
tracking (e.g., ZONE_DMA, ZONE_NORMAL) from atomic reserves and will
free a movable process page, correct? Or which page will you be
freeing?

we are transforming ALL moveable pages belonging to userspace into
unmoveable pages. every ~500 pages one page gets actually
allocated (unmoveable), and another (moveable) one gets freed.


I would not call it "messing with the OOM killer", I'm using the
same interface used by virtio-baloon

Right, and for virtio-balloon it's actually a workaround to restore
the original behavior of a rarely used feature: deflate-on-oom.
Commit da10329cb057 ("virtio-balloon: switch back to OOM handler for
VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_DEFLATE_ON_OOM") tried to document why we switched
back from a shrinker to VIRTIO_BALLOON_F_DEFLATE_ON_OOM:

"The name "deflate on OOM" makes it pretty clear when deflation should
   happen - after other approaches to reclaim memory failed, not while
   reclaiming. This allows to minimize the footprint of a guest -
memory will only be taken out of the balloon when really needed."

Note some subtle differences:

a) IIRC, before running into the OOM killer, will try reclaiming
     anything  else. This is what we want for deflate-on-oom, it might
not be what you want for your feature (e.g., flushing other
processes/VMs to disk/swap instead of waiting for a single process to
stop).

we are already reclaiming the memory of the dead secure guest.

b) Migration of movable balloon inflated pages continues working
because we are dealing with non-lru page migration.

Will page reclaim, page migration, compaction, ... of these movable
LRU pages still continue working while they are sitting around
waiting to be cleaned up? I can see that we're grabbing an extra
reference when we put them onto the list, that might be a problem:
for example, we can most certainly not swap out these pages or write
them back to disk on memory pressure.

this is true. on the other hand, swapping a moveable page would be even
slower, because those pages would need to be exported and not destroyed.

way for a pure (shutdown) optimization is an alarm signal. Of
course, I might be wrong.

You should at least CC linux-mm. I'll do that right now and also CC
Michal. He might have time to have a quick glimpse at patch #11 and
#13.

https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20210804154046.88552-12-imbrenda@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20210804154046.88552-14-imbrenda@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

IMHO, we should proceed with patch 1-10, as they solve a really
important problem ("slow reboots") in a nice way, whereby patch 11
handles a case that can be worked around comparatively easily by
management tools -- my 2 cents.

how would management tools work around the issue that a shutdown can
take very long?

The traditional approach is to wait starting a new VM on another
hypervisor instead until memory has been freed up, or start it on
another hypervisor. That raises the question about the target use
case.

What I don't get is that we have to pay the price for freeing up that
memory. Why isn't it sufficient to keep the process running and let
ordinary MM do it's thing?

what price?

you mean let mm do the slowest possible thing when tearing down a dead
guest?

without this, the dying guest would still take up all the memory. and
swapping it would not be any faster (it would be slower, in fact). the
system would OOM anyway.

Maybe you should clearly spell out what the target use case for the
fast shutdown (fast quitting of the process?) is?. I assume it is,
starting a new VM / process / whatsoever on the same host
immediately, and then

a) Eventually slowing down other processes due heavy reclaim.

for each dying guest, only one CPU is used by the reclaim; depending on
the total load of the system, this might not even be noticeable

b) Slowing down the new process because you have to pay the price of
cleaning up memory.

do you prefer to OOM because the dying guest will need ages to clean up
its memory?

I think I am missing why we need the lazy destroy at all when killing
a process. Couldn't you instead teach the OOM killer "hey, we're
currently quitting a heavy process that is just *very* slow to free
up memory, please wait for that before starting shooting around" ?

isn't this ^ exactly what the OOM notifier does?


another note here:

when the process quits, the mm starts the tear down. at this point, the
mm has no idea that this is a dying KVM guest, so the best it can do is
exporting (which is significantly slower than destroy page)

kvm comes into play long after the mm is gone, and at this point it
can't do anything anymore. the memory is already gone (very slowly).

if I kill -9 qemu (or if qemu segfaults), KVM will never notice until
the mm is gone.


Summarizing what we discussed offline:

1. We should optimize for proper shutdowns first, this is the most important use case. We should look into letting QEMU tear down the KVM secure context such that we can just let MM teardown do its thing -> destroy instead of export secure pages. If no kernel changes are required to get that implemented, even better.

2. If we want to optimize "there is a big process dying horribly slow, please OOM killer please wait a bit instead of starting killing other processes", we might want to do that in a more generic way (if not already in place, no expert).

3. If we really want to go down the path of optimizing "kill -9" and friends to e.g., take 40min instead of 20min on a huge VM (who cares? especially, the OOM handler will struggle already if memory is getting freed that slowly, no matter if 40 or 20 minutes), we should look into being able to release the relevant KVM secure context before tearing down MM. We should avoid any arch specific hacks.

--
Thanks,

David / dhildenb






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