Re: [RFC PATCH] cgroup: introduce dynamic protection for memcg

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On Thu 31-03-22 19:18:58, Zhaoyang Huang wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 31, 2022 at 5:01 PM Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > On Thu 31-03-22 16:00:56, zhaoyang.huang wrote:
> > > From: Zhaoyang Huang <zhaoyang.huang@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > >
> > > For some kind of memcg, the usage is varies greatly from scenarios. Such as
> > > multimedia app could have the usage range from 50MB to 500MB, which generated
> > > by loading an special algorithm into its virtual address space and make it hard
> > > to protect the expanded usage without userspace's interaction.
> >
> > Do I get it correctly that the concern you have is that you do not know
> > how much memory your workload will need because that depends on some
> > parameters?
> right. such as a camera APP will expand the usage from 50MB to 500MB
> because of launching a special function(face beauty etc need special
> algorithm)
> >
> > > Furthermore, fixed
> > > memory.low is a little bit against its role of soft protection as it will response
> > > any system's memory pressure in same way.
> >
> > Could you be more specific about this as well?
> As the camera case above, if we set memory.low as 200MB to keep the
> APP run smoothly, the system will experience high memory pressure when
> another high load APP launched simultaneously. I would like to have
> camera be reclaimed under this scenario.

OK, so you effectivelly want to keep the memory protection when there is
a "normal" memory pressure but want to relax the protection on other
high memory utilization situations?

How do you exactly tell a difference between a steady memory pressure
(say stream IO on the page cache) from "high load APP launched"? Should
you reduce the protection on the stram IO situation as well?

[...]
> > One very important thing that I am missing here is the overall objective of this
> > tuning. From the above it seems that you want to (ab)use memory->low to
> > protect some portion of the charged memory and that the protection
> > shrinks over time depending on the the global PSI metrict and time.
> > But why this is a good thing?
> 'Good' means it meets my original goal of keeping the usage during a
> period of time and responding to the system's memory pressure. For an
> android like system, memory is almost forever being in a tight status
> no matter how many RAM it has. What we need from memcg is more than
> control and grouping, we need it to be more responsive to the system's
> load and could  sacrifice its usage  under certain criteria.

Why existing tools/APIs are insufficient for that? You can watch for
both global and memcg memory pressure including PSI metrics and update
limits dynamically. Why is it necessary to put such a logic into the
kernel?

-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs




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