kernfs nodes are quite small kernel objects, however there are few scenarios where it consumes significant piece of all allocated memory: 1) creating a new netdevice allocates ~50Kb of memory, where ~10Kb was allocated for 80+ kernfs nodes. 2) cgroupv2 mkdir allocates ~60Kb of memory, ~10Kb of them are kernfs structures. 3) Shakeel Butt reports that Google has workloads which create 100s of subcontainers and they have observed high system overhead without memcg accounting of kernfs. Usually new kernfs node creates few other objects: Allocs Alloc Allocation number size -------------------------------------------- 1 + 128 (__kernfs_new_node+0x4d) kernfs node 1 + 88 (__kernfs_iattrs+0x57) kernfs iattrs 1 + 96 (simple_xattr_alloc+0x28) simple_xattr, can grow over 4Kb 1 32 (simple_xattr_set+0x59) 1 8 (__kernfs_new_node+0x30) '+' -- to be accounted This patch enables accounting for kernfs_iattrs_cache slab cache Signed-off-by: Vasily Averin <vvs@xxxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Roman Gushchin <roman.gushchin@xxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Michal Koutný <mkoutny@xxxxxxxx> Acked-by: Shakeel Butt <shakeelb@xxxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Muchun Song <songmuchun@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- fs/kernfs/mount.c | 3 ++- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/fs/kernfs/mount.c b/fs/kernfs/mount.c index 3ac4191b1c40..40e896c7c86b 100644 --- a/fs/kernfs/mount.c +++ b/fs/kernfs/mount.c @@ -397,5 +397,6 @@ void __init kernfs_init(void) /* Creates slab cache for kernfs inode attributes */ kernfs_iattrs_cache = kmem_cache_create("kernfs_iattrs_cache", sizeof(struct kernfs_iattrs), - 0, SLAB_PANIC, NULL); + 0, SLAB_PANIC | SLAB_ACCOUNT, + NULL); } -- 2.36.1