On Fri, Feb 10, 2023 at 5:46 PM Sudarshan Rajagopalan <quic_sudaraja@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On 2/10/2023 5:09 PM, Suren Baghdasaryan wrote: > > On Fri, Feb 10, 2023 at 4:45 PM Sudarshan Rajagopalan > > <quic_sudaraja@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> On 2/10/2023 3:03 PM, Suren Baghdasaryan wrote: > >>> On Fri, Feb 10, 2023 at 2:31 PM Sudarshan Rajagopalan > >>> <quic_sudaraja@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> The PSI mechanism is useful tool to monitor pressure stall > >>>> information in the system. Currently, the minimum window size > >>>> is set to 500ms. May we know what is the rationale for this? > >>> The limit was set to avoid regressions in performance and power > >>> consumption if the window is set too small and the system ends up > >>> polling too frequently. That said, the limit was chosen based on > >>> results of specific experiments which might not represent all > >> Rightly as you said, the effect on power and performance depends on type > >> of the system - embedded systems, or Android mobile, or commercial VMs > >> or servers. With higher PSI sampling, it may not be much of power impact > >> to embedded systems with low-tier chipsets or performance impact to > >> powerful servers. > >> > >>> usecases. If you want to change this limit, you would need to describe > >>> why the new limit is inherently better than the current one (why not > >>> higher, why not lower). > >> This is in regards to the userspace daemon [1] that we are working on, > >> that dynamically resizes the VM memory based on PSI memory pressure > >> events. With current min window size of 500ms, the PSI monitor sampling > >> period would be 50ms. So to detect increase in memory demand in system > >> and plug-in memory into VM when pressure goes up, the minimum time the > >> process needs to stall for is 50ms before a event can be generated and > >> sent out to userspace and the daemon can do actions. > >> > >> This again I'm talking w.r.t. lightweight embedded systems, where even > >> background kswapd/kcompd (which I'm calling it as natural memory > >> pressure) in the system would be less than 5-10ms stall. So any stall > >> more than 5-10ms would "hint" us that a memory consuming usecase has > >> ranB and memory may need to be plugged in. > >> > >> So in these cases, having as low as 5ms psimon sampling time would give > >> us faster reaction time and daemon can be responsive more quickly. In > >> general, this will reduce the malloc latencies significantly. > >> > >> Pasting here the same excerpt I mentioned in [1]. > > My question is: why do you think 5ms is the optimal limit here? I want > > to avoid a race to the bottom where next time someone can argue that > > they would like to detect a stall within a lower period than 5ms. > > Technically the limit can be as small as one wants but at some point I > > think we should consider the possibility of this being used for a DoS > > attack. > > Well the optimal limit should be something which is least destructive? I > do understand about possibility of DoS attacks, but wouldn't that still > be possible with 500ms window today? Which will atleast be 1/10th less > severe compared to 50ms window. The way I see it is - min pressure > sampling should be such that even the least pressure stall which we > think is significant should be captured (this could be 5ms or 50ms at > present) while balancing the power and performance impact across all > usecases. > > At present, Android's LMKD sets 1000ms as window for which it considers > 100ms sampling to be significant. And here, with psi_daemon usecase we > are saying 5ms sampling would be significant. So there's no actual > optimal limit, but we must limit as much possible without effecting > power or performance as a whole. Also, this is just the "minimum > allowable" window, and system admins can configure it as per the system > type/requirement. Ok, let me ask you another way which might be more productive. What caused you to choose 5ms as the time you care to react to a stall buildup? > > Also, about possible DoS attacks - file permissions for > /proc/pressure/... can be set such that not any random user can register > to psi events right? True. We have a CAP_SYS_RESOURCE check for the writers of these files. > > > > >> " > >> > >> 4. Detecting increase in memory demand b when a certain usecase starts > >> in VM that does memory allocations, it will stall causing PSI mechanism > >> to generate a memory pressure event to userspace. To simply put, when > >> pressure increases certain set threshold, it can make educated guess > >> that a memory requiring usecase has ran and VM system needs memory to be > >> added. > >> > >> " > >> > >> [1] > >> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-kernel/1bf30145-22a5-cc46-e583-25053460b105@xxxxxxxxxx/T/#m95ccf038c568271e759a277a08b8e44e51e8f90b > >> > >>> Thanks, > >>> Suren. > >>> > >>>> For lightweight systems such as Linux Embedded Systems, PSI > >>>> can be used to monitor and track memory pressure building up > >>>> in the system and respond quickly to such memory demands. > >>>> Example, the Linux Embedded Systems could be a secondary VM > >>>> system which requests for memory from Primary host. With 500ms > >>>> window size, the sampling period is 50ms (one-tenth of windwo > >>>> size). So the minimum amount of time the process needs to stall, > >>>> so that a PSI event can be generated and actions can be done > >>>> is 50ms. This reaction time can be much reduced by reducing the > >>>> sampling time (by reducing window size), so that responses to > >>>> such memory pressures in system can be serviced much quicker. > >>>> > >>>> Please let us know your thoughts on reducing window size to 50ms. > >>>> > >>>> Sudarshan Rajagopalan (1): > >>>> psi: reduce min window size to 50ms > >>>> > >>>> kernel/sched/psi.c | 2 +- > >>>> 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) > >>>> > >>>> -- > >>>> 2.7.4 > >>>>