The kernel currently doesn't provide any method to show the overall system's peak memory usage recorded. Instead, only each slice's peak memory usage recorded except for cgroup root is shown through each memory.peak. Each slice might consume their peak memory at different time. This is stored at memory.peak in each own slice. The sum of every memory.peak doesn't mean the total system's peak memory usage recorded. The sum at certain point without having a peak memory usage in their slice can have the largest value. time | slice1 | slice2 | sum ======================================= t1 | 50 | 200 | 250 --------------------------------------- t2 | 150 | 150 | 300 --------------------------------------- t3 | 180 | 20 | 200 --------------------------------------- t4 | 80 | 20 | 100 memory.peak value of slice1 is 180 and memory.peak value of slice2 is 200. Only these information are provided through memory.peak value from each slice without providing the overall system's peak memory usage. The total sum of these two value is 380, but this doesn't represent the real peak memory usage of the overall system. The peak value what we want to get is shown in t2 as 300, which doesn't have any biggest number even in one slice. Therefore the proper way to show the system's overall peak memory usage recorded needs to be provided. Hence, expose memory.peak in the cgrop root in order to allow this. Co-developed-by: Christopher Wong <christopher.wong@xxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Christopher Wong <christopher.wong@xxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Matthew Chae <matthew.chae@xxxxxxxx> --- mm/memcontrol.c | 1 - 1 file changed, 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/mm/memcontrol.c b/mm/memcontrol.c index 73afff8062f9..974fc044a7e7 100644 --- a/mm/memcontrol.c +++ b/mm/memcontrol.c @@ -6646,7 +6646,6 @@ static struct cftype memory_files[] = { }, { .name = "peak", - .flags = CFTYPE_NOT_ON_ROOT, .read_u64 = memory_peak_read, }, { -- 2.20.1