On Thu, Sep 21, 2023 at 1:11 AM Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > A global counter for the magnitude of memcg stats update is maintained > on the memcg side to avoid invoking rstat flushes when the pending > updates are not significant. This avoids unnecessary flushes, which are > not very cheap even if there isn't a lot of stats to flush. It also > avoids unnecessary lock contention on the underlying global rstat lock. > > Make this threshold per-memcg. The scheme is followed where percpu (now > also per-memcg) counters are incremented in the update path, and only > propagated to per-memcg atomics when they exceed a certain threshold. > > This provides two benefits: > (a) On large machines with a lot of memcgs, the global threshold can be > reached relatively fast, so guarding the underlying lock becomes less > effective. Making the threshold per-memcg avoids this. > > (b) Having a global threshold makes it hard to do subtree flushes, as we > cannot reset the global counter except for a full flush. Per-memcg > counters removes this as a blocker from doing subtree flushes, which > helps avoid unnecessary work when the stats of a small subtree are > needed. > > Nothing is free, of course. This comes at a cost: > (a) A new per-cpu counter per memcg, consuming NR_CPUS * NR_MEMCGS * 4 > bytes. > > (b) More work on the update side, although in the common case it will > only be percpu counter updates. The amount of work scales with the > number of ancestors (i.e. tree depth). This is not a new concept, adding > a cgroup to the rstat tree involves a parent loop, so is charging. > Testing in a later patch shows this doesn't introduce significant > regressions. > > (c) The error margin in the stats for the system as a whole increases > from NR_CPUS * MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH to NR_CPUS * MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH * > NR_MEMCGS. This is probably fine because we have a similar per-memcg > error in charges coming from percpu stocks, and we have a periodic > flusher that makes sure we always flush all the stats every 2s anyway. > > This patch was tested to make sure no significant regressions are > introduced on the update path as follows. In a cgroup that is 4 levels > deep (/sys/fs/cgroup/a/b/c/d), the following benchmarks were ran: > > (a) neper [1] with 1000 flows and 100 threads (single machine). The > values in the table are the average of server and client throughputs in > mbps after 30 iterations, each running for 30s: > > tcp_rr tcp_stream > Base 9504218.56 357366.84 > Patched 9656205.68 356978.39 > Delta +1.6% -0.1% > Standard Deviation 0.95% 1.03% > > An increase in the performance of tcp_rr doesn't really make sense, but > it's probably in the noise. The same tests were ran with 1 flow and 1 > thread but the throughput was too noisy to make any conclusions (the > averages did not show regressions nonetheless). > > Looking at perf for one iteration of the above test, __mod_memcg_state() > (which is where memcg_rstat_updated() is called) does not show up at all > without this patch, but it shows up with this patch as 1.06% for tcp_rr > and 0.36% for tcp_stream. > > (b) Running "stress-ng --vm 0 -t 1m --times --perf". I don't understand > stress-ng very well, so I am not sure that's the best way to test this, > but it spawns 384 workers and spits a lot of metrics which looks nice :) > I picked a few ones that seem to be relevant to the stats update path. I > also included cache misses as this patch introduce more atomics that may > bounce between cpu caches: > > Metric Base Patched Delta > Cache Misses 3.394 B/sec 3.433 B/sec +1.14% > Cache L1D Read 0.148 T/sec 0.154 T/sec +4.05% > Cache L1D Read Miss 20.430 B/sec 21.820 B/sec +6.8% > Page Faults Total 4.304 M/sec 4.535 M/sec +5.4% > Page Faults Minor 4.304 M/sec 4.535 M/sec +5.4% > Page Faults Major 18.794 /sec 0.000 /sec > Kmalloc 0.153 M/sec 0.152 M/sec -0.65% > Kfree 0.152 M/sec 0.153 M/sec +0.65% > MM Page Alloc 4.640 M/sec 4.898 M/sec +5.56% > MM Page Free 4.639 M/sec 4.897 M/sec +5.56% > Lock Contention Begin 0.362 M/sec 0.479 M/sec +32.32% > Lock Contention End 0.362 M/sec 0.479 M/sec +32.32% > page-cache add 238.057 /sec 0.000 /sec > page-cache del 6.265 /sec 6.267 /sec -0.03% > > This is only using a single run in each case. I am not sure what to > make out of most of these numbers, but they mostly seem in the noise > (some better, some worse). The lock contention numbers are interesting. > I am not sure if higher is better or worse here. No new locks or lock > sections are introduced by this patch either way. > > Looking at perf, __mod_memcg_state() shows up as 0.00% with and without > this patch. This is suspicious, but I verified while stress-ng is > running that all the threads are in the right cgroup. Here is some additional testing. will-it-scale (specifically per_process_ops in page_fault3 test) detected a 25.9% regression before for a change in the stats update path, so I thought it would be a good idea to run the numbers with this change. I ran all page_fault tests in will-it-scale in a cgroup nested in a 4th level ($ROOT/a/b/c/d), as the work here scales with nesting, and 4 levels under root seemed like a worst-ish case scenario. These are the numbers from 30 runs (+ is good): LABEL | MIN | MAX | MEAN | MEDIAN | STDDEV | ------------------------------+-------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+ page_fault1_per_process_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 250644.000 | 298351.000 | 265207.738 | 262941.000 | 12112.379 | (B) patched | 235885.000 | 276680.000 | 249249.191 | 248781.000 | 8767.457 | | -5.89% | -7.26% | -6.02% | -5.39% | | page_fault1_per_thread_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 227214.000 | 271539.000 | 241618.484 | 240209.000 | 10162.207 | (B) patched | 220156.000 | 248552.000 | 229820.671 | 229108.000 | 7506.582 | | -3.11% | -8.47% | -4.88% | -4.62% | | page_fault1_scalability | | | | | | (A) base | 0.031175 | 0.038742 | 0.03545 | 0.035705 | 0.0015837 | (B) patched | 0.026511 | 0.032529 | 0.029952 | 0.029957 | 0.0013551 | | -9.65% | -9.21% | -9.29% | -9.35% | | page_fault2_per_process_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 197948.000 | 209020.000 | 203916.148 | 203496.000 | 2908.331 | (B) patched | 183825.000 | 192870.000 | 186975.419 | 187023.000 | 1991.100 | | -6.67% | -6.80% | -6.85% | -6.90% | | page_fault2_per_thread_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 166563.000 | 174843.000 | 170604.972 | 170532.000 | 1624.834 | (B) patched | 161051.000 | 165887.000 | 163100.260 | 163263.000 | 1517.967 | | -3.31% | -5.12% | -4.40% | -4.26% | | page_fault2_scalability | | | | | | (A) base | 0.052992 | 0.056427 | 0.054603 | 0.054693 | 0.00080196 | (B) patched | 0.042582 | 0.046753 | 0.044882 | 0.044957 | 0.0011766 | | +2.74% | -0.44% | -0.05% | +0.33% | | page_fault3_per_process_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 1282706.000 | 1323143.000 | 1299821.099 | 1297918.000 | 9882.872 | (B) patched | 1232512.000 | 1269816.000 | 1248700.839 | 1247168.000 | 8454.891 | | -3.91% | -4.03% | -3.93% | -3.91% | | page_fault3_per_thread_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 383583.000 | 390303.000 | 387216.963 | 387115.000 | 1605.760 | (B) patched | 363791.000 | 373960.000 | 368538.213 | 368826.000 | 1852.594 | | -5.16% | -4.19% | -4.82% | -4.72% | | page_fault3_scalability | | | | | | (A) base | 0.58206 | 0.62882 | 0.59909 | 0.59367 | 0.01256 | (B) patched | 0.57967 | 0.62165 | 0.59995 | 0.59769 | 0.010088 | | -0.41% | -1.14% | +0.14% | +0.68% | | Most numbers are within the range of normal variation of this benchmark results or within the standard deviation (especially that the fix for [1] assumes that 3% is noise -- and there were no further practical complaints). These numbers are also from 4-level nesting, which is more than most standard setups in my experience. [1]https://lore.kernel.org/all/20190520063534.GB19312@shao2-debian/ > > [1]https://github.com/google/neper > > Signed-off-by: Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > mm/memcontrol.c | 49 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------------- > 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/mm/memcontrol.c b/mm/memcontrol.c > index ef7ad66a9e4c..c273c65bb642 100644 > --- a/mm/memcontrol.c > +++ b/mm/memcontrol.c > @@ -627,6 +627,9 @@ struct memcg_vmstats_percpu { > /* Cgroup1: threshold notifications & softlimit tree updates */ > unsigned long nr_page_events; > unsigned long targets[MEM_CGROUP_NTARGETS]; > + > + /* Stats updates since the last flush */ > + unsigned int stats_updates; > }; > > struct memcg_vmstats { > @@ -641,6 +644,9 @@ struct memcg_vmstats { > /* Pending child counts during tree propagation */ > long state_pending[MEMCG_NR_STAT]; > unsigned long events_pending[NR_MEMCG_EVENTS]; > + > + /* Stats updates since the last flush */ > + atomic64_t stats_updates; > }; > > /* > @@ -660,9 +666,7 @@ struct memcg_vmstats { > */ > static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w); > static DECLARE_DEFERRABLE_WORK(stats_flush_dwork, flush_memcg_stats_dwork); > -static DEFINE_PER_CPU(unsigned int, stats_updates); > static atomic_t stats_flush_ongoing = ATOMIC_INIT(0); > -static atomic_t stats_flush_threshold = ATOMIC_INIT(0); > static u64 flush_last_time; > > #define FLUSH_TIME (2UL*HZ) > @@ -689,26 +693,37 @@ static void memcg_stats_unlock(void) > preempt_enable_nested(); > } > > + > +static bool memcg_should_flush_stats(struct mem_cgroup *memcg) > +{ > + return atomic64_read(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates) > > + MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH * num_online_cpus(); > +} > + > static inline void memcg_rstat_updated(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, int val) > { > + int cpu = smp_processor_id(); > unsigned int x; > > if (!val) > return; > > - cgroup_rstat_updated(memcg->css.cgroup, smp_processor_id()); > + cgroup_rstat_updated(memcg->css.cgroup, cpu); > + > + for (; memcg; memcg = parent_mem_cgroup(memcg)) { > + x = __this_cpu_add_return(memcg->vmstats_percpu->stats_updates, > + abs(val)); > + > + if (x < MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH) > + continue; > > - x = __this_cpu_add_return(stats_updates, abs(val)); > - if (x > MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH) { > /* > - * If stats_flush_threshold exceeds the threshold > - * (>num_online_cpus()), cgroup stats update will be triggered > - * in __mem_cgroup_flush_stats(). Increasing this var further > - * is redundant and simply adds overhead in atomic update. > + * If @memcg is already flush-able, increasing stats_updates is > + * redundant. Avoid the overhead of the atomic update. > */ > - if (atomic_read(&stats_flush_threshold) <= num_online_cpus()) > - atomic_add(x / MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH, &stats_flush_threshold); > - __this_cpu_write(stats_updates, 0); > + if (!memcg_should_flush_stats(memcg)) > + atomic64_add(x, &memcg->vmstats->stats_updates); > + __this_cpu_write(memcg->vmstats_percpu->stats_updates, 0); > } > } > > @@ -727,13 +742,12 @@ static void do_flush_stats(void) > > cgroup_rstat_flush(root_mem_cgroup->css.cgroup); > > - atomic_set(&stats_flush_threshold, 0); > atomic_set(&stats_flush_ongoing, 0); > } > > void mem_cgroup_flush_stats(void) > { > - if (atomic_read(&stats_flush_threshold) > num_online_cpus()) > + if (memcg_should_flush_stats(root_mem_cgroup)) > do_flush_stats(); > } > > @@ -747,8 +761,8 @@ void mem_cgroup_flush_stats_ratelimited(void) > static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w) > { > /* > - * Always flush here so that flushing in latency-sensitive paths is > - * as cheap as possible. > + * Deliberately ignore memcg_should_flush_stats() here so that flushing > + * in latency-sensitive paths is as cheap as possible. > */ > do_flush_stats(); > queue_delayed_work(system_unbound_wq, &stats_flush_dwork, FLUSH_TIME); > @@ -5622,6 +5636,9 @@ static void mem_cgroup_css_rstat_flush(struct cgroup_subsys_state *css, int cpu) > } > } > } > + /* We are in a per-cpu loop here, only do the atomic write once */ > + if (atomic64_read(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates)) > + atomic64_set(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates, 0); > } > > #ifdef CONFIG_MMU > -- > 2.42.0.459.ge4e396fd5e-goog >