On Thu 09-11-23 09:56:46, Huan Yang wrote: > > 在 2023/11/8 22:06, Michal Hocko 写道: > > [Some people who received this message don't often get email from mhocko@xxxxxxxx. Learn why this is important at https://aka.ms/LearnAboutSenderIdentification ] > > > > On Wed 08-11-23 14:58:11, Huan Yang wrote: > > > In some cases, we need to selectively reclaim file pages or anonymous > > > pages in an unbalanced manner. > > > > > > For example, when an application is pushed to the background and frozen, > > > it may not be opened for a long time, and we can safely reclaim the > > > application's anonymous pages, but we do not want to touch the file pages. > > Could you explain why? And also why do you need to swap out in that > > case? > > When an application is frozen, it usually means that we predict that > it will not be used for a long time. In order to proactively save some > memory, our strategy will choose to compress the application's private > data into zram. And we will also select some of the cold application > data that we think is in zram and swap it out. > > The above operations assume that anonymous pages are private to the > application. After the application is frozen, compressing these pages > into zram can save memory to some extent without worrying about > frequent refaults. Why don't you rely on the default reclaim heuristics? In other words do you have any numbers showing that a selective reclaim results in a much better behavior? How do you evaluate that? > > And the cost of refaults on zram is lower than that of IO. > > > > > > > This patchset extends the proactive reclaim interface to achieve > > > unbalanced reclamation. Users can control the reclamation tendency by > > > inputting swappiness under the original interface. Specifically, users > > > can input special values to extremely reclaim specific pages. > > Other have already touched on this in other replies but v2 doesn't have > > a per-memcg swappiness > > > > > Example: > > > echo "1G" 200 > memory.reclaim (only reclaim anon) > > > echo "1G" 0 > memory.reclaim (only reclaim file) > > > echo "1G" 1 > memory.reclaim (only reclaim file) > > > > > > Note that when performing unbalanced reclamation, the cgroup swappiness > > > will be temporarily adjusted dynamically to the input value. Therefore, > > > if the cgroup swappiness is further modified during runtime, there may > > > be some errors. > > In general this is a bad semantic. The operation shouldn't have side > > effect that are potentially visible for another operation. > So, maybe pass swappiness into sc and keep a single reclamation ensure that > swappiness is not changed? That would be a much saner approach. > Or, it's a bad idea that use swappiness to control unbalance reclaim. Memory reclaim is not really obliged to consider swappiness. In fact the actual behavior has changed several times in the past and it is safer to assume this might change in the future again. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs