While investigating hosts with high cgroup memory pressures, Tejun found culprit zombie tasks that had were holding on to a lot of memory, had SIGKILL pending, but were stuck in memory.high reclaim. In the past, we used to always force-charge allocations from tasks that were exiting in order to accelerate them dying and freeing up their rss. This changed for memory.max in a4ebf1b6ca1e ("memcg: prohibit unconditional exceeding the limit of dying tasks"); it noted that this can cause (userspace inducable) containment failures, so it added a mandatory reclaim and OOM kill cycle before forcing charges. At the time, memory.high enforcement was handled in the userspace return path, which isn't reached by dying tasks, and so memory.high was still never enforced by dying tasks. When c9afe31ec443 ("memcg: synchronously enforce memory.high for large overcharges") added synchronous reclaim for memory.high, it added unconditional memory.high enforcement for dying tasks as well. The callstack shows that this path is where the zombie is stuck in. We need to accelerate dying tasks getting past memory.high, but we cannot do it quite the same way as we do for memory.max: memory.max is enforced strictly, and tasks aren't allowed to move past it without FIRST reclaiming and OOM killing if necessary. This ensures very small levels of excess. With memory.high, though, enforcement happens lazily after the charge, and OOM killing is never triggered. A lot of concurrent threads could have pushed, or could actively be pushing, the cgroup into excess. The dying task will enter reclaim on every allocation attempt, with little hope of restoring balance. To fix this, skip synchronous memory.high enforcement on dying tasks altogether again. Update memory.high path documentation while at it. Fixes: c9afe31ec443 ("memcg: synchronously enforce memory.high for large overcharges") Reported-by: Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@xxxxxxxxxxx> --- mm/memcontrol.c | 24 +++++++++++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 21 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/mm/memcontrol.c b/mm/memcontrol.c index 73692cd8c142..aca879995022 100644 --- a/mm/memcontrol.c +++ b/mm/memcontrol.c @@ -2603,8 +2603,9 @@ static unsigned long calculate_high_delay(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, } /* - * Scheduled by try_charge() to be executed from the userland return path - * and reclaims memory over the high limit. + * Reclaims memory over the high limit. Called directly from + * try_charge() when possible, but also scheduled to be called from + * the userland return path where reclaim is always able to block. */ void mem_cgroup_handle_over_high(gfp_t gfp_mask) { @@ -2673,6 +2674,9 @@ void mem_cgroup_handle_over_high(gfp_t gfp_mask) } /* + * Reclaim didn't manage to push usage below the limit, slow + * this allocating task down. + * * If we exit early, we're guaranteed to die (since * schedule_timeout_killable sets TASK_KILLABLE). This means we don't * need to account for any ill-begotten jiffies to pay them off later. @@ -2867,8 +2871,22 @@ static int try_charge_memcg(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, gfp_t gfp_mask, } } while ((memcg = parent_mem_cgroup(memcg))); + /* + * Reclaim is scheduled for the userland return path already, + * but also attempt synchronous reclaim to avoid excessive + * overrun while the task is still inside the kernel. If this + * is successful, the return path will see it when it rechecks + * the overage, and simply bail out. + * + * Skip if the task is already dying, though. Unlike + * memory.max, memory.high enforcement isn't as strict, and + * there is no OOM killer involved, which means the excess + * could already be much bigger (and still growing) than it + * could for memory.max; the dying task could get stuck in + * fruitless reclaim for a long time, which isn't desirable. + */ if (current->memcg_nr_pages_over_high > MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH && - !(current->flags & PF_MEMALLOC) && + !(current->flags & PF_MEMALLOC) && !task_is_dying() && gfpflags_allow_blocking(gfp_mask)) { mem_cgroup_handle_over_high(gfp_mask); } -- 2.43.0