On Sun, 12 May 2024, Sourav Panda wrote: > Today, we do not have any observability of per-page metadata > and how much it takes away from the machine capacity. Thus, > we want to describe the amount of memory that is going towards > per-page metadata, which can vary depending on build > configuration, machine architecture, and system use. > > This patch adds 2 fields to /proc/vmstat that can used as shown > below: > > Accounting per-page metadata allocated by boot-allocator: > /proc/vmstat:nr_memmap_boot * PAGE_SIZE > > Accounting per-page metadata allocated by buddy-allocator: > /proc/vmstat:nr_memmap * PAGE_SIZE > > Accounting total Perpage metadata allocated on the machine: > (/proc/vmstat:nr_memmap_boot + > /proc/vmstat:nr_memmap) * PAGE_SIZE > > Utility for userspace: > > Observability: Describe the amount of memory overhead that is > going to per-page metadata on the system at any given time since > this overhead is not currently observable. > > Debugging: Tracking the changes or absolute value in struct pages > can help detect anomalies as they can be correlated with other > metrics in the machine (e.g., memtotal, number of huge pages, > etc). > > page_ext overheads: Some kernel features such as page_owner > page_table_check that use page_ext can be optionally enabled via > kernel parameters. Having the total per-page metadata information > helps users precisely measure impact. Furthermore, page-metadata > metrics will reflect the amount of struct pages reliquished > (or overhead reduced) when hugetlbfs pages are reserved which > will vary depending on whether hugetlb vmemmap optimization is > enabled or not. > > For background and results see: > lore.kernel.org/all/20240220214558.3377482-1-souravpanda@xxxxxxxxxx > > Signed-off-by: Sourav Panda <souravpanda@xxxxxxxxxx> > Reviewed-by: Pasha Tatashin <pasha.tatashin@xxxxxxxxxx> Acked-by: David Rientjes <rientjes@xxxxxxxxxx>