On Wed, Aug 15 2012, Glauber Costa wrote: > On 08/14/2012 10:58 PM, Greg Thelen wrote: >> On Mon, Aug 13 2012, Glauber Costa wrote: >> >>>>>> + WARN_ON(mem_cgroup_is_root(memcg)); >>>>>> + size = (1 << order) << PAGE_SHIFT; >>>>>> + memcg_uncharge_kmem(memcg, size); >>>>>> + mem_cgroup_put(memcg); >>>> Why do we need ref-counting here ? kmem res_counter cannot work as >>>> reference ? >>> This is of course the pair of the mem_cgroup_get() you commented on >>> earlier. If we need one, we need the other. If we don't need one, we >>> don't need the other =) >>> >>> The guarantee we're trying to give here is that the memcg structure will >>> stay around while there are dangling charges to kmem, that we decided >>> not to move (remember: moving it for the stack is simple, for the slab >>> is very complicated and ill-defined, and I believe it is better to treat >>> all kmem equally here) >> >> By keeping memcg structures hanging around until the last referring kmem >> page is uncharged do such zombie memcg each consume a css_id and thus >> put pressure on the 64k css_id space? I imagine in pathological cases >> this would prevent creation of new cgroups until these zombies are >> dereferenced. > > Yes, but although this patch makes it more likely, it doesn't introduce > that. If the tasks, for instance, grab a reference to the cgroup dentry > in the filesystem (like their CWD, etc), they will also keep the cgroup > around. Fair point. But this doesn't seems like a feature. It's probably not needed initially, but what do you think about creating a memcg_kernel_context structure which is allocated when memcg is allocated? Kernel pages charged to a memcg would have page_cgroup->mem_cgroup=memcg_kernel_context rather than memcg. This would allow the mem_cgroup and its css_id to be deleted when the cgroup is unlinked from cgroupfs while allowing for the active kernel pages to continue pointing to a valid memcg_kernel_context. This would be a reference counted structure much like you are doing with memcg. When a memcg is deleted the memcg_kernel_context would be linked into its surviving parent memcg. This would avoid needing to visit each kernel page. >> Is there any way to see how much kmem such zombie memcg are consuming? >> I think we could find these with >> for_each_mem_cgroup_tree(root_mem_cgroup). > > Yes, just need an interface for that. But I think it is something that > can be addressed orthogonaly to this work, in a separate patch, not as > some fundamental limitation. Agreed. >> Basically, I'm wanting to know where kernel memory has been >> allocated. For live memcg, an admin can cat >> memory.kmem.usage_in_bytes. But for zombie memcg, I'm not sure how >> to get this info. It looks like the root_mem_cgroup >> memory.kmem.usage_in_bytes is not hierarchically charged. >> > > Not sure what you mean by not being hierarchically charged. It should > be, when use_hierarchy = 1. As a matter of fact, I just tested it, and I > do see kmem being charged all the way to the root cgroup when hierarchy > is used. (we just can't limit it there) You're correct, my mistake. I think the procedure to determine out the amount of zombie kmem is: root_mem_cgroup.kmem_usage_in_bytes - sum(all top level memcg memory.kmem_usage_in_bytes) -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>