Re: [PATCH] memcg: async flush memcg stats from perf sensitive codepaths

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On Fri, 25 Feb 2022 16:24:12 -0800 Shakeel Butt <shakeelb@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Daniel Dao has reported [1] a regression on workloads that may trigger
> a lot of refaults (anon and file). The underlying issue is that flushing
> rstat is expensive. Although rstat flush are batched with (nr_cpus *
> MEMCG_BATCH) stat updates, it seems like there are workloads which
> genuinely do stat updates larger than batch value within short amount of
> time. Since the rstat flush can happen in the performance critical
> codepaths like page faults, such workload can suffer greatly.
> 
> The easiest fix for now is for performance critical codepaths trigger
> the rstat flush asynchronously. This patch converts the refault codepath
> to use async rstat flush. In addition, this patch has premptively
> converted mem_cgroup_wb_stats and shrink_node to also use the async
> rstat flush as they may also similar performance regressions.

Gee we do this trick a lot and gee I don't like it :(

a) if we're doing too much work then we're doing too much work. 
   Punting that work over to a different CPU or thread doesn't alter
   that - it in fact adds more work.

b) there's an assumption here that the flusher is able to keep up
   with the producer.  What happens if that isn't the case?  Do we
   simply wind up the deferred items until the system goes oom?

   What happens if there's a producer running on each CPU?  Can the
   flushers keep up?

   Pathologically, what happens if the producer is running
   task_is_realtime() on a single-CPU system?  Or if there's a
   task_is_realtime() producer running on every CPU?  The flusher never
   gets to run and we're dead?


An obvious fix is to limit the permissible amount of windup (to what?)
and at some point, do the flushing synchronously anyway.

Or we just don't do any this at all and put up with the cost of the
current code.  I mean, this "fix" is kind of fake anyway, isn't it? 
Pushing the 4-10ms delay onto a different CPU will just disrupt
something else which wanted to run on that CPU.  The overall effect is
to hide the impact from one particular testcase, but is the benefit
really a real one?




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