On Wed, Dec 18, 2024 at 10:15:06AM +0800, Ge Yang wrote: > > > 在 2024/12/17 23:55, Johannes Weiner 写道: > > Hello Yangge, > > > > On Tue, Dec 17, 2024 at 07:46:44PM +0800, yangge1116@xxxxxxx wrote: > >> From: yangge <yangge1116@xxxxxxx> > >> > >> Since commit 984fdba6a32e ("mm, compaction: use proper alloc_flags > >> in __compaction_suitable()") allow compaction to proceed when free > >> pages required for compaction reside in the CMA pageblocks, it's > >> possible that __compaction_suitable() always returns true, and in > >> some cases, it's not acceptable. > >> > >> There are 4 NUMA nodes on my machine, and each NUMA node has 32GB > >> of memory. I have configured 16GB of CMA memory on each NUMA node, > >> and starting a 32GB virtual machine with device passthrough is > >> extremely slow, taking almost an hour. > >> > >> During the start-up of the virtual machine, it will call > >> pin_user_pages_remote(..., FOLL_LONGTERM, ...) to allocate memory. > >> Long term GUP cannot allocate memory from CMA area, so a maximum > >> of 16 GB of no-CMA memory on a NUMA node can be used as virtual > >> machine memory. Since there is 16G of free CMA memory on the NUMA > >> node, watermark for order-0 always be met for compaction, so > >> __compaction_suitable() always returns true, even if the node is > >> unable to allocate non-CMA memory for the virtual machine. > >> > >> For costly allocations, because __compaction_suitable() always > >> returns true, __alloc_pages_slowpath() can't exit at the appropriate > >> place, resulting in excessively long virtual machine startup times. > >> Call trace: > >> __alloc_pages_slowpath > >> if (compact_result == COMPACT_SKIPPED || > >> compact_result == COMPACT_DEFERRED) > >> goto nopage; // should exit __alloc_pages_slowpath() from here > >> > >> Other unmovable alloctions, like dma_buf, which can be large in a > >> Linux system, are also unable to allocate memory from CMA, and these > >> allocations suffer from the same problems described above. In order > >> to quickly fall back to remote node, we should remove ALLOC_CMA both > >> in __compaction_suitable() and __isolate_free_page() for unmovable > >> alloctions. After this fix, starting a 32GB virtual machine with > >> device passthrough takes only a few seconds. > > > > The symptom is obviously bad, but I don't understand this fix. > > > > The reason we do ALLOC_CMA is that, even for unmovable allocations, > > you can create space in non-CMA space by moving migratable pages over > > to CMA space. This is not a property we want to lose. But I also don't > > see how it would interfere with your scenario. > > The __alloc_pages_slowpath() function was originally intended to exit at > place 1, but due to __compaction_suitable() always returning true, it > results in __alloc_pages_slowpath() exiting at place 2 instead. This > ultimately leads to a significantly longer execution time for > __alloc_pages_slowpath(). > > Call trace: > __alloc_pages_slowpath > if (compact_result == COMPACT_SKIPPED || > compact_result == COMPACT_DEFERRED) > goto nopage; // place 1 > __alloc_pages_direct_reclaim() // Reclaim is very expensive > __alloc_pages_direct_compact() > if (gfp_mask & __GFP_NORETRY) > goto nopage; // place 2 > > Every time memory allocation goes through the above slower process, it > ultimately leads to significantly longer virtual machine startup times. I still don't follow. Why do you want the allocation to fail? The changelog says this is in order to fall back quickly to other nodes. But there is a full node walk in get_page_from_freelist() before the allocator even engages reclaim. There is something missing from the story still. But regardless - surely you can see that we can't make the allocator generally weaker on large requests just because they happen to be optional in your specific case? > > There is the compaction_suitable() check in should_compact_retry(), > > but that only applies when COMPACT_SKIPPED. IOW, it should only happen > > when compaction_suitable() just now returned false. IOW, a race > > condition. Which is why it's also not subject to limited retries. > > > > What's the exact condition that traps the allocator inside the loop? > The should_compact_retry() function was not executed, and the slow here > was mainly due to the execution of __alloc_pages_direct_reclaim(). Ok.