• Johannes Weiner's avatar
    mm: memcontrol: recursive memory.low protection · 8a931f80
    Johannes Weiner authored
    Right now, the effective protection of any given cgroup is capped by its
    own explicit memory.low setting, regardless of what the parent says.  The
    reasons for this are mostly historical and ease of implementation: to make
    delegation of memory.low safe, effective protection is the min() of all
    memory.low up the tree.
    
    Unfortunately, this limitation makes it impossible to protect an entire
    subtree from another without forcing the user to make explicit protection
    allocations all the way to the leaf cgroups - something that is highly
    undesirable in real life scenarios.
    
    Consider memory in a data center host.  At the cgroup top level, we have a
    distinction between system management software and the actual workload the
    system is executing.  Both branches are further subdivided into individual
    services, job components etc.
    
    We want to protect the workload as a whole from the system management
    software, but that doesn't mean we want to protect and prioritize
    individual workload wrt each other.  Their memory demand can vary over
    time, and we'd want the VM to simply cache the hottest data within the
    workload subtree.  Yet, the current memory.low limitations force us to
    allocate a fixed amount of protection to each workload component in order
    to get protection from system management software in general.  This
    results in very inefficient resource distribution.
    
    Another concern with mandating downward allocation is that, as the
    complexity of the cgroup tree grows, it gets harder for the lower levels
    to be informed about decisions made at the host-level.  Consider a
    container inside a namespace that in turn creates its own nested tree of
    cgroups to run multiple workloads.  It'd be extremely difficult to
    configure memory.low parameters in those leaf cgroups that on one hand
    balance pressure among siblings as the container desires, while also
    reflecting the host-level protection from e.g.  rpm upgrades, that lie
    beyond one or more delegation and namespacing points in the tree.
    
    It's highly unusual from a cgroup interface POV that nested levels have to
    be aware of and reflect decisions made at higher levels for them to be
    effective.
    
    To enable such use cases and scale configurability for complex trees, this
    patch implements a resource inheritance model for memory that is similar
    to how the CPU and the IO controller implement work-conserving resource
    allocations: a share of a resource allocated to a subree always applies to
    the entire subtree recursively, while allowing, but not mandating,
    children to further specify distribution rules.
    
    That means that if protection is explicitly allocated among siblings,
    those configured shares are being followed during page reclaim just like
    they are now.  However, if the memory.low set at a higher level is not
    fully claimed by the children in that subtree, the "floating" remainder is
    applied to each cgroup in the tree in proportion to its size.  Since
    reclaim pressure is applied in proportion to size as well, each child in
    that tree gets the same boost, and the effect is neutral among siblings -
    with respect to each other, they behave as if no memory control was
    enabled at all, and the VM simply balances the memory demands optimally
    within the subtree.  But collectively those cgroups enjoy a boost over the
    cgroups in neighboring trees.
    
    E.g.  a leaf cgroup with a memory.low setting of 0 no longer means that
    it's not getting a share of the hierarchically assigned resource, just
    that it doesn't claim a fixed amount of it to protect from its siblings.
    
    This allows us to recursively protect one subtree (workload) from another
    (system management), while letting subgroups compete freely among each
    other - without having to assign fixed shares to each leaf, and without
    nested groups having to echo higher-level settings.
    
    The floating protection composes naturally with fixed protection.
    Consider the following example tree:
    
    		A            A: low = 2G
                   / \          A1: low = 1G
                  A1 A2         A2: low = 0G
    
    As outside pressure is applied to this tree, A1 will enjoy a fixed
    protection from A2 of 1G, but the remaining, unclaimed 1G from A is split
    evenly among A1 and A2, coming out to 1.5G and 0.5G.
    
    There is a slight risk of regressing theoretical setups where the
    top-level cgroups don't know about the true budgeting and set bogusly high
    "bypass" values that are meaningfully allocated down the tree.  Such
    setups would rely on unclaimed protection to be discarded, and
    distributing it would change the intended behavior.  Be safe and hide the
    new behavior behind a mount option, 'memory_recursiveprot'.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarJohannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
    Acked-by: default avatarTejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
    Acked-by: default avatarRoman Gushchin <guro@fb.com>
    Acked-by: default avatarChris Down <chris@chrisdown.name>
    Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com>
    Cc: Michal Koutný <mkoutny@suse.com>
    Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20200227195606.46212-4-hannes@cmpxchg.orgSigned-off-by: default avatarLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
    8a931f80
cgroup.c 168 KB