Thread (19 messages) 19 messages, 3 authors, 2013-08-09

Re: [PATCH 2/3] memcg: Limit the number of events registered on oom_control

From: Tejun Heo <hidden>
Date: 2013-08-07 13:08:42
Also in: linux-mm, lkml

Hello, Michal.

On Wed, Aug 07, 2013 at 01:28:26PM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote:
There is no limit for the maximum number of oom_control events
registered per memcg. This might lead to an user triggered memory
depletion if a regular user is allowed to register events.

Let's be more strict and cap the number of events that might be
registered. MAX_OOM_NOTIFY_EVENTS value is more or less random. The
expectation is that it should be high enough to cover reasonable
usecases while not too high to allow excessive resources consumption.
1024 events consume something like 24KB which shouldn't be a big deal
and it should be good enough (even 1024 oom notification events sounds
crazy).
I think putting restriction on usage_event makes sense as that builds
a shared contiguous table from all events which can't be attributed
correctly and makes it easy to trigger allocation failures due to
large order allocation but is this necessary for oom and vmpressure,
both of which allocate only for the listening task?  It isn't
different from listening from epoll, for example.  If there needs to
be kernel memory limit, shouldn't that be handled by kmemcg?

Thanks.

-- 
tejun
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