Thread (78 messages) 78 messages, 10 authors, 2021-02-04

Re: [PATCH v16 08/11] secretmem: add memcg accounting

From: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com>
Date: 2021-01-28 14:23:55
Also in: linux-api, linux-arch, linux-fsdevel, linux-kselftest, linux-mm, linux-riscv, lkml, nvdimm

On Thu 28-01-21 06:05:11, Shakeel Butt wrote:
On Wed, Jan 27, 2021 at 11:59 PM Michal Hocko [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
On Wed 27-01-21 10:42:13, Roman Gushchin wrote:
quoted
On Tue, Jan 26, 2021 at 04:05:55PM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote:
quoted
On Tue 26-01-21 14:48:38, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
quoted
On Mon, Jan 25, 2021 at 11:38:17PM +0200, Mike Rapoport wrote:
quoted
I cannot use __GFP_ACCOUNT because cma_alloc() does not use gfp.
Besides, kmem accounting with __GFP_ACCOUNT does not seem
to update stats and there was an explicit request for statistics:

https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CALo0P13aq3GsONnZrksZNU9RtfhMsZXGWhK1n=xYJWQizCd4Zw@mail.gmail.com/ (local)

As for (ab)using NR_SLAB_UNRECLAIMABLE_B, as it was already discussed here:

https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20201129172625.GD557259@kernel.org/ (local)

I think that a dedicated stats counter would be too much at the moment and
NR_SLAB_UNRECLAIMABLE_B is the only explicit stat for unreclaimable memory.
That's not true -- Mlocked is also unreclaimable.  And doesn't this
feel more like mlocked memory than unreclaimable slab?  It's also
Unevictable, so could be counted there instead.
yes, that is indeed true, except the unreclaimable counter is tracking
the unevictable LRUs. These pages are not on any LRU and that can cause
some confusion. Maybe they shouldn't be so special and they should live
on unevistable LRU and get their stats automagically.

I definitely do agree that this would be a better fit than NR_SLAB
abuse. But considering that this is somehow even more special than mlock
then a dedicated counter sounds as even better fit.
I think it depends on how large these areas will be in practice.
If they will be measured in single or double digits MBs, a separate entry
is hardly a good choice: because of the batching the displayed value
will be in the noise range, plus every new vmstat item adds to the
struct mem_cgroup size.

If it will be measured in GBs, of course, a separate counter is preferred.
So I'd suggest to go with NR_SLAB (which should have been named NR_KMEM)
as now and conditionally switch to a separate counter later.
I really do not think the overall usage matters when it comes to abusing
other counters. Changing this in future will be always tricky and there
always be our favorite "Can this break userspace" question. Yes we dared
to change meaning of some counters but this is not generally possible.
Just have a look how accounting shmem as a page cache has turned out
being much more tricky than many like.

Really if a separate counter is a big deal, for which I do not see any
big reason, then this should be accounted as unevictable (as suggested
by Matthew) and ideally pages of those mappings should be sitting in the
unevictable LRU as well unless there is a strong reason against.
Why not decide based on the movability of these pages? If movable then
unevictable LRU seems like the right way otherwise NR_SLAB.
I really do not follow. If the page is unevictable then why movability
matters? I also fail to see why NR_SLAB is even considered considering
this is completely outside of slab proper.

Really what is the point? What are we trying to achieve by stats? Do we
want to know how much secret memory is used because that is an
interesting/important information or do we just want to make some
accounting?

Just think at it from a practical point of view. I want to know how much
slab memory is used because it can give me an idea whether kernel is
consuming unexpected amount of memory. Now I have to subtract _some_
number to get that information. Where do I get that some number?

We have been creative with counters and it tends to kick back much more
often than it helps.

I really do not want this to turn into an endless bike shed but either
this should be accounted as a general type of memory (unevictable would
be a good fit because that is a userspace memory which is not
reclaimable) or it needs its own counter to tell how much of this
specific type of memory is used for this purpose.
-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs

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