Thread (138 messages) 138 messages, 17 authors, 2022-09-08

Re: [RFC PATCH 00/30] Code tagging framework and applications

From: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com>
Date: 2022-09-01 19:15:48
Also in: io-uring, linux-arch, linux-bcache, linux-iommu, linux-mm, lkml, xen-devel

On Thu 01-09-22 08:33:19, Suren Baghdasaryan wrote:
On Thu, Sep 1, 2022 at 12:18 AM Michal Hocko [off-list ref] wrote:
[...]
quoted
So I find Peter's question completely appropriate while your response to
that not so much! Maybe ftrace is not the right tool for the intented
job. Maybe there are other ways and it would be really great to show
that those have been evaluated and they are not suitable for a), b) and
c) reasons.
That's fair.
For memory tracking I looked into using kmemleak and page_owner which
can't match the required functionality at an overhead acceptable for
production and pre-production testing environments.
Being more specific would be really helpful. Especially when your cover
letter suggests that you rely on page_owner/memcg metadata as well to
match allocation and their freeing parts.
traces + BPF I
haven't evaluated myself but heard from other members of my team who
tried using that in production environment with poor results. I'll try
to get more specific information on that.
That would be helpful as well.
quoted
E.g. Oscar has been working on extending page_ext to track number of
allocations for specific calltrace[1]. Is this 1:1 replacement? No! But
it can help in environments where page_ext can be enabled and it is
completely non-intrusive to the MM code.
Thanks for pointing out this work. I'll need to review and maybe
profile it before making any claims.
quoted
If the page_ext overhead is not desirable/acceptable then I am sure
there are other options. E.g. kprobes/LivePatching framework can hook
into functions and alter their behavior. So why not use that for data
collection? Has this been evaluated at all?
I'm not sure how I can hook into say alloc_pages() to find out where
it was called from without capturing the call stack (which would
introduce an overhead at every allocation). Would love to discuss this
or other alternatives if they can be done with low enough overhead.
Yes, tracking back the call trace would be really needed. The question
is whether this is really prohibitively expensive. How much overhead are
we talking about? There is no free lunch here, really.  You either have
the overhead during runtime when the feature is used or on the source
code level for all the future development (with a maze of macros and
wrappers).

Thanks!
-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs
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