Re: Re: [PATCH net-next v5 2/3] sock: Always take memcg pressure into consideration
From: Abel Wu <hidden>
Date: 2023-06-05 03:45:16
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On 6/4/23 6:36 PM, Willem de Bruijn wrote:
On Fri, Jun 2, 2023 at 10:42 PM Shakeel Butt [off-list ref] wrote:quoted
On Fri, Jun 02, 2023 at 04:11:34PM +0800, Abel Wu wrote:quoted
The sk_under_memory_pressure() is called to check whether there is memory pressure related to this socket. But now it ignores the net- memcg's pressure if the proto of the socket doesn't care about the global pressure, which may put burden on its memcg compaction or reclaim path (also remember that socket memory is un-reclaimable). So always check the memcg's vm status to alleviate memstalls when it's in pressure.This is interesting. UDP is the only protocol which supports memory accounting (i.e. udp_memory_allocated) but it does not define memory_pressure. In addition, it does have sysctl_udp_mem. So effectively UDP supports a hard limit and ignores memcg pressure at the moment. This patch will change its behavior to consider memcg pressure as well. I don't have any objection but let's get opinion of UDP maintainer.Others have more experience with memory pressure on UDP, for the record. Paolo worked on UDP memory pressure in https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/cover.1579281705.git.pabeni@redhat.com/ (local) It does seem odd to me to modify sk_under_memory_pressure only. See for instance its use in __sk_mem_raise_allocated: if (sk_has_memory_pressure(sk)) { u64 alloc; if (!sk_under_memory_pressure(sk)) return 1; This is not even reached as sk_has_memory_pressure is false for UDP.
I intended to make __sk_mem_raise_allocated() be aware of net-memcg pressure instead of just this bit [1][2]. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20230523094652.49411-5-wuyun.abel@bytedance.com/ (local) [2] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20230523094652.49411-6-wuyun.abel@bytedance.com/ (local) And TBH I am wondering why considering memcg's pressure here, as the main part in this if statement is to allow the sockets that are below average memory usage to raise from a *global* memory view, which seems nothing to do with memcg.
So this commit only affects the only other protocol-independent caller, __sk_mem_reduce_allocated, to possibly call sk_leave_memory_pressure if now under the global limit. What is the expected behavioral change in practice of this commit?
Be more conservative on sockmem alloc if under memcg pressure, to avoid worse memstall/latency.
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Signed-off-by: Abel Wu <redacted> --- include/net/sock.h | 6 ++---- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)diff --git a/include/net/sock.h b/include/net/sock.h index 3f63253ee092..ad1895ffbc4a 100644 --- a/include/net/sock.h +++ b/include/net/sock.h@@ -1411,13 +1411,11 @@ static inline bool sk_has_memory_pressure(const struct sock *sk) static inline bool sk_under_memory_pressure(const struct sock *sk) { - if (!sk->sk_prot->memory_pressure) - return false; - if (mem_cgroup_under_socket_pressure(sk->sk_memcg)) return true; - return !!*sk->sk_prot->memory_pressure; + return sk->sk_prot->memory_pressure && + *sk->sk_prot->memory_pressure; } static inline long --2.37.3