Message ID | 20230921081057.3440885-4-yosryahmed@google.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New |
Headers | show |
Series | mm: memcg: subtree stats flushing and thresholds | expand |
On Thu, Sep 21, 2023 at 1:11 AM Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@google.com> wrote: > > A global counter for the magnitude of memcg stats update is maintained > on the memcg side to avoid invoking rstat flushes when the pending > updates are not significant. This avoids unnecessary flushes, which are > not very cheap even if there isn't a lot of stats to flush. It also > avoids unnecessary lock contention on the underlying global rstat lock. > > Make this threshold per-memcg. The scheme is followed where percpu (now > also per-memcg) counters are incremented in the update path, and only > propagated to per-memcg atomics when they exceed a certain threshold. > > This provides two benefits: > (a) On large machines with a lot of memcgs, the global threshold can be > reached relatively fast, so guarding the underlying lock becomes less > effective. Making the threshold per-memcg avoids this. > > (b) Having a global threshold makes it hard to do subtree flushes, as we > cannot reset the global counter except for a full flush. Per-memcg > counters removes this as a blocker from doing subtree flushes, which > helps avoid unnecessary work when the stats of a small subtree are > needed. > > Nothing is free, of course. This comes at a cost: > (a) A new per-cpu counter per memcg, consuming NR_CPUS * NR_MEMCGS * 4 > bytes. > > (b) More work on the update side, although in the common case it will > only be percpu counter updates. The amount of work scales with the > number of ancestors (i.e. tree depth). This is not a new concept, adding > a cgroup to the rstat tree involves a parent loop, so is charging. > Testing in a later patch shows this doesn't introduce significant > regressions. > > (c) The error margin in the stats for the system as a whole increases > from NR_CPUS * MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH to NR_CPUS * MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH * > NR_MEMCGS. This is probably fine because we have a similar per-memcg > error in charges coming from percpu stocks, and we have a periodic > flusher that makes sure we always flush all the stats every 2s anyway. > > This patch was tested to make sure no significant regressions are > introduced on the update path as follows. In a cgroup that is 4 levels > deep (/sys/fs/cgroup/a/b/c/d), the following benchmarks were ran: > > (a) neper [1] with 1000 flows and 100 threads (single machine). The > values in the table are the average of server and client throughputs in > mbps after 30 iterations, each running for 30s: > > tcp_rr tcp_stream > Base 9504218.56 357366.84 > Patched 9656205.68 356978.39 > Delta +1.6% -0.1% > Standard Deviation 0.95% 1.03% > > An increase in the performance of tcp_rr doesn't really make sense, but > it's probably in the noise. The same tests were ran with 1 flow and 1 > thread but the throughput was too noisy to make any conclusions (the > averages did not show regressions nonetheless). > > Looking at perf for one iteration of the above test, __mod_memcg_state() > (which is where memcg_rstat_updated() is called) does not show up at all > without this patch, but it shows up with this patch as 1.06% for tcp_rr > and 0.36% for tcp_stream. > > (b) Running "stress-ng --vm 0 -t 1m --times --perf". I don't understand > stress-ng very well, so I am not sure that's the best way to test this, > but it spawns 384 workers and spits a lot of metrics which looks nice :) > I picked a few ones that seem to be relevant to the stats update path. I > also included cache misses as this patch introduce more atomics that may > bounce between cpu caches: > > Metric Base Patched Delta > Cache Misses 3.394 B/sec 3.433 B/sec +1.14% > Cache L1D Read 0.148 T/sec 0.154 T/sec +4.05% > Cache L1D Read Miss 20.430 B/sec 21.820 B/sec +6.8% > Page Faults Total 4.304 M/sec 4.535 M/sec +5.4% > Page Faults Minor 4.304 M/sec 4.535 M/sec +5.4% > Page Faults Major 18.794 /sec 0.000 /sec > Kmalloc 0.153 M/sec 0.152 M/sec -0.65% > Kfree 0.152 M/sec 0.153 M/sec +0.65% > MM Page Alloc 4.640 M/sec 4.898 M/sec +5.56% > MM Page Free 4.639 M/sec 4.897 M/sec +5.56% > Lock Contention Begin 0.362 M/sec 0.479 M/sec +32.32% > Lock Contention End 0.362 M/sec 0.479 M/sec +32.32% > page-cache add 238.057 /sec 0.000 /sec > page-cache del 6.265 /sec 6.267 /sec -0.03% > > This is only using a single run in each case. I am not sure what to > make out of most of these numbers, but they mostly seem in the noise > (some better, some worse). The lock contention numbers are interesting. > I am not sure if higher is better or worse here. No new locks or lock > sections are introduced by this patch either way. > > Looking at perf, __mod_memcg_state() shows up as 0.00% with and without > this patch. This is suspicious, but I verified while stress-ng is > running that all the threads are in the right cgroup. > > [1]https://github.com/google/neper > > Signed-off-by: Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@google.com> Johannes, I think this might be what you have suggested in our previous discussion, but I am not sure this is what you meant for the update path, so I did not add a Suggested-by. Please let me know if this is what you meant and I can amend the tag as such. > > --- > mm/memcontrol.c | 49 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------------- > 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/mm/memcontrol.c b/mm/memcontrol.c > index ef7ad66a9e4c..c273c65bb642 100644 > --- a/mm/memcontrol.c > +++ b/mm/memcontrol.c > @@ -627,6 +627,9 @@ struct memcg_vmstats_percpu { > /* Cgroup1: threshold notifications & softlimit tree updates */ > unsigned long nr_page_events; > unsigned long targets[MEM_CGROUP_NTARGETS]; > + > + /* Stats updates since the last flush */ > + unsigned int stats_updates; > }; > > struct memcg_vmstats { > @@ -641,6 +644,9 @@ struct memcg_vmstats { > /* Pending child counts during tree propagation */ > long state_pending[MEMCG_NR_STAT]; > unsigned long events_pending[NR_MEMCG_EVENTS]; > + > + /* Stats updates since the last flush */ > + atomic64_t stats_updates; > }; > > /* > @@ -660,9 +666,7 @@ struct memcg_vmstats { > */ > static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w); > static DECLARE_DEFERRABLE_WORK(stats_flush_dwork, flush_memcg_stats_dwork); > -static DEFINE_PER_CPU(unsigned int, stats_updates); > static atomic_t stats_flush_ongoing = ATOMIC_INIT(0); > -static atomic_t stats_flush_threshold = ATOMIC_INIT(0); > static u64 flush_last_time; > > #define FLUSH_TIME (2UL*HZ) > @@ -689,26 +693,37 @@ static void memcg_stats_unlock(void) > preempt_enable_nested(); > } > > + > +static bool memcg_should_flush_stats(struct mem_cgroup *memcg) > +{ > + return atomic64_read(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates) > > + MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH * num_online_cpus(); > +} > + > static inline void memcg_rstat_updated(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, int val) > { > + int cpu = smp_processor_id(); > unsigned int x; > > if (!val) > return; > > - cgroup_rstat_updated(memcg->css.cgroup, smp_processor_id()); > + cgroup_rstat_updated(memcg->css.cgroup, cpu); > + > + for (; memcg; memcg = parent_mem_cgroup(memcg)) { > + x = __this_cpu_add_return(memcg->vmstats_percpu->stats_updates, > + abs(val)); > + > + if (x < MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH) > + continue; > > - x = __this_cpu_add_return(stats_updates, abs(val)); > - if (x > MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH) { > /* > - * If stats_flush_threshold exceeds the threshold > - * (>num_online_cpus()), cgroup stats update will be triggered > - * in __mem_cgroup_flush_stats(). Increasing this var further > - * is redundant and simply adds overhead in atomic update. > + * If @memcg is already flush-able, increasing stats_updates is > + * redundant. Avoid the overhead of the atomic update. > */ > - if (atomic_read(&stats_flush_threshold) <= num_online_cpus()) > - atomic_add(x / MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH, &stats_flush_threshold); > - __this_cpu_write(stats_updates, 0); > + if (!memcg_should_flush_stats(memcg)) > + atomic64_add(x, &memcg->vmstats->stats_updates); > + __this_cpu_write(memcg->vmstats_percpu->stats_updates, 0); > } > } > > @@ -727,13 +742,12 @@ static void do_flush_stats(void) > > cgroup_rstat_flush(root_mem_cgroup->css.cgroup); > > - atomic_set(&stats_flush_threshold, 0); > atomic_set(&stats_flush_ongoing, 0); > } > > void mem_cgroup_flush_stats(void) > { > - if (atomic_read(&stats_flush_threshold) > num_online_cpus()) > + if (memcg_should_flush_stats(root_mem_cgroup)) > do_flush_stats(); > } > > @@ -747,8 +761,8 @@ void mem_cgroup_flush_stats_ratelimited(void) > static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w) > { > /* > - * Always flush here so that flushing in latency-sensitive paths is > - * as cheap as possible. > + * Deliberately ignore memcg_should_flush_stats() here so that flushing > + * in latency-sensitive paths is as cheap as possible. > */ > do_flush_stats(); > queue_delayed_work(system_unbound_wq, &stats_flush_dwork, FLUSH_TIME); > @@ -5622,6 +5636,9 @@ static void mem_cgroup_css_rstat_flush(struct cgroup_subsys_state *css, int cpu) > } > } > } > + /* We are in a per-cpu loop here, only do the atomic write once */ > + if (atomic64_read(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates)) > + atomic64_set(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates, 0); > } > > #ifdef CONFIG_MMU > -- > 2.42.0.459.ge4e396fd5e-goog >
On Thu, Sep 21, 2023 at 1:11 AM Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@google.com> wrote: > > A global counter for the magnitude of memcg stats update is maintained > on the memcg side to avoid invoking rstat flushes when the pending > updates are not significant. This avoids unnecessary flushes, which are > not very cheap even if there isn't a lot of stats to flush. It also > avoids unnecessary lock contention on the underlying global rstat lock. > > Make this threshold per-memcg. The scheme is followed where percpu (now > also per-memcg) counters are incremented in the update path, and only > propagated to per-memcg atomics when they exceed a certain threshold. > > This provides two benefits: > (a) On large machines with a lot of memcgs, the global threshold can be > reached relatively fast, so guarding the underlying lock becomes less > effective. Making the threshold per-memcg avoids this. > > (b) Having a global threshold makes it hard to do subtree flushes, as we > cannot reset the global counter except for a full flush. Per-memcg > counters removes this as a blocker from doing subtree flushes, which > helps avoid unnecessary work when the stats of a small subtree are > needed. > > Nothing is free, of course. This comes at a cost: > (a) A new per-cpu counter per memcg, consuming NR_CPUS * NR_MEMCGS * 4 > bytes. > > (b) More work on the update side, although in the common case it will > only be percpu counter updates. The amount of work scales with the > number of ancestors (i.e. tree depth). This is not a new concept, adding > a cgroup to the rstat tree involves a parent loop, so is charging. > Testing in a later patch shows this doesn't introduce significant > regressions. > > (c) The error margin in the stats for the system as a whole increases > from NR_CPUS * MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH to NR_CPUS * MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH * > NR_MEMCGS. This is probably fine because we have a similar per-memcg > error in charges coming from percpu stocks, and we have a periodic > flusher that makes sure we always flush all the stats every 2s anyway. > > This patch was tested to make sure no significant regressions are > introduced on the update path as follows. In a cgroup that is 4 levels > deep (/sys/fs/cgroup/a/b/c/d), the following benchmarks were ran: > > (a) neper [1] with 1000 flows and 100 threads (single machine). The > values in the table are the average of server and client throughputs in > mbps after 30 iterations, each running for 30s: > > tcp_rr tcp_stream > Base 9504218.56 357366.84 > Patched 9656205.68 356978.39 > Delta +1.6% -0.1% > Standard Deviation 0.95% 1.03% > > An increase in the performance of tcp_rr doesn't really make sense, but > it's probably in the noise. The same tests were ran with 1 flow and 1 > thread but the throughput was too noisy to make any conclusions (the > averages did not show regressions nonetheless). > > Looking at perf for one iteration of the above test, __mod_memcg_state() > (which is where memcg_rstat_updated() is called) does not show up at all > without this patch, but it shows up with this patch as 1.06% for tcp_rr > and 0.36% for tcp_stream. > > (b) Running "stress-ng --vm 0 -t 1m --times --perf". I don't understand > stress-ng very well, so I am not sure that's the best way to test this, > but it spawns 384 workers and spits a lot of metrics which looks nice :) > I picked a few ones that seem to be relevant to the stats update path. I > also included cache misses as this patch introduce more atomics that may > bounce between cpu caches: > > Metric Base Patched Delta > Cache Misses 3.394 B/sec 3.433 B/sec +1.14% > Cache L1D Read 0.148 T/sec 0.154 T/sec +4.05% > Cache L1D Read Miss 20.430 B/sec 21.820 B/sec +6.8% > Page Faults Total 4.304 M/sec 4.535 M/sec +5.4% > Page Faults Minor 4.304 M/sec 4.535 M/sec +5.4% > Page Faults Major 18.794 /sec 0.000 /sec > Kmalloc 0.153 M/sec 0.152 M/sec -0.65% > Kfree 0.152 M/sec 0.153 M/sec +0.65% > MM Page Alloc 4.640 M/sec 4.898 M/sec +5.56% > MM Page Free 4.639 M/sec 4.897 M/sec +5.56% > Lock Contention Begin 0.362 M/sec 0.479 M/sec +32.32% > Lock Contention End 0.362 M/sec 0.479 M/sec +32.32% > page-cache add 238.057 /sec 0.000 /sec > page-cache del 6.265 /sec 6.267 /sec -0.03% > > This is only using a single run in each case. I am not sure what to > make out of most of these numbers, but they mostly seem in the noise > (some better, some worse). The lock contention numbers are interesting. > I am not sure if higher is better or worse here. No new locks or lock > sections are introduced by this patch either way. > > Looking at perf, __mod_memcg_state() shows up as 0.00% with and without > this patch. This is suspicious, but I verified while stress-ng is > running that all the threads are in the right cgroup. Here is some additional testing. will-it-scale (specifically per_process_ops in page_fault3 test) detected a 25.9% regression before for a change in the stats update path, so I thought it would be a good idea to run the numbers with this change. I ran all page_fault tests in will-it-scale in a cgroup nested in a 4th level ($ROOT/a/b/c/d), as the work here scales with nesting, and 4 levels under root seemed like a worst-ish case scenario. These are the numbers from 30 runs (+ is good): LABEL | MIN | MAX | MEAN | MEDIAN | STDDEV | ------------------------------+-------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------+ page_fault1_per_process_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 250644.000 | 298351.000 | 265207.738 | 262941.000 | 12112.379 | (B) patched | 235885.000 | 276680.000 | 249249.191 | 248781.000 | 8767.457 | | -5.89% | -7.26% | -6.02% | -5.39% | | page_fault1_per_thread_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 227214.000 | 271539.000 | 241618.484 | 240209.000 | 10162.207 | (B) patched | 220156.000 | 248552.000 | 229820.671 | 229108.000 | 7506.582 | | -3.11% | -8.47% | -4.88% | -4.62% | | page_fault1_scalability | | | | | | (A) base | 0.031175 | 0.038742 | 0.03545 | 0.035705 | 0.0015837 | (B) patched | 0.026511 | 0.032529 | 0.029952 | 0.029957 | 0.0013551 | | -9.65% | -9.21% | -9.29% | -9.35% | | page_fault2_per_process_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 197948.000 | 209020.000 | 203916.148 | 203496.000 | 2908.331 | (B) patched | 183825.000 | 192870.000 | 186975.419 | 187023.000 | 1991.100 | | -6.67% | -6.80% | -6.85% | -6.90% | | page_fault2_per_thread_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 166563.000 | 174843.000 | 170604.972 | 170532.000 | 1624.834 | (B) patched | 161051.000 | 165887.000 | 163100.260 | 163263.000 | 1517.967 | | -3.31% | -5.12% | -4.40% | -4.26% | | page_fault2_scalability | | | | | | (A) base | 0.052992 | 0.056427 | 0.054603 | 0.054693 | 0.00080196 | (B) patched | 0.042582 | 0.046753 | 0.044882 | 0.044957 | 0.0011766 | | +2.74% | -0.44% | -0.05% | +0.33% | | page_fault3_per_process_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 1282706.000 | 1323143.000 | 1299821.099 | 1297918.000 | 9882.872 | (B) patched | 1232512.000 | 1269816.000 | 1248700.839 | 1247168.000 | 8454.891 | | -3.91% | -4.03% | -3.93% | -3.91% | | page_fault3_per_thread_ops | | | | | | (A) base | 383583.000 | 390303.000 | 387216.963 | 387115.000 | 1605.760 | (B) patched | 363791.000 | 373960.000 | 368538.213 | 368826.000 | 1852.594 | | -5.16% | -4.19% | -4.82% | -4.72% | | page_fault3_scalability | | | | | | (A) base | 0.58206 | 0.62882 | 0.59909 | 0.59367 | 0.01256 | (B) patched | 0.57967 | 0.62165 | 0.59995 | 0.59769 | 0.010088 | | -0.41% | -1.14% | +0.14% | +0.68% | | Most numbers are within the range of normal variation of this benchmark results or within the standard deviation (especially that the fix for [1] assumes that 3% is noise -- and there were no further practical complaints). These numbers are also from 4-level nesting, which is more than most standard setups in my experience. [1]https://lore.kernel.org/all/20190520063534.GB19312@shao2-debian/ > > [1]https://github.com/google/neper > > Signed-off-by: Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@google.com> > --- > mm/memcontrol.c | 49 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------------- > 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/mm/memcontrol.c b/mm/memcontrol.c > index ef7ad66a9e4c..c273c65bb642 100644 > --- a/mm/memcontrol.c > +++ b/mm/memcontrol.c > @@ -627,6 +627,9 @@ struct memcg_vmstats_percpu { > /* Cgroup1: threshold notifications & softlimit tree updates */ > unsigned long nr_page_events; > unsigned long targets[MEM_CGROUP_NTARGETS]; > + > + /* Stats updates since the last flush */ > + unsigned int stats_updates; > }; > > struct memcg_vmstats { > @@ -641,6 +644,9 @@ struct memcg_vmstats { > /* Pending child counts during tree propagation */ > long state_pending[MEMCG_NR_STAT]; > unsigned long events_pending[NR_MEMCG_EVENTS]; > + > + /* Stats updates since the last flush */ > + atomic64_t stats_updates; > }; > > /* > @@ -660,9 +666,7 @@ struct memcg_vmstats { > */ > static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w); > static DECLARE_DEFERRABLE_WORK(stats_flush_dwork, flush_memcg_stats_dwork); > -static DEFINE_PER_CPU(unsigned int, stats_updates); > static atomic_t stats_flush_ongoing = ATOMIC_INIT(0); > -static atomic_t stats_flush_threshold = ATOMIC_INIT(0); > static u64 flush_last_time; > > #define FLUSH_TIME (2UL*HZ) > @@ -689,26 +693,37 @@ static void memcg_stats_unlock(void) > preempt_enable_nested(); > } > > + > +static bool memcg_should_flush_stats(struct mem_cgroup *memcg) > +{ > + return atomic64_read(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates) > > + MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH * num_online_cpus(); > +} > + > static inline void memcg_rstat_updated(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, int val) > { > + int cpu = smp_processor_id(); > unsigned int x; > > if (!val) > return; > > - cgroup_rstat_updated(memcg->css.cgroup, smp_processor_id()); > + cgroup_rstat_updated(memcg->css.cgroup, cpu); > + > + for (; memcg; memcg = parent_mem_cgroup(memcg)) { > + x = __this_cpu_add_return(memcg->vmstats_percpu->stats_updates, > + abs(val)); > + > + if (x < MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH) > + continue; > > - x = __this_cpu_add_return(stats_updates, abs(val)); > - if (x > MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH) { > /* > - * If stats_flush_threshold exceeds the threshold > - * (>num_online_cpus()), cgroup stats update will be triggered > - * in __mem_cgroup_flush_stats(). Increasing this var further > - * is redundant and simply adds overhead in atomic update. > + * If @memcg is already flush-able, increasing stats_updates is > + * redundant. Avoid the overhead of the atomic update. > */ > - if (atomic_read(&stats_flush_threshold) <= num_online_cpus()) > - atomic_add(x / MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH, &stats_flush_threshold); > - __this_cpu_write(stats_updates, 0); > + if (!memcg_should_flush_stats(memcg)) > + atomic64_add(x, &memcg->vmstats->stats_updates); > + __this_cpu_write(memcg->vmstats_percpu->stats_updates, 0); > } > } > > @@ -727,13 +742,12 @@ static void do_flush_stats(void) > > cgroup_rstat_flush(root_mem_cgroup->css.cgroup); > > - atomic_set(&stats_flush_threshold, 0); > atomic_set(&stats_flush_ongoing, 0); > } > > void mem_cgroup_flush_stats(void) > { > - if (atomic_read(&stats_flush_threshold) > num_online_cpus()) > + if (memcg_should_flush_stats(root_mem_cgroup)) > do_flush_stats(); > } > > @@ -747,8 +761,8 @@ void mem_cgroup_flush_stats_ratelimited(void) > static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w) > { > /* > - * Always flush here so that flushing in latency-sensitive paths is > - * as cheap as possible. > + * Deliberately ignore memcg_should_flush_stats() here so that flushing > + * in latency-sensitive paths is as cheap as possible. > */ > do_flush_stats(); > queue_delayed_work(system_unbound_wq, &stats_flush_dwork, FLUSH_TIME); > @@ -5622,6 +5636,9 @@ static void mem_cgroup_css_rstat_flush(struct cgroup_subsys_state *css, int cpu) > } > } > } > + /* We are in a per-cpu loop here, only do the atomic write once */ > + if (atomic64_read(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates)) > + atomic64_set(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates, 0); > } > > #ifdef CONFIG_MMU > -- > 2.42.0.459.ge4e396fd5e-goog >
diff --git a/mm/memcontrol.c b/mm/memcontrol.c index ef7ad66a9e4c..c273c65bb642 100644 --- a/mm/memcontrol.c +++ b/mm/memcontrol.c @@ -627,6 +627,9 @@ struct memcg_vmstats_percpu { /* Cgroup1: threshold notifications & softlimit tree updates */ unsigned long nr_page_events; unsigned long targets[MEM_CGROUP_NTARGETS]; + + /* Stats updates since the last flush */ + unsigned int stats_updates; }; struct memcg_vmstats { @@ -641,6 +644,9 @@ struct memcg_vmstats { /* Pending child counts during tree propagation */ long state_pending[MEMCG_NR_STAT]; unsigned long events_pending[NR_MEMCG_EVENTS]; + + /* Stats updates since the last flush */ + atomic64_t stats_updates; }; /* @@ -660,9 +666,7 @@ struct memcg_vmstats { */ static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w); static DECLARE_DEFERRABLE_WORK(stats_flush_dwork, flush_memcg_stats_dwork); -static DEFINE_PER_CPU(unsigned int, stats_updates); static atomic_t stats_flush_ongoing = ATOMIC_INIT(0); -static atomic_t stats_flush_threshold = ATOMIC_INIT(0); static u64 flush_last_time; #define FLUSH_TIME (2UL*HZ) @@ -689,26 +693,37 @@ static void memcg_stats_unlock(void) preempt_enable_nested(); } + +static bool memcg_should_flush_stats(struct mem_cgroup *memcg) +{ + return atomic64_read(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates) > + MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH * num_online_cpus(); +} + static inline void memcg_rstat_updated(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, int val) { + int cpu = smp_processor_id(); unsigned int x; if (!val) return; - cgroup_rstat_updated(memcg->css.cgroup, smp_processor_id()); + cgroup_rstat_updated(memcg->css.cgroup, cpu); + + for (; memcg; memcg = parent_mem_cgroup(memcg)) { + x = __this_cpu_add_return(memcg->vmstats_percpu->stats_updates, + abs(val)); + + if (x < MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH) + continue; - x = __this_cpu_add_return(stats_updates, abs(val)); - if (x > MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH) { /* - * If stats_flush_threshold exceeds the threshold - * (>num_online_cpus()), cgroup stats update will be triggered - * in __mem_cgroup_flush_stats(). Increasing this var further - * is redundant and simply adds overhead in atomic update. + * If @memcg is already flush-able, increasing stats_updates is + * redundant. Avoid the overhead of the atomic update. */ - if (atomic_read(&stats_flush_threshold) <= num_online_cpus()) - atomic_add(x / MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH, &stats_flush_threshold); - __this_cpu_write(stats_updates, 0); + if (!memcg_should_flush_stats(memcg)) + atomic64_add(x, &memcg->vmstats->stats_updates); + __this_cpu_write(memcg->vmstats_percpu->stats_updates, 0); } } @@ -727,13 +742,12 @@ static void do_flush_stats(void) cgroup_rstat_flush(root_mem_cgroup->css.cgroup); - atomic_set(&stats_flush_threshold, 0); atomic_set(&stats_flush_ongoing, 0); } void mem_cgroup_flush_stats(void) { - if (atomic_read(&stats_flush_threshold) > num_online_cpus()) + if (memcg_should_flush_stats(root_mem_cgroup)) do_flush_stats(); } @@ -747,8 +761,8 @@ void mem_cgroup_flush_stats_ratelimited(void) static void flush_memcg_stats_dwork(struct work_struct *w) { /* - * Always flush here so that flushing in latency-sensitive paths is - * as cheap as possible. + * Deliberately ignore memcg_should_flush_stats() here so that flushing + * in latency-sensitive paths is as cheap as possible. */ do_flush_stats(); queue_delayed_work(system_unbound_wq, &stats_flush_dwork, FLUSH_TIME); @@ -5622,6 +5636,9 @@ static void mem_cgroup_css_rstat_flush(struct cgroup_subsys_state *css, int cpu) } } } + /* We are in a per-cpu loop here, only do the atomic write once */ + if (atomic64_read(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates)) + atomic64_set(&memcg->vmstats->stats_updates, 0); } #ifdef CONFIG_MMU
A global counter for the magnitude of memcg stats update is maintained on the memcg side to avoid invoking rstat flushes when the pending updates are not significant. This avoids unnecessary flushes, which are not very cheap even if there isn't a lot of stats to flush. It also avoids unnecessary lock contention on the underlying global rstat lock. Make this threshold per-memcg. The scheme is followed where percpu (now also per-memcg) counters are incremented in the update path, and only propagated to per-memcg atomics when they exceed a certain threshold. This provides two benefits: (a) On large machines with a lot of memcgs, the global threshold can be reached relatively fast, so guarding the underlying lock becomes less effective. Making the threshold per-memcg avoids this. (b) Having a global threshold makes it hard to do subtree flushes, as we cannot reset the global counter except for a full flush. Per-memcg counters removes this as a blocker from doing subtree flushes, which helps avoid unnecessary work when the stats of a small subtree are needed. Nothing is free, of course. This comes at a cost: (a) A new per-cpu counter per memcg, consuming NR_CPUS * NR_MEMCGS * 4 bytes. (b) More work on the update side, although in the common case it will only be percpu counter updates. The amount of work scales with the number of ancestors (i.e. tree depth). This is not a new concept, adding a cgroup to the rstat tree involves a parent loop, so is charging. Testing in a later patch shows this doesn't introduce significant regressions. (c) The error margin in the stats for the system as a whole increases from NR_CPUS * MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH to NR_CPUS * MEMCG_CHARGE_BATCH * NR_MEMCGS. This is probably fine because we have a similar per-memcg error in charges coming from percpu stocks, and we have a periodic flusher that makes sure we always flush all the stats every 2s anyway. This patch was tested to make sure no significant regressions are introduced on the update path as follows. In a cgroup that is 4 levels deep (/sys/fs/cgroup/a/b/c/d), the following benchmarks were ran: (a) neper [1] with 1000 flows and 100 threads (single machine). The values in the table are the average of server and client throughputs in mbps after 30 iterations, each running for 30s: tcp_rr tcp_stream Base 9504218.56 357366.84 Patched 9656205.68 356978.39 Delta +1.6% -0.1% Standard Deviation 0.95% 1.03% An increase in the performance of tcp_rr doesn't really make sense, but it's probably in the noise. The same tests were ran with 1 flow and 1 thread but the throughput was too noisy to make any conclusions (the averages did not show regressions nonetheless). Looking at perf for one iteration of the above test, __mod_memcg_state() (which is where memcg_rstat_updated() is called) does not show up at all without this patch, but it shows up with this patch as 1.06% for tcp_rr and 0.36% for tcp_stream. (b) Running "stress-ng --vm 0 -t 1m --times --perf". I don't understand stress-ng very well, so I am not sure that's the best way to test this, but it spawns 384 workers and spits a lot of metrics which looks nice :) I picked a few ones that seem to be relevant to the stats update path. I also included cache misses as this patch introduce more atomics that may bounce between cpu caches: Metric Base Patched Delta Cache Misses 3.394 B/sec 3.433 B/sec +1.14% Cache L1D Read 0.148 T/sec 0.154 T/sec +4.05% Cache L1D Read Miss 20.430 B/sec 21.820 B/sec +6.8% Page Faults Total 4.304 M/sec 4.535 M/sec +5.4% Page Faults Minor 4.304 M/sec 4.535 M/sec +5.4% Page Faults Major 18.794 /sec 0.000 /sec Kmalloc 0.153 M/sec 0.152 M/sec -0.65% Kfree 0.152 M/sec 0.153 M/sec +0.65% MM Page Alloc 4.640 M/sec 4.898 M/sec +5.56% MM Page Free 4.639 M/sec 4.897 M/sec +5.56% Lock Contention Begin 0.362 M/sec 0.479 M/sec +32.32% Lock Contention End 0.362 M/sec 0.479 M/sec +32.32% page-cache add 238.057 /sec 0.000 /sec page-cache del 6.265 /sec 6.267 /sec -0.03% This is only using a single run in each case. I am not sure what to make out of most of these numbers, but they mostly seem in the noise (some better, some worse). The lock contention numbers are interesting. I am not sure if higher is better or worse here. No new locks or lock sections are introduced by this patch either way. Looking at perf, __mod_memcg_state() shows up as 0.00% with and without this patch. This is suspicious, but I verified while stress-ng is running that all the threads are in the right cgroup. [1]https://github.com/google/neper Signed-off-by: Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@google.com> --- mm/memcontrol.c | 49 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------------- 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)