1 /* 2 * Linux VM pressure 3 * 4 * Copyright 2012 Linaro Ltd. 5 * Anton Vorontsov <anton.vorontsov@linaro.org> 6 * 7 * Based on ideas from Andrew Morton, David Rientjes, KOSAKI Motohiro, 8 * Leonid Moiseichuk, Mel Gorman, Minchan Kim and Pekka Enberg. 9 * 10 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it 11 * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as published 12 * by the Free Software Foundation. 13 */ 14 15 #include <linux/cgroup.h> 16 #include <linux/fs.h> 17 #include <linux/log2.h> 18 #include <linux/sched.h> 19 #include <linux/mm.h> 20 #include <linux/vmstat.h> 21 #include <linux/eventfd.h> 22 #include <linux/swap.h> 23 #include <linux/printk.h> 24 #include <linux/vmpressure.h> 25 26 /* 27 * The window size (vmpressure_win) is the number of scanned pages before 28 * we try to analyze scanned/reclaimed ratio. So the window is used as a 29 * rate-limit tunable for the "low" level notification, and also for 30 * averaging the ratio for medium/critical levels. Using small window 31 * sizes can cause lot of false positives, but too big window size will 32 * delay the notifications. 33 * 34 * As the vmscan reclaimer logic works with chunks which are multiple of 35 * SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX, it makes sense to use it for the window size as well. 36 * 37 * TODO: Make the window size depend on machine size, as we do for vmstat 38 * thresholds. Currently we set it to 512 pages (2MB for 4KB pages). 39 */ 40 static const unsigned long vmpressure_win = SWAP_CLUSTER_MAX * 16; 41 42 /* 43 * These thresholds are used when we account memory pressure through 44 * scanned/reclaimed ratio. The current values were chosen empirically. In 45 * essence, they are percents: the higher the value, the more number 46 * unsuccessful reclaims there were. 47 */ 48 static const unsigned int vmpressure_level_med = 60; 49 static const unsigned int vmpressure_level_critical = 95; 50 51 /* 52 * When there are too little pages left to scan, vmpressure() may miss the 53 * critical pressure as number of pages will be less than "window size". 54 * However, in that case the vmscan priority will raise fast as the 55 * reclaimer will try to scan LRUs more deeply. 56 * 57 * The vmscan logic considers these special priorities: 58 * 59 * prio == DEF_PRIORITY (12): reclaimer starts with that value 60 * prio <= DEF_PRIORITY - 2 : kswapd becomes somewhat overwhelmed 61 * prio == 0 : close to OOM, kernel scans every page in an lru 62 * 63 * Any value in this range is acceptable for this tunable (i.e. from 12 to 64 * 0). Current value for the vmpressure_level_critical_prio is chosen 65 * empirically, but the number, in essence, means that we consider 66 * critical level when scanning depth is ~10% of the lru size (vmscan 67 * scans 'lru_size >> prio' pages, so it is actually 12.5%, or one 68 * eights). 69 */ 70 static const unsigned int vmpressure_level_critical_prio = ilog2(100 / 10); 71 72 static struct vmpressure *work_to_vmpressure(struct work_struct *work) 73 { 74 return container_of(work, struct vmpressure, work); 75 } 76 77 static struct vmpressure *cg_to_vmpressure(struct cgroup *cg) 78 { 79 return css_to_vmpressure(cgroup_subsys_state(cg, mem_cgroup_subsys_id)); 80 } 81 82 static struct vmpressure *vmpressure_parent(struct vmpressure *vmpr) 83 { 84 struct cgroup *cg = vmpressure_to_css(vmpr)->cgroup; 85 struct mem_cgroup *memcg = mem_cgroup_from_cont(cg); 86 87 memcg = parent_mem_cgroup(memcg); 88 if (!memcg) 89 return NULL; 90 return memcg_to_vmpressure(memcg); 91 } 92 93 enum vmpressure_levels { 94 VMPRESSURE_LOW = 0, 95 VMPRESSURE_MEDIUM, 96 VMPRESSURE_CRITICAL, 97 VMPRESSURE_NUM_LEVELS, 98 }; 99 100 static const char * const vmpressure_str_levels[] = { 101 [VMPRESSURE_LOW] = "low", 102 [VMPRESSURE_MEDIUM] = "medium", 103 [VMPRESSURE_CRITICAL] = "critical", 104 }; 105 106 static enum vmpressure_levels vmpressure_level(unsigned long pressure) 107 { 108 if (pressure >= vmpressure_level_critical) 109 return VMPRESSURE_CRITICAL; 110 else if (pressure >= vmpressure_level_med) 111 return VMPRESSURE_MEDIUM; 112 return VMPRESSURE_LOW; 113 } 114 115 static enum vmpressure_levels vmpressure_calc_level(unsigned long scanned, 116 unsigned long reclaimed) 117 { 118 unsigned long scale = scanned + reclaimed; 119 unsigned long pressure; 120 121 /* 122 * We calculate the ratio (in percents) of how many pages were 123 * scanned vs. reclaimed in a given time frame (window). Note that 124 * time is in VM reclaimer's "ticks", i.e. number of pages 125 * scanned. This makes it possible to set desired reaction time 126 * and serves as a ratelimit. 127 */ 128 pressure = scale - (reclaimed * scale / scanned); 129 pressure = pressure * 100 / scale; 130 131 pr_debug("%s: %3lu (s: %lu r: %lu)\n", __func__, pressure, 132 scanned, reclaimed); 133 134 return vmpressure_level(pressure); 135 } 136 137 struct vmpressure_event { 138 struct eventfd_ctx *efd; 139 enum vmpressure_levels level; 140 struct list_head node; 141 }; 142 143 static bool vmpressure_event(struct vmpressure *vmpr, 144 unsigned long scanned, unsigned long reclaimed) 145 { 146 struct vmpressure_event *ev; 147 enum vmpressure_levels level; 148 bool signalled = false; 149 150 level = vmpressure_calc_level(scanned, reclaimed); 151 152 mutex_lock(&vmpr->events_lock); 153 154 list_for_each_entry(ev, &vmpr->events, node) { 155 if (level >= ev->level) { 156 eventfd_signal(ev->efd, 1); 157 signalled = true; 158 } 159 } 160 161 mutex_unlock(&vmpr->events_lock); 162 163 return signalled; 164 } 165 166 static void vmpressure_work_fn(struct work_struct *work) 167 { 168 struct vmpressure *vmpr = work_to_vmpressure(work); 169 unsigned long scanned; 170 unsigned long reclaimed; 171 172 /* 173 * Several contexts might be calling vmpressure(), so it is 174 * possible that the work was rescheduled again before the old 175 * work context cleared the counters. In that case we will run 176 * just after the old work returns, but then scanned might be zero 177 * here. No need for any locks here since we don't care if 178 * vmpr->reclaimed is in sync. 179 */ 180 if (!vmpr->scanned) 181 return; 182 183 mutex_lock(&vmpr->sr_lock); 184 scanned = vmpr->scanned; 185 reclaimed = vmpr->reclaimed; 186 vmpr->scanned = 0; 187 vmpr->reclaimed = 0; 188 mutex_unlock(&vmpr->sr_lock); 189 190 do { 191 if (vmpressure_event(vmpr, scanned, reclaimed)) 192 break; 193 /* 194 * If not handled, propagate the event upward into the 195 * hierarchy. 196 */ 197 } while ((vmpr = vmpressure_parent(vmpr))); 198 } 199 200 /** 201 * vmpressure() - Account memory pressure through scanned/reclaimed ratio 202 * @gfp: reclaimer's gfp mask 203 * @memcg: cgroup memory controller handle 204 * @scanned: number of pages scanned 205 * @reclaimed: number of pages reclaimed 206 * 207 * This function should be called from the vmscan reclaim path to account 208 * "instantaneous" memory pressure (scanned/reclaimed ratio). The raw 209 * pressure index is then further refined and averaged over time. 210 * 211 * This function does not return any value. 212 */ 213 void vmpressure(gfp_t gfp, struct mem_cgroup *memcg, 214 unsigned long scanned, unsigned long reclaimed) 215 { 216 struct vmpressure *vmpr = memcg_to_vmpressure(memcg); 217 218 /* 219 * Here we only want to account pressure that userland is able to 220 * help us with. For example, suppose that DMA zone is under 221 * pressure; if we notify userland about that kind of pressure, 222 * then it will be mostly a waste as it will trigger unnecessary 223 * freeing of memory by userland (since userland is more likely to 224 * have HIGHMEM/MOVABLE pages instead of the DMA fallback). That 225 * is why we include only movable, highmem and FS/IO pages. 226 * Indirect reclaim (kswapd) sets sc->gfp_mask to GFP_KERNEL, so 227 * we account it too. 228 */ 229 if (!(gfp & (__GFP_HIGHMEM | __GFP_MOVABLE | __GFP_IO | __GFP_FS))) 230 return; 231 232 /* 233 * If we got here with no pages scanned, then that is an indicator 234 * that reclaimer was unable to find any shrinkable LRUs at the 235 * current scanning depth. But it does not mean that we should 236 * report the critical pressure, yet. If the scanning priority 237 * (scanning depth) goes too high (deep), we will be notified 238 * through vmpressure_prio(). But so far, keep calm. 239 */ 240 if (!scanned) 241 return; 242 243 mutex_lock(&vmpr->sr_lock); 244 vmpr->scanned += scanned; 245 vmpr->reclaimed += reclaimed; 246 scanned = vmpr->scanned; 247 mutex_unlock(&vmpr->sr_lock); 248 249 if (scanned < vmpressure_win || work_pending(&vmpr->work)) 250 return; 251 schedule_work(&vmpr->work); 252 } 253 254 /** 255 * vmpressure_prio() - Account memory pressure through reclaimer priority level 256 * @gfp: reclaimer's gfp mask 257 * @memcg: cgroup memory controller handle 258 * @prio: reclaimer's priority 259 * 260 * This function should be called from the reclaim path every time when 261 * the vmscan's reclaiming priority (scanning depth) changes. 262 * 263 * This function does not return any value. 264 */ 265 void vmpressure_prio(gfp_t gfp, struct mem_cgroup *memcg, int prio) 266 { 267 /* 268 * We only use prio for accounting critical level. For more info 269 * see comment for vmpressure_level_critical_prio variable above. 270 */ 271 if (prio > vmpressure_level_critical_prio) 272 return; 273 274 /* 275 * OK, the prio is below the threshold, updating vmpressure 276 * information before shrinker dives into long shrinking of long 277 * range vmscan. Passing scanned = vmpressure_win, reclaimed = 0 278 * to the vmpressure() basically means that we signal 'critical' 279 * level. 280 */ 281 vmpressure(gfp, memcg, vmpressure_win, 0); 282 } 283 284 /** 285 * vmpressure_register_event() - Bind vmpressure notifications to an eventfd 286 * @cg: cgroup that is interested in vmpressure notifications 287 * @cft: cgroup control files handle 288 * @eventfd: eventfd context to link notifications with 289 * @args: event arguments (used to set up a pressure level threshold) 290 * 291 * This function associates eventfd context with the vmpressure 292 * infrastructure, so that the notifications will be delivered to the 293 * @eventfd. The @args parameter is a string that denotes pressure level 294 * threshold (one of vmpressure_str_levels, i.e. "low", "medium", or 295 * "critical"). 296 * 297 * This function should not be used directly, just pass it to (struct 298 * cftype).register_event, and then cgroup core will handle everything by 299 * itself. 300 */ 301 int vmpressure_register_event(struct cgroup *cg, struct cftype *cft, 302 struct eventfd_ctx *eventfd, const char *args) 303 { 304 struct vmpressure *vmpr = cg_to_vmpressure(cg); 305 struct vmpressure_event *ev; 306 int level; 307 308 for (level = 0; level < VMPRESSURE_NUM_LEVELS; level++) { 309 if (!strcmp(vmpressure_str_levels[level], args)) 310 break; 311 } 312 313 if (level >= VMPRESSURE_NUM_LEVELS) 314 return -EINVAL; 315 316 ev = kzalloc(sizeof(*ev), GFP_KERNEL); 317 if (!ev) 318 return -ENOMEM; 319 320 ev->efd = eventfd; 321 ev->level = level; 322 323 mutex_lock(&vmpr->events_lock); 324 list_add(&ev->node, &vmpr->events); 325 mutex_unlock(&vmpr->events_lock); 326 327 return 0; 328 } 329 330 /** 331 * vmpressure_unregister_event() - Unbind eventfd from vmpressure 332 * @cg: cgroup handle 333 * @cft: cgroup control files handle 334 * @eventfd: eventfd context that was used to link vmpressure with the @cg 335 * 336 * This function does internal manipulations to detach the @eventfd from 337 * the vmpressure notifications, and then frees internal resources 338 * associated with the @eventfd (but the @eventfd itself is not freed). 339 * 340 * This function should not be used directly, just pass it to (struct 341 * cftype).unregister_event, and then cgroup core will handle everything 342 * by itself. 343 */ 344 void vmpressure_unregister_event(struct cgroup *cg, struct cftype *cft, 345 struct eventfd_ctx *eventfd) 346 { 347 struct vmpressure *vmpr = cg_to_vmpressure(cg); 348 struct vmpressure_event *ev; 349 350 mutex_lock(&vmpr->events_lock); 351 list_for_each_entry(ev, &vmpr->events, node) { 352 if (ev->efd != eventfd) 353 continue; 354 list_del(&ev->node); 355 kfree(ev); 356 break; 357 } 358 mutex_unlock(&vmpr->events_lock); 359 } 360 361 /** 362 * vmpressure_init() - Initialize vmpressure control structure 363 * @vmpr: Structure to be initialized 364 * 365 * This function should be called on every allocated vmpressure structure 366 * before any usage. 367 */ 368 void vmpressure_init(struct vmpressure *vmpr) 369 { 370 mutex_init(&vmpr->sr_lock); 371 mutex_init(&vmpr->events_lock); 372 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&vmpr->events); 373 INIT_WORK(&vmpr->work, vmpressure_work_fn); 374 } 375