Re: [RFC] How to handle the rules engine for cgroups

From: KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki
Date: Thu Jul 03 2008 - 20:30:04 EST


On Thu, 3 Jul 2008 11:54:46 -0400
Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Thu, Jul 03, 2008 at 10:19:57AM +0900, KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki wrote:
> > On Tue, 1 Jul 2008 15:11:26 -0400
> > Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > - How to handle delays in rule exectuion?
> > > - For example, if an "exec" happens and by the time process is moved to
> > > right group, it might have forked off few more processes or might
> > > have done quite some amount of memory allocation which will be
> > > charged to the wring group. Or, newly exec process might get
> > > killed in existing cgroup because of lack of memory (despite the
> > > fact that destination cgroup has sufficient memory).
> > >
> > Hmm, can't we rework the process event connector to use some reliable
> > fast interface besides netlink ? (I mean an interface like eventpoll.)
> > (Or enhance netlink ? ;)
>
> I see following text in netlink man page.
>
> "However, reliable transmissions from kernel to user are impossible in
> any case. The kernel can’t send a netlink message if the socket buffer
> is full: the message will be dropped and the kernel and the userspace
> process will no longer have the same view of kernel state. It is up to
> the application to detect when this happens (via the ENOBUFS error
> returned by recvmsg(2)) and resynchronize."
>
> So at the end of the day, it looks like unreliability comes from the
> fact that we can not allocate memory currently so we will discard the
> packet.
>
> Are there alternatives as compared to dropping packets?
>
If it's just problem of memory allocation, preallocate socket buffer and
use it later, like radix_tree_preload().
==
foo() {
if (preallocate())
return -ENOBUFS;

.......
proc_xxxx_connector();
}
==
(this means setuid() will return -ENOBUFS, undocumented error code.)

But af_netlink layer have another cause of dropping packets
1. copying skb at broadcast.
2. recv buffer over run..

(2) is not avoidable in the kernel.


> - Let sender cache the packet and retry later. So maybe netlink layer
> can return error if packet can not be queued and connector can cache the
> event and try sending it later. (Hopefully later memory situation became
> better because of OOM or some process exited or something else...).
>
> This looks like a band-aid to handle the temporary congestion kind of
> problems. Will not be able to help if consumer is inherently slow and
> event generation is faster.
>
> This probably can be one possible enhancement to connector, but at the end
> of the day, any kind of user space daemon will have to accept the fact
> that packets can be dropped, leading to lost events. Detect that situation
> (using ENOBUFS) and then let admin know about it (logging). I am not sure
> what admin is supposed to do after that.
>
I'm not either ;)

> I am CCing Thomas Graf. He might have a better idea of netlink limitations
> and is there a way to overcome these.
>
> >
> > Because "a child inherits parent's" rule is very strong, I think the amount
> > of events we have to check is much less than we get report. Can't we add some
> > filter/assumption here ?
> >
>
> I am not sure if proc connector currently allows filtering of various
> events like fork, exec, exit etc. In a quick look it looks like it
> does not. But probably that can be worked out. Even then, it will just
> help reduce the number of messages queued for user space on that socket
> but will not take away the fact that messages can be dropped under
> memory pressure.
>
agreed.

> > BTW, the placement of proc_exec_connector() is not too late ? It seems memory for
> > creating exec-image is charged to original group...
> >
>
> As of today it should happen because newly execed process will run into
> same cgroup as parent. But that's what probably we need to avoid.
I think so.

> For example, if an admin has created three cgroups "database", "browser"
> "others" and a user launches "firefox" from shell (assuming shell is running
> originally in "others" cgroup), then any memory allocation for firefox should
> come from "browser" cgroup and not from "others".
>
yes.

> I am assuming that this will be a requirement for enterprise class
> systems. Would be good to know the experiences of people who are already
> doing some kind of work load management.
>

Thanks,
-Kame

> Thanks
> Vivek
>

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/