Re: [rfc patch 0/6] mm: memcg naturalization

From: Johannes Weiner
Date: Mon May 16 2011 - 06:58:11 EST


On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 04:00:34PM +0530, Balbir Singh wrote:
> * Johannes Weiner <hannes@xxxxxxxxxxx> [2011-05-12 16:53:52]:
>
> > Hi!
> >
> > Here is a patch series that is a result of the memcg discussions on
> > LSF (memcg-aware global reclaim, global lru removal, struct
> > page_cgroup reduction, soft limit implementation) and the recent
> > feature discussions on linux-mm.
> >
> > The long-term idea is to have memcgs no longer bolted to the side of
> > the mm code, but integrate it as much as possible such that there is a
> > native understanding of containers, and that the traditional !memcg
> > setup is just a singular group. This series is an approach in that
> > direction.
> >
> > It is a rather early snapshot, WIP, barely tested etc., but I wanted
> > to get your opinions before further pursuing it. It is also part of
> > my counter-argument to the proposals of adding memcg-reclaim-related
> > user interfaces at this point in time, so I wanted to push this out
> > the door before things are merged into .40.
> >
> > The patches are quite big, I am still looking for things to factor and
> > split out, sorry for this. Documentation is on its way as well ;)
> >
> > #1 and #2 are boring preparational work. #3 makes traditional reclaim
> > in vmscan.c memcg-aware, which is a prerequisite for both removal of
> > the global lru in #5 and the way I reimplemented soft limit reclaim in
> > #6.
>
> A large part of the acceptance would be based on what the test results
> for common mm benchmarks show.

I will try to ensure the following things:

1. will not degrade performance on !CONFIG_MEMCG kernels

2. will not degrade performance on CONFIG_MEMCG kernels without
configured memcgs. This might be the most important one as most
desktop/server distributions enable the memory controller per default

3. will not degrade overall performance of workloads running
concurrently in separate memory control groups. I expect some shifts,
however, that even out performance differences.

Please let me know what you consider common mm benchmarks.

Thanks!

Hannes
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