Re: [PATCH RFC v2 0/4] mm/ksm: add option to automerge VMAs

From: Oleksandr Natalenko
Date: Wed May 15 2019 - 03:39:13 EST


Hi.

On Wed, May 15, 2019 at 08:53:11AM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote:
> On Wed 15-05-19 08:25:23, Oleksandr Natalenko wrote:
> [...]
> > > > Please make sure to describe a usecase that warrants adding a new
> > > > interface we have to maintain for ever.
> >
> > I think of two major consumers of this interface:
> >
> > 1) hosts, that run containers, especially similar ones and especially in
> > a trusted environment;
> >
> > 2) heavy applications, that can be run in multiple instances, not
> > limited to opensource ones like Firefox, but also those that cannot be
> > modified.
>
> This is way too generic. Please provide something more specific. Ideally
> with numbers. Why those usecases cannot use an existing interfaces.
> Remember you are trying to add a new user interface which we will have
> to maintain for ever.

For my current setup with 2 Firefox instances I get 100 to 200 MiB saved
for the second instance depending on the amount of tabs.

1 FF instance with 15 tabs:

$ echo "$(cat /sys/kernel/mm/ksm/pages_sharing) * 4 / 1024" | bc
410

2 FF instances, second one has 12 tabs (all the tabs are different):

$ echo "$(cat /sys/kernel/mm/ksm/pages_sharing) * 4 / 1024" | bc
592

At the very moment I do not have specific numbers for containerised
workload, but those should be similar in case the containers share
similar/same runtime (like multiple Node.js containers etc).

Answering your question regarding using existing interfaces, since
there's only one, madvise(2), this requires modifying all the
applications one wants to de-duplicate. In case of containers with
arbitrary content or in case of binary-only apps this is pretty hard if
not impossible to do properly.

> I will try to comment on the interface itself later. But I have to say
> that I am not impressed. Abusing sysfs for per process features is quite
> gross to be honest.

Sure, please do.

Thanks for your time and inputs.

--
Best regards,
Oleksandr Natalenko (post-factum)
Senior Software Maintenance Engineer