[PATCH v7 0/4] Charge loop device i/o to issuing cgroup

From: Dan Schatzberg
Date: Mon Aug 24 2020 - 11:38:17 EST


Much of the discussion about this has died down. There's been a
concern raised that we could generalize infrastructure across loop,
md, etc. This may be possible, in the future, but it isn't clear to me
how this would look like. I'm inclined to fix the existing issue with
loop devices now (this is a problem we hit at FB) and address
consolidation with other cases if and when those need to be addressed.

Note that patch 2 in this series (mm: support nesting
memalloc_use_memcg()) has also been submitted by Roman Guschchin to
the mm tree and can be seen here:
http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/2008.2/09214.html - I
include it here for completeness, but this series works with either
version of the patch.

Changes since V7:

* Rebased against linus's branch

Changes since V6:

* Added separate spinlock for worker synchronization
* Minor style changes

Changes since V5:

* Fixed a missing css_put when failing to allocate a worker
* Minor style changes

Changes since V4:

Only patches 1 and 2 have changed.

* Fixed irq lock ordering bug
* Simplified loop detach
* Added support for nesting memalloc_use_memcg

Changes since V3:

* Fix race on loop device destruction and deferred worker cleanup
* Ensure charge on shmem_swapin_page works just like getpage
* Minor style changes

Changes since V2:

* Deferred destruction of workqueue items so in the common case there
is no allocation needed

Changes since V1:

* Split out and reordered patches so cgroup charging changes are
separate from kworker -> workqueue change

* Add mem_css to struct loop_cmd to simplify logic

The loop device runs all i/o to the backing file on a separate kworker
thread which results in all i/o being charged to the root cgroup. This
allows a loop device to be used to trivially bypass resource limits
and other policy. This patch series fixes this gap in accounting.

A simple script to demonstrate this behavior on cgroupv2 machine:

'''
#!/bin/bash
set -e

CGROUP=/sys/fs/cgroup/test.slice
LOOP_DEV=/dev/loop0

if [[ ! -d $CGROUP ]]
then
sudo mkdir $CGROUP
fi

grep oom_kill $CGROUP/memory.events

# Set a memory limit, write more than that limit to tmpfs -> OOM kill
sudo unshare -m bash -c "
echo \$\$ > $CGROUP/cgroup.procs;
echo 0 > $CGROUP/memory.swap.max;
echo 64M > $CGROUP/memory.max;
mount -t tmpfs -o size=512m tmpfs /tmp;
dd if=/dev/zero of=/tmp/file bs=1M count=256" || true

grep oom_kill $CGROUP/memory.events

# Set a memory limit, write more than that limit through loopback
# device -> no OOM kill
sudo unshare -m bash -c "
echo \$\$ > $CGROUP/cgroup.procs;
echo 0 > $CGROUP/memory.swap.max;
echo 64M > $CGROUP/memory.max;
mount -t tmpfs -o size=512m tmpfs /tmp;
truncate -s 512m /tmp/backing_file
losetup $LOOP_DEV /tmp/backing_file
dd if=/dev/zero of=$LOOP_DEV bs=1M count=256;
losetup -D $LOOP_DEV" || true

grep oom_kill $CGROUP/memory.events
'''

Naively charging cgroups could result in priority inversions through
the single kworker thread in the case where multiple cgroups are
reading/writing to the same loop device. This patch series does some
minor modification to the loop driver so that each cgroup can make
forward progress independently to avoid this inversion.

With this patch series applied, the above script triggers OOM kills
when writing through the loop device as expected.

Dan Schatzberg (3):
loop: Use worker per cgroup instead of kworker
mm: Charge active memcg when no mm is set
loop: Charge i/o to mem and blk cg

Johannes Weiner (1):
mm: support nesting memalloc_use_memcg()

drivers/block/loop.c | 248 ++++++++++++++++++++++-----
drivers/block/loop.h | 15 +-
fs/buffer.c | 6 +-
fs/notify/fanotify/fanotify.c | 5 +-
fs/notify/inotify/inotify_fsnotify.c | 5 +-
include/linux/memcontrol.h | 6 +
include/linux/sched/mm.h | 28 +--
kernel/cgroup/cgroup.c | 1 +
mm/memcontrol.c | 17 +-
mm/shmem.c | 4 +-
10 files changed, 253 insertions(+), 82 deletions(-)

--
2.24.1