[PATCH 0/5] prevent OOM triggered by TTM
Christian König
christian.koenig at amd.com
Wed Feb 7 13:22:40 UTC 2018
> Understood, but why is that?
Well because customers requested it :)
What we try to do here is having a parameter which says when less than x
megabytes of memory are left then fail the allocation.
This is basically to prevent buggy applications which try to allocate as
much memory as possible until they receive an -ENOMEM from running into
the OOM killer.
> That's true, but with VRAM, TTM overcommits swap space which may lead
> to ugly memory allocation failures at hibernate time.
Yeah, that is exactly the reason why I said that Roger should disable
the limit during suspend swap out :)
Regards,
Christian.
Am 07.02.2018 um 14:17 schrieb Thomas Hellstrom:
> Hi, Roger.
>
> On 02/07/2018 09:25 AM, He, Roger wrote:
>> Why should TTM be different in that aspect? It would be good to
>> know your reasoning WRT this?
>>
>> Now, in TTM struct ttm_bo_device it already has member no_retry to
>> indicate your option.
>> If you prefer no OOM triggered by TTM, set it as true. The default is
>> false to keep original behavior.
>> AMD prefers return value of no memory rather than OOM for now.
>
> Understood, but why is that? I mean just because TTM doesn't invoke
> the OOM killer, that doesn't mean that the process will, the next
> millisecond, page in a number of pages and invoke it? So this
> mechanism would be pretty susceptible to races?
>> One thing I looked at at one point was to have TTM do the
>> swapping itself instead of handing it off to the shmem system. That
>> way we could pre-allocate swap entries for all swappable (BO) memory,
>> making sure that we wouldn't run out of swap space when,
>>
>> I prefer current mechanism of swap out. At the beginning the swapped
>> pages stay in system memory by shmem until OS move to status with
>> high memory pressure, that has an obvious advantage. For example, if
>> the BO is swapped out into shmem, but not really be flushed into swap
>> disk. When validate it and swap in it at this moment, the overhead is
>> small compared to swap in from disk.
>
> But that is true for a page handed off to the swap-cache as well. It
> won't be immediately flushed to disc, only when the swap cache is shrunk.
>
>> In addition, No need swap space reservation for TTM pages when
>> allocation since swap disk is shared not only for TTM exclusive.
>
> That's true, but with VRAM, TTM overcommits swap space which may lead
> to ugly memory allocation failures at hibernate time.
>
>> So again we provide a flag no_retry in struct ttm_bo_device to let
>> driver set according to its request.
>
> Thanks,
> Thomas
>
>
>>
>>
>> Thanks
>> Roger(Hongbo.He)
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Thomas Hellstrom [mailto:thomas at shipmail.org]
>> Sent: Wednesday, February 07, 2018 2:43 PM
>> To: He, Roger <Hongbo.He at amd.com>; amd-gfx at lists.freedesktop.org;
>> dri-devel at lists.freedesktop.org
>> Cc: Koenig, Christian <Christian.Koenig at amd.com>
>> Subject: Re: [PATCH 0/5] prevent OOM triggered by TTM
>>
>> Hi, Roger,
>>
>> On 02/06/2018 10:04 AM, Roger He wrote:
>>> currently ttm code has no any allocation limit. So it allows pages
>>> allocatation unlimited until OOM. Because if swap space is full of
>>> swapped pages and then system memory will be filled up with ttm pages.
>>> and then any memory allocation request will trigger OOM.
>>>
>> I'm a bit curious, isn't this the way things are supposed to work on
>> a linux system?
>> If all memory resources are used up, the OOM killer will kill the
>> most memory hungry (perhaps rogue) process rather than processes
>> being nice and try to find out themselves whether allocations will
>> succeed?
>> Why should TTM be different in that aspect? It would be good to know
>> your reasoning WRT this?
>>
>> Admittedly, graphics process OOM memory accounting doesn't work very
>> well, due to not all BOs not being CPU mapped, but it looks like
>> there is recent work towards fixing this?
>>
>> One thing I looked at at one point was to have TTM do the swapping
>> itself instead of handing it off to the shmem system. That way we
>> could pre-allocate swap entries for all swappable (BO) memory, making
>> sure that we wouldn't run out of swap space when, for example,
>> hibernating and that would also limit the pinned non-swappable memory
>> (from TTM driver kernel allocations for example) to half the system
>> memory resources.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Thomas
>>
>
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