[PATCH 09/11] drm, cgroup: Introduce lgpu as DRM cgroup resource

Kenny Ho y2kenny at gmail.com
Fri Feb 21 05:59:55 UTC 2020


Thanks, I will take a look.

Regards,
Kenny

On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 1:38 PM Johannes Weiner <hannes at cmpxchg.org> wrote:
>
> On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 11:28:48AM -0500, Kenny Ho wrote:
> > On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 11:18 AM Johannes Weiner <hannes at cmpxchg.org> wrote:
> > >
> > > Yes, I'd go with absolute units when it comes to memory, because it's
> > > not a renewable resource like CPU and IO, and so we do have cliff
> > > behavior around the edge where you transition from ok to not-enough.
> > >
> > > memory.low is a bit in flux right now, so if anything is unclear
> > > around its semantics, please feel free to reach out.
> >
> > I am not familiar with the discussion, would you point me to a
> > relevant thread please?
>
> Here is a cleanup patch, not yet merged, that documents the exact
> semantics and behavioral considerations:
>
> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20191213192158.188939-3-hannes@cmpxchg.org/
>
> But the high-level idea is this: you assign each cgroup or cgroup
> subtree a chunk of the resource that it's guaranteed to be able to
> consume. It *can* consume beyond that threshold if available, but that
> overage may get reclaimed again if somebody else needs it instead.
>
> This allows you to do a ballpark distribution of the resource between
> different workloads, while the kernel retains the ability to optimize
> allocation of spare resources - because in practice, workload demand
> varies over time, workloads disappear and new ones start up etc.
>
> > In addition, is there some kind of order of preference for
> > implementing low vs high vs max?
>
> If you implement only one allocation model, the preference would be on
> memory.low. Limits are rigid and per definition waste resources, so in
> practice we're moving away from them.


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