From: Jiayuan Chen <jiayuan.chen@linux.dev>
To: SeongJae Park <sj@kernel.org>
Cc: damon@lists.linux.dev, Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>,
Shu Anzai <shu17az@gmail.com>,
Jiayuan Chen <jiayuan.chen@shopee.com>,
Quanmin Yan <yanquanmin1@huawei.com>,
linux-mm@kvack.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH 0/2] mm/damon/core: detect internal variation above max_nr_regions/2
Date: Fri, 22 May 2026 23:11:47 +0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <ddc3eb87-e34f-400f-a1d1-b807b340ff33@linux.dev> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20260522024228.87328-1-sj@kernel.org>
Hi, SJ
On 5/22/26 10:42 AM, SeongJae Park wrote:
> On Thu, 21 May 2026 23:07:11 +0800 Jiayuan Chen <jiayuan.chen@linux.dev> wrote:
>
>> Hi SJ,
>>
>> Thanks for taking a look. Quick replies inline.
>>
>>
>> On 5/21/26 10:30 PM, SeongJae Park wrote:
>>> Hello Jiayuan,
>>>
>>> On Thu, 21 May 2026 12:52:22 +0800 Jiayuan Chen <jiayuan.chen@linux.dev> wrote:
>>>
>>>> kdamond_split_regions() bails out early when nr_regions is already
>>>> above max_nr_regions / 2. A large region that picks up new internal
>>>> variation after that point never gets split, so we lose visibility
>>>> into its hot/cold structure.
>>>>
>>>> We hit this with damon-paddr on hugepage workloads and damon-vaddr
>>>> on processes that mmap a large anonymous range.
>>>>
>>>> On our production tree we added a current_nr_regions counter (no
>>>> good upstream home for it yet, so it's not in this series). We saw
>>>> nr_regions never getting close to max_nr_regions, and the picture of
>>>> the access pattern was too coarse.
>>> Is 'current_nr_regions' somewhat showing the number of DAMON regions? If so,
>>> you could also get the information from nr_regions field of damon_aggregated
>>> tracepoint. I'm wondering if you considered using that but found a problem
>>> that made you have to implement the internal change.
>>>
>>> I will be happy to help removing such downstream changes.
>>
>> Yes, same data as the nr_regions field in damon_aggregated. The downstream
>>
>> counter was just for convenience -- easier to cat a sysfs file than to wire
>>
>> up tracing. Even the tracepoint covers it, It's cost to much for
>> Grafana to just get
>>
>> a metrics by tracepoint.
> Makes sense. And I think this deserves to be upstreamed. Some minor
> modifications might be needed to your current implementation, though. Please
> feel free to send a patch to start the discussion, if you want.
On the sysfs counter -- agreed, same data as the tracepoint. I'll
look into a suitable location.
>>
>>>> Example with max_nr_regions == 1500. A target ends up with 799
>>>> small hot/cold regions plus one big region (an earlier merge
>>>> collapsed a uniformly-accessed range into a single piece):
>>>>
>>>> H:hot
>>>> C:cold
>>>>
>>>> r1 r2 r3 r800
>>>> HHHHHH|CCCCCC|HHHHHH|...|HHHHHH..........................|
>>>>
>>>> nr_regions = 800 > max_nr_regions / 2 = 750
>>>>
>>>> Now a cold subarea shows up inside r800:
>>>>
>>>> r1 r2 r3 r800
>>>> HHHHHH|CCCCCC|HHHHHH|...|HHHHHH........CCCCCC.............|
>>>>
>>>> The small regions can't merge with each other (their access counts
>>>> differ), so budget never frees up. r800 can't be split because
>>>> nr_regions > max_nr_regions / 2 returns early. The cold subarea
>>>> stays invisible.
>>> I agree this corner case could theoretically happen. But, would the small
>>> regions have the current pattern forever? On real world systems having dynamic
>>
>> I agree with the point that this is a corner case. But it's not
>> transient for us.
> Thank you for sharing this nice information.
>
>> On a production setup with max_nr_regions = 20000, nr_regions sits at
>> 11k-12k
>>
>> for extended periods. There are occasional bursts (e.g. from offline
>> pods), then things settle
>>
>> back without ever reclaiming the budget.
> Could you please clarify a little bit more? What is the occasional bursts, and
> how offline pods contribute to that? What "reclaiming the budget" means?
>
> Also, do you have some measurements that shows this problem and how much of it
> is removed by this series?
>
>>
>>> access pattern, I guess those small regions may not keep the shape forever, and
>>> give chance for the large region to be split. Am I missing something?
>>>
>>> My theory also implies that this kind of situation could happen at least
>>> sometimes for temporal periods. In other words, it could happens too
>>> frequently and too long to be problematic. But, in the case, maybe the user
>>> could mitigate the issue by increasing the max_nr_regions. I'm curious if you
>>> considered that direction and found a problem that I don't expect for now.
>>>
>>>> Patch 1 lets this path still split regions that just changed
>>>> (age == 0),
>>> Why 'age == 0' means it is a good candidate to split? Because it means its
>>> access frequency is anyway unstable? Or are there other reasons? More
>>> clarification would be helpful.
>>
>> Yes, age == 0 means the region's access count drifted past the merge
>> threshold in
>> the last aggregation -- the strongest signal it just changed internally.
>> Regions with age > 0 are stable; splitting them tends to oscillate (the next
>> merge cycle pulls the halves back together and we waste the budget).
> Thank you for confirming this. Yes, that sounds good approach to me. But
> because this is a core behavior, I'd like to be careful more than usual. I
> will spend more time at thinking if I'm missing something, and if this is the
> best approach. If you have measurements that I asked above and can share, that
> will also be helpful.
We considered selecting regions randomly past max/2 (which is what our
downstream tree does). Random selection converges to higher
nr_regions faster. We picked age == 0 for upstream because:
- It's DAMON's own signal that the region's nr_accesses just
crossed the merge threshold -- i.e. the access pattern is
currently unstable. Splitting an unstable region is more likely
to reveal new internal structure than splitting a stable region
- It's selective by design, so it leans conservative on a core
code path. In our tests it still reaches the effective
refinement we need (e.g. 160-180 at max_nr_regions = 200), just
more gradually than random selection would.
We thought a selective, signal-based filte.
>>>> up to whatever budget is left under max_nr_regions.
>>>> If a split turns out useless, the next merge cycle undoes it.
>>> I'm again curious why the user cannot just increase max_nr_regions.
>> It works as a workaround, but it isn't free: higher max means more sampling
>> work and more memory,
> It would depend on the real number of distinct access patterns. I understand
> the number is really high on your use case. Again, if you have measurements
> and could share, that will be very helpful.
>
>> and 20000 is the ceiling we actually want to live
>> with. Bumping to 30000 just so the splitter has room to make progress
>> between max/2 and max is wasteful -- we don't actually want to spend the
>> resources for 30000 regions.
> Makes sense.
>
>> The real issue isn't budget waste, it's that once nr_regions crosses max/2
>> the splitter has no recovery path -- it returns immediately even when
>> there's
>> variation worth refining, and merges don't help because the small regions
>> have different access counts. nr_regions just sits between max/2 and max,
>> and new variation inside a large region goes undetected. The patch gives
>> that path a way to keep refining within whatever budget remains, instead of
>> asking users to over-provision max.
> Yes, I agree. Nonetheless, as I mentioned above a couple of times, if you have
> and could share measurements that showing how big the problem is and how much
> of it this change can solve will be very helpful.
>
Our downstream paddr has per-cgroup tweaks, so I don't think those
numbers would be that meaningful for upstream review. Here's a clean
upstream-paddr reproducer instead.
paddr config:
```shell
ADMIN=/sys/kernel/mm/damon/admin
echo 1 > $ADMIN/kdamonds/nr_kdamonds
echo 1 > $ADMIN/kdamonds/0/contexts/nr_contexts
CTX=$ADMIN/kdamonds/0/contexts/0
echo paddr > $CTX/operations
# Using stress-ng for hot memory. Walking a 256M chunk takes around
# sample=50ms, aggr=1000ms, update=1s
echo 50000 > $CTX/monitoring_attrs/intervals/sample_us
echo 1000000 > $CTX/monitoring_attrs/intervals/aggr_us
echo 1000000 > $CTX/monitoring_attrs/intervals/update_us
# Without any cap nr_regions usually settles around 300+ on this
# workload, so max=200 makes the corner case easy to hit.
echo 10 > $CTX/monitoring_attrs/nr_regions/min
echo 200 > $CTX/monitoring_attrs/nr_regions/max
echo 1 > $CTX/targets/nr_targets
echo 1 > $CTX/targets/0/regions/nr_regions
echo 0 > $CTX/targets/0/regions/0/start
# 32C 16G machine
echo $((16 * 1024 * 1024 * 1024)) > $CTX/targets/0/regions/0/end
echo 0 > $CTX/schemes/nr_schemes
echo on > $ADMIN/kdamonds/0/state
```
Workload -- cold producer first, then a few hot producers right after,
so cold and hot pages get interleaved across physical memory:
```shell
# Cold: 4 GiB mmap, touch every page once, then sleep
python3 -c '
import mmap, time
size = 4 * 1024**3
m = mmap.mmap(-1, size, mmap.MAP_PRIVATE | mmap.MAP_ANONYMOUS)
for i in range(0, size, 4096):
m[i] = 1
print("cold allocated, sleeping")
time.sleep(86400)
' &
# Hot: 7 stress-ng instances, different vm-methods so the hot
# regions don't all look identical and merge into one
for m in walk-0a walk-1a walk-0d walk-1d incdec rand-set zero-one; do
stress-ng --vm 4 --vm-bytes 256M --vm-method $m --vm-keep --timeout 0 &
done
```
After running for an hour:
1.Without this series: nr_regions stays at ~100 (max/2), doesn't recover
2.With this series: nr_regions stays at 160-180
In real production this is actually pretty common. Workloads keep
changing state and creating new access patterns, so nr_regions
naturally tends to live above max/2 most of the time -- which is
exactly where the corner case kicks in. On our production box with
max_nr_regions = 20000, nr_regions sits at 11k-13k for long stretches
without ever clearing.
Without this series the effective ceiling is just max/2. Set max=200,
you cap at ~100. Set max=400, you cap at ~200.
The 1-hour reproducer above is admittedly a bit of a toy -- I set
max=200 to force the corner case without having to scale up the
workload -- but it shows the same pattern: once nr_regions crosses
max/2 it just stays there.
The offline-pod example I mentioned earlier is just one workload that
hits this. The mechanism isn't specific to that workload: any new
access pattern that shows up inside an existing region after
nr_regions crosses max/2 will stay invisible until something else
lowers nr_regions, which may never happen.
Thanks,
Jiayuan
> Thanks,
> SJ
>
> [...]
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2026-05-22 15:12 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 14+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2026-05-21 4:52 [PATCH 0/2] mm/damon/core: detect internal variation above max_nr_regions/2 Jiayuan Chen
2026-05-21 4:52 ` [PATCH 1/2] mm/damon/core: split age==0 regions when nr_regions exceeds max/2 Jiayuan Chen
2026-05-21 5:22 ` sashiko-bot
2026-05-21 6:34 ` Jiayuan Chen
2026-05-21 4:52 ` [PATCH 2/2] mm/damon/tests/core-kunit: test split above max_nr_regions/2 Jiayuan Chen
2026-05-21 5:41 ` sashiko-bot
2026-05-21 6:44 ` Jiayuan Chen
2026-05-21 14:30 ` [PATCH 0/2] mm/damon/core: detect internal variation " SeongJae Park
2026-05-21 15:07 ` Jiayuan Chen
2026-05-22 2:42 ` SeongJae Park
2026-05-22 15:11 ` Jiayuan Chen [this message]
2026-05-23 1:43 ` SeongJae Park
2026-05-25 8:09 ` Jiayuan Chen
2026-05-25 16:38 ` SeongJae Park
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