* why the kmalloc return fail when there is free physical address but return success after dropping page caches
@ 2016-05-18 2:38 baotiao
2016-05-18 8:45 ` Vlastimil Babka
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: baotiao @ 2016-05-18 2:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-mm
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1640 bytes --]
Hello every, I meet an interesting kernel memory problem. Can anyone help me explain what happen under the kernel
The machine's status is describe as blow:
the machine has 96 physical memory. And the real use memory is about 64G, and the page cache use about 32G. we also use the swap area, at that time we have about 10G(we set the swap max size to 32G). At that moment, we find xfs report
Apr 29 21:54:31 w-openstack86 kernel: XFS: possible memory allocation deadlock in kmem_alloc (mode:0x250)
after reading the source code. This message is display from this line
ptr = kmalloc(size, lflags); if (ptr || (flags & (KM_MAYFAIL|KM_NOSLEEP))) return ptr; if (!(++retries % 100)) xfs_err(NULL, "possible memory allocation deadlock in %s (mode:0x%x)", __func__, lflags); congestion_wait(BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50);
The error is cause by the kmalloc() function, there is not enough memory in the system. But there is still 32G page cache.
So I run
echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
to drop the page cache.
Then the system is fine. But I really don't know the reason. Why after I run drop_caches operation the kmalloc() function will success? I think even we use whole physical memory, but we only use 64 real momory, the 32G memory are page cache, further we have enough swap space. So why the kernel don't flush the page cache or the swap to reserved the kmalloc operation.
----------------------------------------
Github: https://github.com/baotiao
Blog: http://baotiao.github.io/
Stackoverflow: http://stackoverflow.com/users/634415/baotiao
Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=145231990
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: why the kmalloc return fail when there is free physical address but return success after dropping page caches
2016-05-18 2:38 why the kmalloc return fail when there is free physical address but return success after dropping page caches baotiao
@ 2016-05-18 8:45 ` Vlastimil Babka
2016-05-18 8:58 ` baotiao
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Vlastimil Babka @ 2016-05-18 8:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: baotiao; +Cc: linux-mm, Dave Chinner
[+CC Dave]
On 05/18/2016 04:38 AM, baotiao wrote:
> Hello every, I meet an interesting kernel memory problem. Can anyone
> help me explain what happen under the kernel
Which kernel version is that?
> The machine's status is describe as blow:
>
> the machine has 96 physical memory. And the real use memory is about
> 64G, and the page cache use about 32G. we also use the swap area, at
> that time we have about 10G(we set the swap max size to 32G). At that
> moment, we find xfs report
>
> |Apr 29 21:54:31 w-openstack86 kernel: XFS: possible memory allocation
> deadlock in kmem_alloc (mode:0x250) |
Just once, or many times?
> after reading the source code. This message is display from this line
>
> |ptr = kmalloc(size, lflags); if (ptr || (flags &
> (KM_MAYFAIL|KM_NOSLEEP))) return ptr; if (!(++retries % 100))
> xfs_err(NULL, "possible memory allocation deadlock in %s (mode:0x%x)",
> __func__, lflags); congestion_wait(BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); |
Any indication what is the size used here?
> The error is cause by the kmalloc() function, there is not enough memory
> in the system. But there is still 32G page cache.
>
> So I run
>
> |echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches |
>
> to drop the page cache.
>
> Then the system is fine.
Are you saying that the error message was repeated infinitely until you
did the drop_caches?
> But I really don't know the reason. Why after I
> run drop_caches operation the kmalloc() function will success? I think
> even we use whole physical memory, but we only use 64 real momory, the
> 32G memory are page cache, further we have enough swap space. So why the
> kernel don't flush the page cache or the swap to reserved the kmalloc
> operation.
>
>
> ----------------------------------------
> Github: https://github.com/baotiao
> Blog: http://baotiao.github.io/
> Stackoverflow: http://stackoverflow.com/users/634415/baotiao
> Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=145231990
>
--
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* Re: why the kmalloc return fail when there is free physical address but return success after dropping page caches
2016-05-18 8:45 ` Vlastimil Babka
@ 2016-05-18 8:58 ` baotiao
2016-05-18 14:41 ` Dave Chinner
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: baotiao @ 2016-05-18 8:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vlastimil Babka; +Cc: linux-mm, Dave Chinner
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Thanks for your reply
>> Hello every, I meet an interesting kernel memory problem. Can anyone
>> help me explain what happen under the kernel
>
> Which kernel version is that?
The kernel version is 3.10.0-327.4.5.el7.x86_64
>> The machine's status is describe as blow:
>>
>> the machine has 96 physical memory. And the real use memory is about
>> 64G, and the page cache use about 32G. we also use the swap area, at
>> that time we have about 10G(we set the swap max size to 32G). At that
>> moment, we find xfs report
>>
>> |Apr 29 21:54:31 w-openstack86 kernel: XFS: possible memory allocation
>> deadlock in kmem_alloc (mode:0x250) |
>
> Just once, or many times?
the message appear many times
from the code, I know that xfs will try 100 time of kmalloc() function
>> after reading the source code. This message is display from this line
>>
>> |ptr = kmalloc(size, lflags); if (ptr || (flags &
>> (KM_MAYFAIL|KM_NOSLEEP))) return ptr; if (!(++retries % 100))
>> xfs_err(NULL, "possible memory allocation deadlock in %s (mode:0x%x)",
>> __func__, lflags); congestion_wait(BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); |
>
> Any indication what is the size used here?
I don't know the size here, since it is called by the xfs.
>> The error is cause by the kmalloc() function, there is not enough memory
>> in the system. But there is still 32G page cache.
>>
>> So I run
>>
>> |echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches |
>>
>> to drop the page cache.
>>
>> Then the system is fine.
>
> Are you saying that the error message was repeated infinitely until you did the drop_caches?
No. the error message don't appear after I drop_cache.
Is it possible the reason is that even we have enough physical pages, but there pages is used for page cache, when user call kmalloc(), kmalloc() get page from kernel. kernel find that there is not enough pages, but some page is used for page cache, we can get some free pages from these page caches. so the kernel will call the kswapd to clear away some page cache. But it takes too long to get the free pages. And the function in xfs kmem_alloc don't set the flag __GFP_WAIT flag. So the kmem_alloc always return no enough memory, and print the error message.
----------------------------------------
Github: https://github.com/baotiao
Blog: http://baotiao.github.io/
Stackoverflow: http://stackoverflow.com/users/634415/baotiao
Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=145231990
> On May 18, 2016, at 16:45, Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@suse.cz> wrote:
>
> [+CC Dave]
>
> On 05/18/2016 04:38 AM, baotiao wrote:
>> Hello every, I meet an interesting kernel memory problem. Can anyone
>> help me explain what happen under the kernel
>
> Which kernel version is that?
>
>> The machine's status is describe as blow:
>>
>> the machine has 96 physical memory. And the real use memory is about
>> 64G, and the page cache use about 32G. we also use the swap area, at
>> that time we have about 10G(we set the swap max size to 32G). At that
>> moment, we find xfs report
>>
>> |Apr 29 21:54:31 w-openstack86 kernel: XFS: possible memory allocation
>> deadlock in kmem_alloc (mode:0x250) |
>
> Just once, or many times?
>
>> after reading the source code. This message is display from this line
>>
>> |ptr = kmalloc(size, lflags); if (ptr || (flags &
>> (KM_MAYFAIL|KM_NOSLEEP))) return ptr; if (!(++retries % 100))
>> xfs_err(NULL, "possible memory allocation deadlock in %s (mode:0x%x)",
>> __func__, lflags); congestion_wait(BLK_RW_ASYNC, HZ/50); |
>
> Any indication what is the size used here?
>
>> The error is cause by the kmalloc() function, there is not enough memory
>> in the system. But there is still 32G page cache.
>>
>> So I run
>>
>> |echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches |
>>
>> to drop the page cache.
>>
>> Then the system is fine.
>
> Are you saying that the error message was repeated infinitely until you did the drop_caches?
>
>> But I really don't know the reason. Why after I
>> run drop_caches operation the kmalloc() function will success? I think
>> even we use whole physical memory, but we only use 64 real momory, the
>> 32G memory are page cache, further we have enough swap space. So why the
>> kernel don't flush the page cache or the swap to reserved the kmalloc
>> operation.
>>
>>
>> ----------------------------------------
>> Github: https://github.com/baotiao
>> Blog: http://baotiao.github.io/
>> Stackoverflow: http://stackoverflow.com/users/634415/baotiao
>> Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=145231990
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: why the kmalloc return fail when there is free physical address but return success after dropping page caches
2016-05-18 8:58 ` baotiao
@ 2016-05-18 14:41 ` Dave Chinner
2016-05-25 9:25 ` 陈宗志
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Dave Chinner @ 2016-05-18 14:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: baotiao; +Cc: Vlastimil Babka, linux-mm
On Wed, May 18, 2016 at 04:58:31PM +0800, baotiao wrote:
> Thanks for your reply
>
> >> Hello every, I meet an interesting kernel memory problem. Can anyone
> >> help me explain what happen under the kernel
> >
> > Which kernel version is that?
>
> The kernel version is 3.10.0-327.4.5.el7.x86_64
RHEL7 kernel. Best you report the problem to your RH support
contact - the RHEL7 kernels are far different to upstream kernels..
> >> The machine's status is describe as blow:
> >>
> >> the machine has 96 physical memory. And the real use memory is about
> >> 64G, and the page cache use about 32G. we also use the swap area, at
> >> that time we have about 10G(we set the swap max size to 32G). At that
> >> moment, we find xfs report
> >>
> >> |Apr 29 21:54:31 w-openstack86 kernel: XFS: possible memory allocation
> >> deadlock in kmem_alloc (mode:0x250) |
Pretty sure that's a GFP_NOFS allocation context.
> > Just once, or many times?
>
> the message appear many times
> from the code, I know that xfs will try 100 time of kmalloc() function
The curent upstream kernels report much more information - process,
size of allocation, etc.
In general, the cause of such problems is memory fragmentation
preventing a large contiguous allocation from taking place (e.g.
when you try to read a file with millions of extents).
> >> in the system. But there is still 32G page cache.
> >>
> >> So I run
> >>
> >> |echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches |
> >>
> >> to drop the page cache.
> >>
> >> Then the system is fine.
> >
> > Are you saying that the error message was repeated infinitely until you did the drop_caches?
>
>
> No. the error message don't appear after I drop_cache.
Of course - freeing memory will cause contiguous free space to
reform. then the allocation will succeed.
IIRC, the reason the system can't recover itself is that memory
compaction is not triggered from GFP_NOFS allocation context, which
means memory reclaim won't try to create contiguous regions by
moving things around and hence the allocation will not succeed until
a significant amount of memory is freed by some other trigger....
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
david@fromorbit.com
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* Re: why the kmalloc return fail when there is free physical address but return success after dropping page caches
2016-05-18 14:41 ` Dave Chinner
@ 2016-05-25 9:25 ` 陈宗志
0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: 陈宗志 @ 2016-05-25 9:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Dave Chinner; +Cc: Vlastimil Babka, linux-mm
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5524 bytes --]
Hi Dave
> >> The machine's status is describe as blow:
> >>
> >> the machine has 96 physical memory. And the real use memory is about
> >> 64G, and the page cache use about 32G. we also use the swap area, at
> >> that time we have about 10G(we set the swap max size to 32G). At that
> >> moment, we find xfs report
> >>
> >> |Apr 29 21:54:31 w-openstack86 kernel: XFS: possible memory allocation
> >> deadlock in kmem_alloc (mode:0x250) |
Pretty sure that's a GFP_NOFS allocation context.
You are right, it is a GFP_NOFS operator from the xfs, xfs use GFP_NOFS
flag to avoid recursive filesystem call
> > Just once, or many times?
>
> the message appear many times
> from the code, I know that xfs will try 100 time of kmalloc() function
The curent upstream kernels report much more information - process,
size of allocation, etc.
In general, the cause of such problems is memory fragmentation
preventing a large contiguous allocation from taking place (e.g.
when you try to read a file with millions of extents).
> >> in the system. But there is still 32G page cache.
> >>
> >> So I run
> >>
> >> |echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches |
> >>
> >> to drop the page cache.
> >>
> >> Then the system is fine.
> >
> > Are you saying that the error message was repeated infinitely until you
did the drop_caches?
>
>
> No. the error message don't appear after I drop_cache.
Yes, you are right, before I echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches, the
/proc/buddyinfo is list blow:
Node 0, zone DMA 0 0 0 1 2 1 1
0 1 1 3
Node 0, zone DMA32 2983 2230 1037 290 121 63 47
61 16 0 0
Node 0, zone Normal 13707 1126 285 268 291 160 64
21 11 0 0
Node 1, zone Normal 10678 5041 1167 705 316 158 61
22 0 0 0
after the operator the /proc/buddyinfo is list blow:
Node 0, zone DMA 0 0 0 1 2 1 1
0 1 1 3
Node 0, zone DMA32 61091 22791 3659 348 169 81 89
63 16 0 0
Node 0, zone Normal 781723 532596 246195 57076 9853 4061 1922
799 217 19 0
Node 1, zone Normal 334903 138984 49608 6929 2770 1603 843
447 232 2 0
we can find that after the operator, we get more large size pages
beside the /proc/buddyinfo, is there any other command the get the memory
fragmentation info?
And beside the drop_caches operator, is there any other command can avoid
the memory fragmentation?
IIRC, the reason the system can't recover itself is that memory
compaction is not triggered from GFP_NOFS allocation context, which
means memory reclaim won't try to create contiguous regions by
moving things around and hence the allocation will not succeed until
a significant amount of memory is freed by some other trigger....
The GFP_NOFS will not triggered memory compaction, where can I find the
logic in kernel source code?
thank you
On Wed, May 18, 2016 at 10:41 PM, Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com> wrote:
> On Wed, May 18, 2016 at 04:58:31PM +0800, baotiao wrote:
> > Thanks for your reply
> >
> > >> Hello every, I meet an interesting kernel memory problem. Can anyone
> > >> help me explain what happen under the kernel
> > >
> > > Which kernel version is that?
> >
> > The kernel version is 3.10.0-327.4.5.el7.x86_64
>
> RHEL7 kernel. Best you report the problem to your RH support
> contact - the RHEL7 kernels are far different to upstream kernels..
>
> > >> The machine's status is describe as blow:
> > >>
> > >> the machine has 96 physical memory. And the real use memory is about
> > >> 64G, and the page cache use about 32G. we also use the swap area, at
> > >> that time we have about 10G(we set the swap max size to 32G). At that
> > >> moment, we find xfs report
> > >>
> > >> |Apr 29 21:54:31 w-openstack86 kernel: XFS: possible memory allocation
> > >> deadlock in kmem_alloc (mode:0x250) |
>
> Pretty sure that's a GFP_NOFS allocation context.
>
> > > Just once, or many times?
> >
> > the message appear many times
> > from the code, I know that xfs will try 100 time of kmalloc() function
>
> The curent upstream kernels report much more information - process,
> size of allocation, etc.
>
> In general, the cause of such problems is memory fragmentation
> preventing a large contiguous allocation from taking place (e.g.
> when you try to read a file with millions of extents).
>
> > >> in the system. But there is still 32G page cache.
> > >>
> > >> So I run
> > >>
> > >> |echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches |
> > >>
> > >> to drop the page cache.
> > >>
> > >> Then the system is fine.
> > >
> > > Are you saying that the error message was repeated infinitely until
> you did the drop_caches?
> >
> >
> > No. the error message don't appear after I drop_cache.
>
> Of course - freeing memory will cause contiguous free space to
> reform. then the allocation will succeed.
>
> IIRC, the reason the system can't recover itself is that memory
> compaction is not triggered from GFP_NOFS allocation context, which
> means memory reclaim won't try to create contiguous regions by
> moving things around and hence the allocation will not succeed until
> a significant amount of memory is freed by some other trigger....
>
> Cheers,
>
> Dave.
> --
> Dave Chinner
> david@fromorbit.com
>
--
---
Blog: http://www.chenzongzhi.info
Twitter: https://twitter.com/baotiao <https://twitter.com/#%21/baotiao>
Git: https://github.com/baotiao
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2016-05-18 2:38 why the kmalloc return fail when there is free physical address but return success after dropping page caches baotiao
2016-05-18 8:45 ` Vlastimil Babka
2016-05-18 8:58 ` baotiao
2016-05-18 14:41 ` Dave Chinner
2016-05-25 9:25 ` 陈宗志
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