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1==========================
2Memory Resource Controller
3==========================
4
5NOTE:
6      This document is hopelessly outdated and it asks for a complete
7      rewrite. It still contains a useful information so we are keeping it
8      here but make sure to check the current code if you need a deeper
9      understanding.
10
11NOTE:
12      The Memory Resource Controller has generically been referred to as the
13      memory controller in this document. Do not confuse memory controller
14      used here with the memory controller that is used in hardware.
15
16(For editors) In this document:
17      When we mention a cgroup (cgroupfs's directory) with memory controller,
18      we call it "memory cgroup". When you see git-log and source code, you'll
19      see patch's title and function names tend to use "memcg".
20      In this document, we avoid using it.
21
22Benefits and Purpose of the memory controller
23=============================================
24
25The memory controller isolates the memory behaviour of a group of tasks
26from the rest of the system. The article on LWN [12] mentions some probable
27uses of the memory controller. The memory controller can be used to
28
29a. Isolate an application or a group of applications
30   Memory-hungry applications can be isolated and limited to a smaller
31   amount of memory.
32b. Create a cgroup with a limited amount of memory; this can be used
33   as a good alternative to booting with mem=XXXX.
34c. Virtualization solutions can control the amount of memory they want
35   to assign to a virtual machine instance.
36d. A CD/DVD burner could control the amount of memory used by the
37   rest of the system to ensure that burning does not fail due to lack
38   of available memory.
39e. There are several other use cases; find one or use the controller just
40   for fun (to learn and hack on the VM subsystem).
41
42Current Status: linux-2.6.34-mmotm(development version of 2010/April)
43
44Features:
45
46 - accounting anonymous pages, file caches, swap caches usage and limiting them.
47 - pages are linked to per-memcg LRU exclusively, and there is no global LRU.
48 - optionally, memory+swap usage can be accounted and limited.
49 - hierarchical accounting
50 - soft limit
51 - moving (recharging) account at moving a task is selectable.
52 - usage threshold notifier
53 - memory pressure notifier
54 - oom-killer disable knob and oom-notifier
55 - Root cgroup has no limit controls.
56
57 Kernel memory support is a work in progress, and the current version provides
58 basically functionality. (See Section 2.7)
59
60Brief summary of control files.
61
62==================================== ==========================================
63 tasks				     attach a task(thread) and show list of
64				     threads
65 cgroup.procs			     show list of processes
66 cgroup.event_control		     an interface for event_fd()
67 memory.usage_in_bytes		     show current usage for memory
68				     (See 5.5 for details)
69 memory.memsw.usage_in_bytes	     show current usage for memory+Swap
70				     (See 5.5 for details)
71 memory.limit_in_bytes		     set/show limit of memory usage
72 memory.memsw.limit_in_bytes	     set/show limit of memory+Swap usage
73 memory.failcnt			     show the number of memory usage hits limits
74 memory.memsw.failcnt		     show the number of memory+Swap hits limits
75 memory.max_usage_in_bytes	     show max memory usage recorded
76 memory.memsw.max_usage_in_bytes     show max memory+Swap usage recorded
77 memory.soft_limit_in_bytes	     set/show soft limit of memory usage
78 memory.stat			     show various statistics
79 memory.use_hierarchy		     set/show hierarchical account enabled
80 memory.force_empty		     trigger forced page reclaim
81 memory.pressure_level		     set memory pressure notifications
82 memory.swappiness		     set/show swappiness parameter of vmscan
83				     (See sysctl's vm.swappiness)
84 memory.move_charge_at_immigrate     set/show controls of moving charges
85                                     This knob is deprecated and shouldn't be
86                                     used.
87 memory.oom_control		     set/show oom controls.
88 memory.numa_stat		     show the number of memory usage per numa
89				     node
90 memory.kmem.limit_in_bytes          set/show hard limit for kernel memory
91                                     This knob is deprecated and shouldn't be
92                                     used. It is planned that this be removed in
93                                     the foreseeable future.
94 memory.kmem.usage_in_bytes          show current kernel memory allocation
95 memory.kmem.failcnt                 show the number of kernel memory usage
96				     hits limits
97 memory.kmem.max_usage_in_bytes      show max kernel memory usage recorded
98
99 memory.kmem.tcp.limit_in_bytes      set/show hard limit for tcp buf memory
100 memory.kmem.tcp.usage_in_bytes      show current tcp buf memory allocation
101 memory.kmem.tcp.failcnt             show the number of tcp buf memory usage
102				     hits limits
103 memory.kmem.tcp.max_usage_in_bytes  show max tcp buf memory usage recorded
104==================================== ==========================================
105
1061. History
107==========
108
109The memory controller has a long history. A request for comments for the memory
110controller was posted by Balbir Singh [1]. At the time the RFC was posted
111there were several implementations for memory control. The goal of the
112RFC was to build consensus and agreement for the minimal features required
113for memory control. The first RSS controller was posted by Balbir Singh[2]
114in Feb 2007. Pavel Emelianov [3][4][5] has since posted three versions of the
115RSS controller. At OLS, at the resource management BoF, everyone suggested
116that we handle both page cache and RSS together. Another request was raised
117to allow user space handling of OOM. The current memory controller is
118at version 6; it combines both mapped (RSS) and unmapped Page
119Cache Control [11].
120
1212. Memory Control
122=================
123
124Memory is a unique resource in the sense that it is present in a limited
125amount. If a task requires a lot of CPU processing, the task can spread
126its processing over a period of hours, days, months or years, but with
127memory, the same physical memory needs to be reused to accomplish the task.
128
129The memory controller implementation has been divided into phases. These
130are:
131
1321. Memory controller
1332. mlock(2) controller
1343. Kernel user memory accounting and slab control
1354. user mappings length controller
136
137The memory controller is the first controller developed.
138
1392.1. Design
140-----------
141
142The core of the design is a counter called the page_counter. The
143page_counter tracks the current memory usage and limit of the group of
144processes associated with the controller. Each cgroup has a memory controller
145specific data structure (mem_cgroup) associated with it.
146
1472.2. Accounting
148---------------
149
150::
151
152		+--------------------+
153		|  mem_cgroup        |
154		|  (page_counter)    |
155		+--------------------+
156		 /            ^      \
157		/             |       \
158           +---------------+  |        +---------------+
159           | mm_struct     |  |....    | mm_struct     |
160           |               |  |        |               |
161           +---------------+  |        +---------------+
162                              |
163                              + --------------+
164                                              |
165           +---------------+           +------+--------+
166           | page          +---------->  page_cgroup|
167           |               |           |               |
168           +---------------+           +---------------+
169
170             (Figure 1: Hierarchy of Accounting)
171
172
173Figure 1 shows the important aspects of the controller
174
1751. Accounting happens per cgroup
1762. Each mm_struct knows about which cgroup it belongs to
1773. Each page has a pointer to the page_cgroup, which in turn knows the
178   cgroup it belongs to
179
180The accounting is done as follows: mem_cgroup_charge_common() is invoked to
181set up the necessary data structures and check if the cgroup that is being
182charged is over its limit. If it is, then reclaim is invoked on the cgroup.
183More details can be found in the reclaim section of this document.
184If everything goes well, a page meta-data-structure called page_cgroup is
185updated. page_cgroup has its own LRU on cgroup.
186(*) page_cgroup structure is allocated at boot/memory-hotplug time.
187
1882.2.1 Accounting details
189------------------------
190
191All mapped anon pages (RSS) and cache pages (Page Cache) are accounted.
192Some pages which are never reclaimable and will not be on the LRU
193are not accounted. We just account pages under usual VM management.
194
195RSS pages are accounted at page_fault unless they've already been accounted
196for earlier. A file page will be accounted for as Page Cache when it's
197inserted into inode (radix-tree). While it's mapped into the page tables of
198processes, duplicate accounting is carefully avoided.
199
200An RSS page is unaccounted when it's fully unmapped. A PageCache page is
201unaccounted when it's removed from radix-tree. Even if RSS pages are fully
202unmapped (by kswapd), they may exist as SwapCache in the system until they
203are really freed. Such SwapCaches are also accounted.
204A swapped-in page is not accounted until it's mapped.
205
206Note: The kernel does swapin-readahead and reads multiple swaps at once.
207This means swapped-in pages may contain pages for other tasks than a task
208causing page fault. So, we avoid accounting at swap-in I/O.
209
210At page migration, accounting information is kept.
211
212Note: we just account pages-on-LRU because our purpose is to control amount
213of used pages; not-on-LRU pages tend to be out-of-control from VM view.
214
2152.3 Shared Page Accounting
216--------------------------
217
218Shared pages are accounted on the basis of the first touch approach. The
219cgroup that first touches a page is accounted for the page. The principle
220behind this approach is that a cgroup that aggressively uses a shared
221page will eventually get charged for it (once it is uncharged from
222the cgroup that brought it in -- this will happen on memory pressure).
223
224But see section 8.2: when moving a task to another cgroup, its pages may
225be recharged to the new cgroup, if move_charge_at_immigrate has been chosen.
226
227Exception: If CONFIG_MEMCG_SWAP is not used.
228When you do swapoff and make swapped-out pages of shmem(tmpfs) to
229be backed into memory in force, charges for pages are accounted against the
230caller of swapoff rather than the users of shmem.
231
2322.4 Swap Extension (CONFIG_MEMCG_SWAP)
233--------------------------------------
234
235Swap Extension allows you to record charge for swap. A swapped-in page is
236charged back to original page allocator if possible.
237
238When swap is accounted, following files are added.
239
240 - memory.memsw.usage_in_bytes.
241 - memory.memsw.limit_in_bytes.
242
243memsw means memory+swap. Usage of memory+swap is limited by
244memsw.limit_in_bytes.
245
246Example: Assume a system with 4G of swap. A task which allocates 6G of memory
247(by mistake) under 2G memory limitation will use all swap.
248In this case, setting memsw.limit_in_bytes=3G will prevent bad use of swap.
249By using the memsw limit, you can avoid system OOM which can be caused by swap
250shortage.
251
252**why 'memory+swap' rather than swap**
253
254The global LRU(kswapd) can swap out arbitrary pages. Swap-out means
255to move account from memory to swap...there is no change in usage of
256memory+swap. In other words, when we want to limit the usage of swap without
257affecting global LRU, memory+swap limit is better than just limiting swap from
258an OS point of view.
259
260**What happens when a cgroup hits memory.memsw.limit_in_bytes**
261
262When a cgroup hits memory.memsw.limit_in_bytes, it's useless to do swap-out
263in this cgroup. Then, swap-out will not be done by cgroup routine and file
264caches are dropped. But as mentioned above, global LRU can do swapout memory
265from it for sanity of the system's memory management state. You can't forbid
266it by cgroup.
267
2682.5 Reclaim
269-----------
270
271Each cgroup maintains a per cgroup LRU which has the same structure as
272global VM. When a cgroup goes over its limit, we first try
273to reclaim memory from the cgroup so as to make space for the new
274pages that the cgroup has touched. If the reclaim is unsuccessful,
275an OOM routine is invoked to select and kill the bulkiest task in the
276cgroup. (See 10. OOM Control below.)
277
278The reclaim algorithm has not been modified for cgroups, except that
279pages that are selected for reclaiming come from the per-cgroup LRU
280list.
281
282NOTE:
283  Reclaim does not work for the root cgroup, since we cannot set any
284  limits on the root cgroup.
285
286Note2:
287  When panic_on_oom is set to "2", the whole system will panic.
288
289When oom event notifier is registered, event will be delivered.
290(See oom_control section)
291
2922.6 Locking
293-----------
294
295   lock_page_cgroup()/unlock_page_cgroup() should not be called under
296   the i_pages lock.
297
298   Other lock order is following:
299
300   PG_locked.
301     mm->page_table_lock
302         pgdat->lru_lock
303	   lock_page_cgroup.
304
305  In many cases, just lock_page_cgroup() is called.
306
307  per-zone-per-cgroup LRU (cgroup's private LRU) is just guarded by
308  pgdat->lru_lock, it has no lock of its own.
309
3102.7 Kernel Memory Extension (CONFIG_MEMCG_KMEM)
311-----------------------------------------------
312
313With the Kernel memory extension, the Memory Controller is able to limit
314the amount of kernel memory used by the system. Kernel memory is fundamentally
315different than user memory, since it can't be swapped out, which makes it
316possible to DoS the system by consuming too much of this precious resource.
317
318Kernel memory accounting is enabled for all memory cgroups by default. But
319it can be disabled system-wide by passing cgroup.memory=nokmem to the kernel
320at boot time. In this case, kernel memory will not be accounted at all.
321
322Kernel memory limits are not imposed for the root cgroup. Usage for the root
323cgroup may or may not be accounted. The memory used is accumulated into
324memory.kmem.usage_in_bytes, or in a separate counter when it makes sense.
325(currently only for tcp).
326
327The main "kmem" counter is fed into the main counter, so kmem charges will
328also be visible from the user counter.
329
330Currently no soft limit is implemented for kernel memory. It is future work
331to trigger slab reclaim when those limits are reached.
332
3332.7.1 Current Kernel Memory resources accounted
334-----------------------------------------------
335
336stack pages:
337  every process consumes some stack pages. By accounting into
338  kernel memory, we prevent new processes from being created when the kernel
339  memory usage is too high.
340
341slab pages:
342  pages allocated by the SLAB or SLUB allocator are tracked. A copy
343  of each kmem_cache is created every time the cache is touched by the first time
344  from inside the memcg. The creation is done lazily, so some objects can still be
345  skipped while the cache is being created. All objects in a slab page should
346  belong to the same memcg. This only fails to hold when a task is migrated to a
347  different memcg during the page allocation by the cache.
348
349sockets memory pressure:
350  some sockets protocols have memory pressure
351  thresholds. The Memory Controller allows them to be controlled individually
352  per cgroup, instead of globally.
353
354tcp memory pressure:
355  sockets memory pressure for the tcp protocol.
356
3572.7.2 Common use cases
358----------------------
359
360Because the "kmem" counter is fed to the main user counter, kernel memory can
361never be limited completely independently of user memory. Say "U" is the user
362limit, and "K" the kernel limit. There are three possible ways limits can be
363set:
364
365U != 0, K = unlimited:
366    This is the standard memcg limitation mechanism already present before kmem
367    accounting. Kernel memory is completely ignored.
368
369U != 0, K < U:
370    Kernel memory is a subset of the user memory. This setup is useful in
371    deployments where the total amount of memory per-cgroup is overcommited.
372    Overcommiting kernel memory limits is definitely not recommended, since the
373    box can still run out of non-reclaimable memory.
374    In this case, the admin could set up K so that the sum of all groups is
375    never greater than the total memory, and freely set U at the cost of his
376    QoS.
377
378WARNING:
379    In the current implementation, memory reclaim will NOT be
380    triggered for a cgroup when it hits K while staying below U, which makes
381    this setup impractical.
382
383U != 0, K >= U:
384    Since kmem charges will also be fed to the user counter and reclaim will be
385    triggered for the cgroup for both kinds of memory. This setup gives the
386    admin a unified view of memory, and it is also useful for people who just
387    want to track kernel memory usage.
388
3893. User Interface
390=================
391
3923.0. Configuration
393------------------
394
395a. Enable CONFIG_CGROUPS
396b. Enable CONFIG_MEMCG
397c. Enable CONFIG_MEMCG_SWAP (to use swap extension)
398d. Enable CONFIG_MEMCG_KMEM (to use kmem extension)
399
4003.1. Prepare the cgroups (see cgroups.txt, Why are cgroups needed?)
401-------------------------------------------------------------------
402
403::
404
405	# mount -t tmpfs none /sys/fs/cgroup
406	# mkdir /sys/fs/cgroup/memory
407	# mount -t cgroup none /sys/fs/cgroup/memory -o memory
408
4093.2. Make the new group and move bash into it::
410
411	# mkdir /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/0
412	# echo $$ > /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/0/tasks
413
414Since now we're in the 0 cgroup, we can alter the memory limit::
415
416	# echo 4M > /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/0/memory.limit_in_bytes
417
418NOTE:
419  We can use a suffix (k, K, m, M, g or G) to indicate values in kilo,
420  mega or gigabytes. (Here, Kilo, Mega, Giga are Kibibytes, Mebibytes,
421  Gibibytes.)
422
423NOTE:
424  We can write "-1" to reset the ``*.limit_in_bytes(unlimited)``.
425
426NOTE:
427  We cannot set limits on the root cgroup any more.
428
429::
430
431  # cat /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/0/memory.limit_in_bytes
432  4194304
433
434We can check the usage::
435
436  # cat /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/0/memory.usage_in_bytes
437  1216512
438
439A successful write to this file does not guarantee a successful setting of
440this limit to the value written into the file. This can be due to a
441number of factors, such as rounding up to page boundaries or the total
442availability of memory on the system. The user is required to re-read
443this file after a write to guarantee the value committed by the kernel::
444
445  # echo 1 > memory.limit_in_bytes
446  # cat memory.limit_in_bytes
447  4096
448
449The memory.failcnt field gives the number of times that the cgroup limit was
450exceeded.
451
452The memory.stat file gives accounting information. Now, the number of
453caches, RSS and Active pages/Inactive pages are shown.
454
4554. Testing
456==========
457
458For testing features and implementation, see memcg_test.txt.
459
460Performance test is also important. To see pure memory controller's overhead,
461testing on tmpfs will give you good numbers of small overheads.
462Example: do kernel make on tmpfs.
463
464Page-fault scalability is also important. At measuring parallel
465page fault test, multi-process test may be better than multi-thread
466test because it has noise of shared objects/status.
467
468But the above two are testing extreme situations.
469Trying usual test under memory controller is always helpful.
470
4714.1 Troubleshooting
472-------------------
473
474Sometimes a user might find that the application under a cgroup is
475terminated by the OOM killer. There are several causes for this:
476
4771. The cgroup limit is too low (just too low to do anything useful)
4782. The user is using anonymous memory and swap is turned off or too low
479
480A sync followed by echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches will help get rid of
481some of the pages cached in the cgroup (page cache pages).
482
483To know what happens, disabling OOM_Kill as per "10. OOM Control" (below) and
484seeing what happens will be helpful.
485
4864.2 Task migration
487------------------
488
489When a task migrates from one cgroup to another, its charge is not
490carried forward by default. The pages allocated from the original cgroup still
491remain charged to it, the charge is dropped when the page is freed or
492reclaimed.
493
494You can move charges of a task along with task migration.
495See 8. "Move charges at task migration"
496
4974.3 Removing a cgroup
498---------------------
499
500A cgroup can be removed by rmdir, but as discussed in sections 4.1 and 4.2, a
501cgroup might have some charge associated with it, even though all
502tasks have migrated away from it. (because we charge against pages, not
503against tasks.)
504
505We move the stats to root (if use_hierarchy==0) or parent (if
506use_hierarchy==1), and no change on the charge except uncharging
507from the child.
508
509Charges recorded in swap information is not updated at removal of cgroup.
510Recorded information is discarded and a cgroup which uses swap (swapcache)
511will be charged as a new owner of it.
512
513About use_hierarchy, see Section 6.
514
5155. Misc. interfaces
516===================
517
5185.1 force_empty
519---------------
520  memory.force_empty interface is provided to make cgroup's memory usage empty.
521  When writing anything to this::
522
523    # echo 0 > memory.force_empty
524
525  the cgroup will be reclaimed and as many pages reclaimed as possible.
526
527  The typical use case for this interface is before calling rmdir().
528  Though rmdir() offlines memcg, but the memcg may still stay there due to
529  charged file caches. Some out-of-use page caches may keep charged until
530  memory pressure happens. If you want to avoid that, force_empty will be useful.
531
532  Also, note that when memory.kmem.limit_in_bytes is set the charges due to
533  kernel pages will still be seen. This is not considered a failure and the
534  write will still return success. In this case, it is expected that
535  memory.kmem.usage_in_bytes == memory.usage_in_bytes.
536
537  About use_hierarchy, see Section 6.
538
5395.2 stat file
540-------------
541
542memory.stat file includes following statistics
543
544per-memory cgroup local status
545^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
546
547=============== ===============================================================
548cache		# of bytes of page cache memory.
549rss		# of bytes of anonymous and swap cache memory (includes
550		transparent hugepages).
551rss_huge	# of bytes of anonymous transparent hugepages.
552mapped_file	# of bytes of mapped file (includes tmpfs/shmem)
553pgpgin		# of charging events to the memory cgroup. The charging
554		event happens each time a page is accounted as either mapped
555		anon page(RSS) or cache page(Page Cache) to the cgroup.
556pgpgout		# of uncharging events to the memory cgroup. The uncharging
557		event happens each time a page is unaccounted from the cgroup.
558swap		# of bytes of swap usage
559dirty		# of bytes that are waiting to get written back to the disk.
560writeback	# of bytes of file/anon cache that are queued for syncing to
561		disk.
562inactive_anon	# of bytes of anonymous and swap cache memory on inactive
563		LRU list.
564active_anon	# of bytes of anonymous and swap cache memory on active
565		LRU list.
566inactive_file	# of bytes of file-backed memory on inactive LRU list.
567active_file	# of bytes of file-backed memory on active LRU list.
568unevictable	# of bytes of memory that cannot be reclaimed (mlocked etc).
569=============== ===============================================================
570
571status considering hierarchy (see memory.use_hierarchy settings)
572^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
573
574========================= ===================================================
575hierarchical_memory_limit # of bytes of memory limit with regard to hierarchy
576			  under which the memory cgroup is
577hierarchical_memsw_limit  # of bytes of memory+swap limit with regard to
578			  hierarchy under which memory cgroup is.
579
580total_<counter>		  # hierarchical version of <counter>, which in
581			  addition to the cgroup's own value includes the
582			  sum of all hierarchical children's values of
583			  <counter>, i.e. total_cache
584========================= ===================================================
585
586The following additional stats are dependent on CONFIG_DEBUG_VM
587^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
588
589========================= ========================================
590recent_rotated_anon	  VM internal parameter. (see mm/vmscan.c)
591recent_rotated_file	  VM internal parameter. (see mm/vmscan.c)
592recent_scanned_anon	  VM internal parameter. (see mm/vmscan.c)
593recent_scanned_file	  VM internal parameter. (see mm/vmscan.c)
594========================= ========================================
595
596Memo:
597	recent_rotated means recent frequency of LRU rotation.
598	recent_scanned means recent # of scans to LRU.
599	showing for better debug please see the code for meanings.
600
601Note:
602	Only anonymous and swap cache memory is listed as part of 'rss' stat.
603	This should not be confused with the true 'resident set size' or the
604	amount of physical memory used by the cgroup.
605
606	'rss + mapped_file" will give you resident set size of cgroup.
607
608	(Note: file and shmem may be shared among other cgroups. In that case,
609	mapped_file is accounted only when the memory cgroup is owner of page
610	cache.)
611
6125.3 swappiness
613--------------
614
615Overrides /proc/sys/vm/swappiness for the particular group. The tunable
616in the root cgroup corresponds to the global swappiness setting.
617
618Please note that unlike during the global reclaim, limit reclaim
619enforces that 0 swappiness really prevents from any swapping even if
620there is a swap storage available. This might lead to memcg OOM killer
621if there are no file pages to reclaim.
622
6235.4 failcnt
624-----------
625
626A memory cgroup provides memory.failcnt and memory.memsw.failcnt files.
627This failcnt(== failure count) shows the number of times that a usage counter
628hit its limit. When a memory cgroup hits a limit, failcnt increases and
629memory under it will be reclaimed.
630
631You can reset failcnt by writing 0 to failcnt file::
632
633	# echo 0 > .../memory.failcnt
634
6355.5 usage_in_bytes
636------------------
637
638For efficiency, as other kernel components, memory cgroup uses some optimization
639to avoid unnecessary cacheline false sharing. usage_in_bytes is affected by the
640method and doesn't show 'exact' value of memory (and swap) usage, it's a fuzz
641value for efficient access. (Of course, when necessary, it's synchronized.)
642If you want to know more exact memory usage, you should use RSS+CACHE(+SWAP)
643value in memory.stat(see 5.2).
644
6455.6 numa_stat
646-------------
647
648This is similar to numa_maps but operates on a per-memcg basis.  This is
649useful for providing visibility into the numa locality information within
650an memcg since the pages are allowed to be allocated from any physical
651node.  One of the use cases is evaluating application performance by
652combining this information with the application's CPU allocation.
653
654Each memcg's numa_stat file includes "total", "file", "anon" and "unevictable"
655per-node page counts including "hierarchical_<counter>" which sums up all
656hierarchical children's values in addition to the memcg's own value.
657
658The output format of memory.numa_stat is::
659
660  total=<total pages> N0=<node 0 pages> N1=<node 1 pages> ...
661  file=<total file pages> N0=<node 0 pages> N1=<node 1 pages> ...
662  anon=<total anon pages> N0=<node 0 pages> N1=<node 1 pages> ...
663  unevictable=<total anon pages> N0=<node 0 pages> N1=<node 1 pages> ...
664  hierarchical_<counter>=<counter pages> N0=<node 0 pages> N1=<node 1 pages> ...
665
666The "total" count is sum of file + anon + unevictable.
667
6686. Hierarchy support
669====================
670
671The memory controller supports a deep hierarchy and hierarchical accounting.
672The hierarchy is created by creating the appropriate cgroups in the
673cgroup filesystem. Consider for example, the following cgroup filesystem
674hierarchy::
675
676	       root
677	     /  |   \
678            /	|    \
679	   a	b     c
680		      | \
681		      |  \
682		      d   e
683
684In the diagram above, with hierarchical accounting enabled, all memory
685usage of e, is accounted to its ancestors up until the root (i.e, c and root),
686that has memory.use_hierarchy enabled. If one of the ancestors goes over its
687limit, the reclaim algorithm reclaims from the tasks in the ancestor and the
688children of the ancestor.
689
6906.1 Enabling hierarchical accounting and reclaim
691------------------------------------------------
692
693A memory cgroup by default disables the hierarchy feature. Support
694can be enabled by writing 1 to memory.use_hierarchy file of the root cgroup::
695
696	# echo 1 > memory.use_hierarchy
697
698The feature can be disabled by::
699
700	# echo 0 > memory.use_hierarchy
701
702NOTE1:
703       Enabling/disabling will fail if either the cgroup already has other
704       cgroups created below it, or if the parent cgroup has use_hierarchy
705       enabled.
706
707NOTE2:
708       When panic_on_oom is set to "2", the whole system will panic in
709       case of an OOM event in any cgroup.
710
7117. Soft limits
712==============
713
714Soft limits allow for greater sharing of memory. The idea behind soft limits
715is to allow control groups to use as much of the memory as needed, provided
716
717a. There is no memory contention
718b. They do not exceed their hard limit
719
720When the system detects memory contention or low memory, control groups
721are pushed back to their soft limits. If the soft limit of each control
722group is very high, they are pushed back as much as possible to make
723sure that one control group does not starve the others of memory.
724
725Please note that soft limits is a best-effort feature; it comes with
726no guarantees, but it does its best to make sure that when memory is
727heavily contended for, memory is allocated based on the soft limit
728hints/setup. Currently soft limit based reclaim is set up such that
729it gets invoked from balance_pgdat (kswapd).
730
7317.1 Interface
732-------------
733
734Soft limits can be setup by using the following commands (in this example we
735assume a soft limit of 256 MiB)::
736
737	# echo 256M > memory.soft_limit_in_bytes
738
739If we want to change this to 1G, we can at any time use::
740
741	# echo 1G > memory.soft_limit_in_bytes
742
743NOTE1:
744       Soft limits take effect over a long period of time, since they involve
745       reclaiming memory for balancing between memory cgroups
746NOTE2:
747       It is recommended to set the soft limit always below the hard limit,
748       otherwise the hard limit will take precedence.
749
7508. Move charges at task migration (DEPRECATED!)
751===============================================
752
753THIS IS DEPRECATED!
754
755It's expensive and unreliable! It's better practice to launch workload
756tasks directly from inside their target cgroup. Use dedicated workload
757cgroups to allow fine-grained policy adjustments without having to
758move physical pages between control domains.
759
760Users can move charges associated with a task along with task migration, that
761is, uncharge task's pages from the old cgroup and charge them to the new cgroup.
762This feature is not supported in !CONFIG_MMU environments because of lack of
763page tables.
764
7658.1 Interface
766-------------
767
768This feature is disabled by default. It can be enabled (and disabled again) by
769writing to memory.move_charge_at_immigrate of the destination cgroup.
770
771If you want to enable it::
772
773	# echo (some positive value) > memory.move_charge_at_immigrate
774
775Note:
776      Each bits of move_charge_at_immigrate has its own meaning about what type
777      of charges should be moved. See 8.2 for details.
778Note:
779      Charges are moved only when you move mm->owner, in other words,
780      a leader of a thread group.
781Note:
782      If we cannot find enough space for the task in the destination cgroup, we
783      try to make space by reclaiming memory. Task migration may fail if we
784      cannot make enough space.
785Note:
786      It can take several seconds if you move charges much.
787
788And if you want disable it again::
789
790	# echo 0 > memory.move_charge_at_immigrate
791
7928.2 Type of charges which can be moved
793--------------------------------------
794
795Each bit in move_charge_at_immigrate has its own meaning about what type of
796charges should be moved. But in any case, it must be noted that an account of
797a page or a swap can be moved only when it is charged to the task's current
798(old) memory cgroup.
799
800+---+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
801|bit| what type of charges would be moved ?                                    |
802+===+==========================================================================+
803| 0 | A charge of an anonymous page (or swap of it) used by the target task.   |
804|   | You must enable Swap Extension (see 2.4) to enable move of swap charges. |
805+---+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
806| 1 | A charge of file pages (normal file, tmpfs file (e.g. ipc shared memory) |
807|   | and swaps of tmpfs file) mmapped by the target task. Unlike the case of  |
808|   | anonymous pages, file pages (and swaps) in the range mmapped by the task |
809|   | will be moved even if the task hasn't done page fault, i.e. they might   |
810|   | not be the task's "RSS", but other task's "RSS" that maps the same file. |
811|   | And mapcount of the page is ignored (the page can be moved even if       |
812|   | page_mapcount(page) > 1). You must enable Swap Extension (see 2.4) to    |
813|   | enable move of swap charges.                                             |
814+---+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
815
8168.3 TODO
817--------
818
819- All of moving charge operations are done under cgroup_mutex. It's not good
820  behavior to hold the mutex too long, so we may need some trick.
821
8229. Memory thresholds
823====================
824
825Memory cgroup implements memory thresholds using the cgroups notification
826API (see cgroups.txt). It allows to register multiple memory and memsw
827thresholds and gets notifications when it crosses.
828
829To register a threshold, an application must:
830
831- create an eventfd using eventfd(2);
832- open memory.usage_in_bytes or memory.memsw.usage_in_bytes;
833- write string like "<event_fd> <fd of memory.usage_in_bytes> <threshold>" to
834  cgroup.event_control.
835
836Application will be notified through eventfd when memory usage crosses
837threshold in any direction.
838
839It's applicable for root and non-root cgroup.
840
84110. OOM Control
842===============
843
844memory.oom_control file is for OOM notification and other controls.
845
846Memory cgroup implements OOM notifier using the cgroup notification
847API (See cgroups.txt). It allows to register multiple OOM notification
848delivery and gets notification when OOM happens.
849
850To register a notifier, an application must:
851
852 - create an eventfd using eventfd(2)
853 - open memory.oom_control file
854 - write string like "<event_fd> <fd of memory.oom_control>" to
855   cgroup.event_control
856
857The application will be notified through eventfd when OOM happens.
858OOM notification doesn't work for the root cgroup.
859
860You can disable the OOM-killer by writing "1" to memory.oom_control file, as:
861
862	#echo 1 > memory.oom_control
863
864If OOM-killer is disabled, tasks under cgroup will hang/sleep
865in memory cgroup's OOM-waitqueue when they request accountable memory.
866
867For running them, you have to relax the memory cgroup's OOM status by
868
869	* enlarge limit or reduce usage.
870
871To reduce usage,
872
873	* kill some tasks.
874	* move some tasks to other group with account migration.
875	* remove some files (on tmpfs?)
876
877Then, stopped tasks will work again.
878
879At reading, current status of OOM is shown.
880
881	- oom_kill_disable 0 or 1
882	  (if 1, oom-killer is disabled)
883	- under_oom	   0 or 1
884	  (if 1, the memory cgroup is under OOM, tasks may be stopped.)
885
88611. Memory Pressure
887===================
888
889The pressure level notifications can be used to monitor the memory
890allocation cost; based on the pressure, applications can implement
891different strategies of managing their memory resources. The pressure
892levels are defined as following:
893
894The "low" level means that the system is reclaiming memory for new
895allocations. Monitoring this reclaiming activity might be useful for
896maintaining cache level. Upon notification, the program (typically
897"Activity Manager") might analyze vmstat and act in advance (i.e.
898prematurely shutdown unimportant services).
899
900The "medium" level means that the system is experiencing medium memory
901pressure, the system might be making swap, paging out active file caches,
902etc. Upon this event applications may decide to further analyze
903vmstat/zoneinfo/memcg or internal memory usage statistics and free any
904resources that can be easily reconstructed or re-read from a disk.
905
906The "critical" level means that the system is actively thrashing, it is
907about to out of memory (OOM) or even the in-kernel OOM killer is on its
908way to trigger. Applications should do whatever they can to help the
909system. It might be too late to consult with vmstat or any other
910statistics, so it's advisable to take an immediate action.
911
912By default, events are propagated upward until the event is handled, i.e. the
913events are not pass-through. For example, you have three cgroups: A->B->C. Now
914you set up an event listener on cgroups A, B and C, and suppose group C
915experiences some pressure. In this situation, only group C will receive the
916notification, i.e. groups A and B will not receive it. This is done to avoid
917excessive "broadcasting" of messages, which disturbs the system and which is
918especially bad if we are low on memory or thrashing. Group B, will receive
919notification only if there are no event listers for group C.
920
921There are three optional modes that specify different propagation behavior:
922
923 - "default": this is the default behavior specified above. This mode is the
924   same as omitting the optional mode parameter, preserved by backwards
925   compatibility.
926
927 - "hierarchy": events always propagate up to the root, similar to the default
928   behavior, except that propagation continues regardless of whether there are
929   event listeners at each level, with the "hierarchy" mode. In the above
930   example, groups A, B, and C will receive notification of memory pressure.
931
932 - "local": events are pass-through, i.e. they only receive notifications when
933   memory pressure is experienced in the memcg for which the notification is
934   registered. In the above example, group C will receive notification if
935   registered for "local" notification and the group experiences memory
936   pressure. However, group B will never receive notification, regardless if
937   there is an event listener for group C or not, if group B is registered for
938   local notification.
939
940The level and event notification mode ("hierarchy" or "local", if necessary) are
941specified by a comma-delimited string, i.e. "low,hierarchy" specifies
942hierarchical, pass-through, notification for all ancestor memcgs. Notification
943that is the default, non pass-through behavior, does not specify a mode.
944"medium,local" specifies pass-through notification for the medium level.
945
946The file memory.pressure_level is only used to setup an eventfd. To
947register a notification, an application must:
948
949- create an eventfd using eventfd(2);
950- open memory.pressure_level;
951- write string as "<event_fd> <fd of memory.pressure_level> <level[,mode]>"
952  to cgroup.event_control.
953
954Application will be notified through eventfd when memory pressure is at
955the specific level (or higher). Read/write operations to
956memory.pressure_level are no implemented.
957
958Test:
959
960   Here is a small script example that makes a new cgroup, sets up a
961   memory limit, sets up a notification in the cgroup and then makes child
962   cgroup experience a critical pressure::
963
964	# cd /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/
965	# mkdir foo
966	# cd foo
967	# cgroup_event_listener memory.pressure_level low,hierarchy &
968	# echo 8000000 > memory.limit_in_bytes
969	# echo 8000000 > memory.memsw.limit_in_bytes
970	# echo $$ > tasks
971	# dd if=/dev/zero | read x
972
973   (Expect a bunch of notifications, and eventually, the oom-killer will
974   trigger.)
975
97612. TODO
977========
978
9791. Make per-cgroup scanner reclaim not-shared pages first
9802. Teach controller to account for shared-pages
9813. Start reclamation in the background when the limit is
982   not yet hit but the usage is getting closer
983
984Summary
985=======
986
987Overall, the memory controller has been a stable controller and has been
988commented and discussed quite extensively in the community.
989
990References
991==========
992
9931. Singh, Balbir. RFC: Memory Controller, http://lwn.net/Articles/206697/
9942. Singh, Balbir. Memory Controller (RSS Control),
995   http://lwn.net/Articles/222762/
9963. Emelianov, Pavel. Resource controllers based on process cgroups
997   http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/3/6/198
9984. Emelianov, Pavel. RSS controller based on process cgroups (v2)
999   http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/4/9/78
10005. Emelianov, Pavel. RSS controller based on process cgroups (v3)
1001   http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/5/30/244
10026. Menage, Paul. Control Groups v10, http://lwn.net/Articles/236032/
10037. Vaidyanathan, Srinivasan, Control Groups: Pagecache accounting and control
1004   subsystem (v3), http://lwn.net/Articles/235534/
10058. Singh, Balbir. RSS controller v2 test results (lmbench),
1006   http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/5/17/232
10079. Singh, Balbir. RSS controller v2 AIM9 results
1008   http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/5/18/1
100910. Singh, Balbir. Memory controller v6 test results,
1010    http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/8/19/36
101111. Singh, Balbir. Memory controller introduction (v6),
1012    http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/8/17/69
101312. Corbet, Jonathan, Controlling memory use in cgroups,
1014    http://lwn.net/Articles/243795/
1015