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author | https://me.yahoo.com/a/g3Ccalpj0NhN566pHbUl6i9QF0QEkrhlfPM-#b1c14 <diana@web> | 2015-02-16 20:08:03 +0100 |
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committer | GNU Hurd web pages engine <web-hurd@gnu.org> | 2015-02-16 20:08:03 +0100 |
commit | 95878586ec7611791f4001a4ee17abf943fae3c1 (patch) | |
tree | 847cf658ab3c3208a296202194b16a6550b243cf /open_issues/ext2fs_page_cache_swapping_leak.mdwn | |
parent | 8063426bf7848411b0ef3626d57be8cb4826715e (diff) | |
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rename open_issues.mdwn to service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663.mdwn
Diffstat (limited to 'open_issues/ext2fs_page_cache_swapping_leak.mdwn')
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diff --git a/open_issues/ext2fs_page_cache_swapping_leak.mdwn b/open_issues/ext2fs_page_cache_swapping_leak.mdwn deleted file mode 100644 index 81915492..00000000 --- a/open_issues/ext2fs_page_cache_swapping_leak.mdwn +++ /dev/null @@ -1,361 +0,0 @@ -[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2011, 2012, 2013 Free Software Foundation, -Inc."]] - -[[!meta license="""[[!toggle id="license" text="GFDL 1.2+"]][[!toggleable -id="license" text="Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this -document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or -any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant -Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license -is included in the section entitled [[GNU Free Documentation -License|/fdl]]."]]"""]] - -[[!tag open_issue_gnumach open_issue_hurd]] - -There is a [[!FF_project 272]][[!tag bounty]] on this task. - -[[!toc]] - - -# IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2011-03-24 - - <youpi> I still believe we have an ext2fs page cache swapping leak, however - <youpi> as the 1.8GiB swap was full, yet the ld process was only 1.5GiB big - <pinotree> a leak at swapping time, you mean? - <youpi> I mean the ext2fs page cache being swapped out instead of simply - dropped - <pinotree> ah - <pinotree> so the swap tends to accumulate unuseful stuff, i see - <youpi> yes - <youpi> the disk content, basicallyt :) - - -# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2011-04-18 - - <antrik> damn, a cp -a simply gobbles down swap space... - <braunr> really ? - <braunr> that's weird - <braunr> why would a copy use so much anonymous memory ? - <braunr> unless the external pager is so busy that the kernel falls back to - its default pager - <youpi> that's what I suggested some time ago - <braunr> maybe this case should be traced in the kernel - <braunr> a simple message in the kernel buffer to warn that this condition - happened may help - <youpi> I'm seeing swap space being kept used on buildds for no real reason - except possibly backing ext2fs pages - <youpi> that could help, yes - <antrik> youpi: I think it was actually slpz who suggested that... - <youpi> I think we're generally missing feedback from memory behavior - <antrik> youpi: do you think andrei's kernel instrumentation work might be - helpful with analyzing such things? - <youpi> antrik: I think I suggested it too, but never mind - <youpi> antrik: no, because it's not a trace of events that you want - <youpi> some specific events would be useful - <youpi> but then we don't really need a whole framework for that - <antrik> apt-get upgrade eats swap too - <youpi> the upgrade itself, or the computation of the ugprade? - <youpi> apt is a memory eater nowadays - <antrik> installing the packages - <antrik> seems to have stabilized though after a while... - <antrik> so perhaps it's not a leak in this case - <youpi> ideally we should have a way to know what was put in the swap - <braunr> how would you represent what's in the swap ? - <antrik> the apt-get process has 46M of virtual memory above the 128 M - baseline - <braunr> mostly libraries i guess - <braunr> are trheads stacks 8 MiB like on Linux ? - <youpi> braunr: at least knowing how much of each process is in the swap - <youpi> braunr: 2MiB - <braunr> ok - <youpi> vminfo could also report which parts of the address space are in - the swap - <antrik> youpi: would be nice to have some simple utility reporting how - much of a process' address space is anonymous - <antrik> (in fact, I wonder why it's not reported by standard tools such as - ps or top... this shouldn't be too difficult I would think?) - <antrik> it would be much more useful information than the total virt size, - which includes rather meaningless disk and device mappings... - <youpi> agreed - <braunr> well - <braunr> there are tools like pmap for this - <braunr> unfortunately, it's difficult in mach to know what backs a - non-anonymous mapping - <braunr> pagers should be able to name their mappings - <youpi> that'd be helpful for debugging yes - <braunr> there is almost no overhead in doing that, and it would be very - useful - <youpi> and could lead to /proc/pid/maps - <braunr> yes - <braunr> isn't there a maps already ? - <youpi> nope - <braunr> ok - <youpi> (probably not very useful without the names) - <braunr> ithought i remembered maps without names, and guessed it might - have been on the hurd for that reason - <braunr> but i'm not sure - <youpi> there's the vminfo command, yes - <braunr> 14:06 < youpi> braunr: at least knowing how much of each process - is in the swap - <braunr> wouldn't it be clearer to do it the other way around ? - <braunr> like a swapinfo tool indicating what it contains ? - <youpi> sure, but it's a lot more difficult - <braunr> really ? - <braunr> why ? - <youpi> because you have to traverse all the mappings - <youpi> etc - <youpi> (in all processes, I mean) - <youpi> and you have to name what is waht - <braunr> there are other ways - <braunr> the swap is a central structure - <youpi> while simply introducing the swap % in vminfo - <youpi> for a given process you know what is what - <braunr> right - <youpi> and doing that introduction is probably very simple - <braunr> that's a good point - <braunr> top-down is effectively easier than bottom-up resolution in Mach - VM - <antrik> hm... the memory use caused by cp doesn't seem to be reflected in - the virtual size of any particular process - <antrik> ghost memory - <braunr> what's cp vmsize at the time of the problem ? - <antrik> it's at 134 M right now... so considering the 128 M baseline, - nothing worth speaking of - <braunr> right - <braunr> maybe a copy map during I/O - <braunr> but I don't know Mach copy maps in detail, as they have been - eliminated from UVM - <antrik> BTW, the memory eatup happens even before swap comes into - play... swapping seems to be a result of the problem, not the cause - <braunr> what do you mean ? - <braunr> I thought swapping was the issue - <braunr> you mean RAM is full before swapping ? - <antrik> well, I don't know what the actual problem is... I just don't - understand why the memory use increases without any particular process - seeing an increase in size - <antrik> the "free" size in vmstat decreses - <antrik> once it's eatun up, swap space use increases - <braunr> well it doesn't change much of it - <braunr> the anonymous memory pager will use RAM before resorting to the - external default-pager - <antrik> I would suspect normal block caching... but then, shouldn't this - show up in the memory info of the ext2 process? - <braunr> although, again, I'm not sure of the behaviour of the anonymous - memory pager - <braunr> antrik: I don't know how block caching behaves - <antrik> BTW, is it a know problem that doing ^C on a "cp -a" seems to hang - the whole system?... - <antrik> (the whole hurd instance that is... the other instance is not - affected) - <youpi> not that I know of - <braunr> seems like a deadlock in the anonymous memory handling - <youpi> (and I've never seen that) - <antrik> happens both in my main system (using ancient hurd/libc) and in my - subhurd (recently upgraded to current stuff) - <antrik> this make testing this stuff quite a lot harder... [sigh] - <antrik> any suggestions how to debug this hang? - <braunr> antrik: no :/ - -2011-04-28: [[!taglink open_issue_documentation]] - - <antrik> hm... is it normal that "swap free" doesn't increase as a process' - memory is paged back in? - <youpi> yes - <youpi> there's no real use cleaning swap - <youpi> on the contrary, it makes paging the process out again longer - <antrik> hm... so essentially, after swapping back and forth a bit, a part - of the swap equal to the size of physical RAM will be occupied with stuff - that is actually in RAM? - <youpi> yes - <youpi> so that that RAM can be freed immediately if needed - <antrik> hm... that means my effective swap size is only like 300 MB... no - wonder I see crashes under load - <antrik> err... make that 230 actually - <antrik> indeed, quitting the application freed both the physical RAM and - swap space - <braunr> 02:28 < antrik> hm... is it normal that "swap free" doesn't - increase as a process' memory is paged back in? - <braunr> swap is the backing store of anonymous memory, like ext2fs is the - backing store of memory objects created from its pager - <braunr> so you can view swap as the file system for everything that isn't - an external memory object - - -# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2011-11-15 - - <braunr> hm, now my system got unstable - <braunr> swap is increasing, without any apparent reason - <antrik> you mean without any load? - <braunr> with load, yes - <braunr> :) - <antrik> well, with load is "normal"... - <antrik> at least for some loads - <braunr> i can't create memory pressure to stress reclaiming without any - load - <antrik> what load are you using? - <braunr> ftp mirrorring - <antrik> hm... never tried that; but I guess it's similar to apt-get - <antrik> so yes, that's "normal". I talked about it several times, and also - wrote to the ML - <braunr> antrik: ok - <antrik> if you find out how to fix this, you are my hero ;-) - <braunr> arg :) - <antrik> I suspect it's the infamous double swapping problem; but that's - just a guess - <braunr> looks like this - <antrik> BTW, if you give me the exact command, I could check if I see it - too - <braunr> i use lftp (mirror -Re) from a linux git repository - <braunr> through sftp - <braunr> (lots of small files, big content) - <antrik> can't you just give me the exact command? I don't feel like - figuring it out myself - <braunr> antrik: cd linux-stable; lftp sftp://hurd_addr/ - <braunr> inside lftp: mkdir linux-stable; cd linux-stable; mirror -Re - <braunr> hm, half of physical memory just got freed - <braunr> our page cache is really weird :/ - <braunr> (i didn't delete any file when that happened) - <antrik> hurd_addr? - <braunr> ssh server ip address - <braunr> or name - <braunr> of your hurd :) - <antrik> I'm confused. you are mirroring *from* the Hurd box? - <braunr> no, to it - <antrik> ah, so you login via sftp and then push to it? - <braunr> yes - <braunr> fragmentation looks very fine - <braunr> even for the huge pv_entry cache and its 60k+ entries - <braunr> (and i'm running a kernel with the cpu layer enabled) - <braunr> git reset/status/diff/log/grep all work correctly - <braunr> anyway, mcsim's branch looks quite stable to me - <antrik> braunr: I can't reproduce the swap leak with ftp. free memory - idles around 6.5 k (seems to be the threshold where paging starts), and - swap use is constant - <antrik> might be because everything swappable is already present in swap - from previous load I guess... - <antrik> err... scratch that. was connected to the wrong host, silly me - <antrik> indeed swap gets eaten away, as expected - <antrik> but only if free memory actually falls below the - threshold. otherwise it just oscillates around a constant value, and - never touches swap - <antrik> so this seems to confirm the double swapping theory - <youpi> antrik: is that "double swap" theory written somewhere? - <youpi> (no, a quick google didn't tell me) - - -## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2011-11-16 - - <antrik> youpi: - http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/l4-hurd/2002-06/msg00001.html talks - about "double paging". probably it's also the term others used for it; - however, the term is generally used in a completely different meaning, so - I guess it's not really suitable for googling either ;-) - <antrik> IIRC slpz (or perhaps someone else?) proposed a solution to this, - but I don't remember any details - <youpi> ok so it's the same thing I was thinking about with swap getting - filled - <youpi> my question was: is there something to release the double swap, - once the ext2fs pager managed to recover? - <antrik> apparently not - <antrik> the only way to free the memory seems to be terminating the FS - server - <youpi> uh :/ - - -# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2011-11-30 - - <antrik> slpz: basically, whenever free memory goes below the paging - threshold (which seems to be around 6 MiB) while there is other I/O - happening, swap usage begins to increase continuously; and only gets - freed again when the filesystem translator in question exits - <antrik> so it sounds *very* much like pages go to swap because the - filesystem isn't quick enough to properly page them out - <antrik> slpz: I think it was you who talked about double paging a while - back? - <slpz> antrik: probably, sounds like me :-) - <antrik> slpz: I have some indication that the degenerating performance and - ultimate hang issues I'm seeing are partially or entirely caused by - double paging... - <antrik> slpz: I don't remember, did you propose some possible fix? - <slpz> antrik: hmm... perhaps it wasn't me, because I don't remember trying - to fix that problem... - <slpz> antrik: at which point do you think pages get duplicated? - <antrik> slpz: it was a question. I don't remember whether you proposed - something or not :-) - <antrik> slpz: basically, whenever free memory goes below the paging - threshold (which seems to be around 6 MiB) while there is other I/O - happening, swap usage begins to increase continuously; and only gets - freed again when the filesystem translator in question exits - <antrik> so it sounds *very* much like pages go to swap because the - filesystem isn't quick enough to properly page them out - <slpz> antrik: I see - <slpz> antrik: I didn't addressed this problem directly, but when I've - modified the pageout mechanism to provide a special treatment for - external pages, I also removed the possibility of sending them to the - default pager - <slpz> antrik: this was in my experimental environment, of course - <antrik> slpz: oh, nice... so it may fix the issues I'm seeing? :-) - <antrik> anything testable yet? - <slpz> antrik: yes, only anonymous memory could be swapped with that - <slpz> antrik: it works, but is ugly as hell - <antrik> tschwinge: these is also your observation about compilations - getting slower on further runs, and my followups... I *suspect* it's the - same issue - -[[performance/degradation]]. - - <slpz> antrik: I'm thinking about establishing a repository for these - experimental versions, so they don't get lost with the time - <antrik> slpz: please do :-) - <slpz> antrik: perhaps in savannah's HARD project - <antrik> even if it's not ready for upstream, it would be nice if I could - test it -- right now it's bothering me more than any other Hurd issues I - think... - <slpz> also, there's another problem which causes performance degradation - with the simple use of the system - <tschwinge> slpz: Please just push to Savannah Hurd. Under your - slpz/... or similar. - <tschwinge> antrik: Might very well be, yes. - <slpz> and I almost sure it is the fragmentation of the task map - <slpz> tschwinge: ok - <slpz> after playing a bit with a translator, it can easily get more than - 3000 entries in its map - <antrik> slpz: yeah, other issues might play a role here as well. I - observed that terminating the problematic FS servers does free most of - the memory and remove most of the performance degradation, but in some - cases it's still very slow - <slpz> that makes vm_map_lookup a lot slower - <antrik> on a related note: any idea what can cause paging errors and a - system hang even when there is plenty of free swap? - <antrik> (I'm not entirely sure, but my impression is that it *might* be - related to the swap usage and performance degradation problems) - <slpz> I think this degree of fragmentation has something to do with the - reiterative mapping of memory objects which is done in pager-memcpy.c - <slpz> antrik: which kind of paging errors? - <antrik> hm... I don't think I ever noted down the exact message; but I - think it's the same you get when actually running out of swap - <slpz> antrik: that could be the default pager dying for some internal bug - <antrik> well, but it *seems* to go along with the performance degradation - and/or swap usage - <slpz> I also have the impression that we're using memory objects the wrong - way - <antrik> basically, once I get to a certain level of swap use and slowness - (after about a month of use), the system eventually dies - <slpz> antrik: I never had a system running for that time, so it could be a - completely different problem from what I've seen before :-/ - <slpz> Anybody has experience with block-level caches on microkernel - environments? - <antrik> slpz: yeah, it typically happens after about a month of my normal - use... but I can significantly accellerate it by putting some problematic - load on it, such as large apt-get runs... - <slpz> I wonder if it would be better to put them in kernel or in user - space. And in the latter, if it would be better to have one per-device - shared for all accesing translators, or just each task should have its - own cache... - <antrik> slpz: - http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-hurd/2011-09/msg00041.html is where - I described the issue(s) - <antrik> (should send another update for the most recent findings I - guess...) - <antrik> slpz: well, if we move to userspace drivers, the kernel part of - the question is already answered ;-) - <antrik> but I'm not sure about per-device cache vs. caching in FS server |