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authorVasily Averin <vvs@virtuozzo.com>2021-11-05 23:38:09 +0300
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>2021-11-06 23:30:35 +0300
commita4ebf1b6ca1e011289677239a2a361fde4a88076 (patch)
tree81710da439c5d7ae7ada3dc9ec0afb0c7b2c46a8 /mm/mmap.c
parent60e2793d440a3ec95abb5d6d4fc034a4b480472d (diff)
downloadlinux-a4ebf1b6ca1e011289677239a2a361fde4a88076.tar.xz
memcg: prohibit unconditional exceeding the limit of dying tasks
Memory cgroup charging allows killed or exiting tasks to exceed the hard limit. It is assumed that the amount of the memory charged by those tasks is bound and most of the memory will get released while the task is exiting. This is resembling a heuristic for the global OOM situation when tasks get access to memory reserves. There is no global memory shortage at the memcg level so the memcg heuristic is more relieved. The above assumption is overly optimistic though. E.g. vmalloc can scale to really large requests and the heuristic would allow that. We used to have an early break in the vmalloc allocator for killed tasks but this has been reverted by commit b8c8a338f75e ("Revert "vmalloc: back off when the current task is killed""). There are likely other similar code paths which do not check for fatal signals in an allocation&charge loop. Also there are some kernel objects charged to a memcg which are not bound to a process life time. It has been observed that it is not really hard to trigger these bypasses and cause global OOM situation. One potential way to address these runaways would be to limit the amount of excess (similar to the global OOM with limited oom reserves). This is certainly possible but it is not really clear how much of an excess is desirable and still protects from global OOMs as that would have to consider the overall memcg configuration. This patch is addressing the problem by removing the heuristic altogether. Bypass is only allowed for requests which either cannot fail or where the failure is not desirable while excess should be still limited (e.g. atomic requests). Implementation wise a killed or dying task fails to charge if it has passed the OOM killer stage. That should give all forms of reclaim chance to restore the limit before the failure (ENOMEM) and tell the caller to back off. In addition, this patch renames should_force_charge() helper to task_is_dying() because now its use is not associated witch forced charging. This patch depends on pagefault_out_of_memory() to not trigger out_of_memory(), because then a memcg failure can unwind to VM_FAULT_OOM and cause a global OOM killer. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/8f5cebbb-06da-4902-91f0-6566fc4b4203@virtuozzo.com Signed-off-by: Vasily Averin <vvs@virtuozzo.com> Suggested-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> Acked-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Cc: Vladimir Davydov <vdavydov.dev@gmail.com> Cc: Roman Gushchin <guro@fb.com> Cc: Uladzislau Rezki <urezki@gmail.com> Cc: Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@suse.cz> Cc: Shakeel Butt <shakeelb@google.com> Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net> Cc: Tetsuo Handa <penguin-kernel@i-love.sakura.ne.jp> Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'mm/mmap.c')
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