diff options
author | Martynas Pumputis <[email protected]> | 2019-03-18 16:10:26 +0100 |
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committer | Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]> | 2019-03-18 16:48:25 +0100 |
commit | f01a7dbe98ae4265023fa5d3af0f076f0b18a647 (patch) | |
tree | 1a3ed6ee305519403b394ceebde3c87013571f86 /tools/perf/scripts/python/export-to-sqlite.py | |
parent | ea239314fe42ace880bdd834256834679346c80e (diff) |
bpf: Try harder when allocating memory for large maps
It has been observed that sometimes a higher order memory allocation
for BPF maps fails when there is no obvious memory pressure in a system.
E.g. the map (BPF_MAP_TYPE_LRU_HASH, key=38, value=56, max_elems=524288)
could not be created due to vmalloc unable to allocate 75497472B,
when the system's memory consumption (in MB) was the following:
Total: 3942 Used: 837 (21.24%) Free: 138 Buffers: 239 Cached: 2727
Later analysis [1] by Michal Hocko showed that the vmalloc was not trying
to reclaim memory from the page cache and was failing prematurely due to
__GFP_NORETRY.
Considering dcda9b0471 ("mm, tree wide: replace __GFP_REPEAT by
__GFP_RETRY_MAYFAIL with more useful semantic") and [1], we can replace
__GFP_NORETRY with __GFP_RETRY_MAYFAIL, as it won't invoke OOM killer
and will try harder to fulfil allocation requests.
Unfortunately, replacing the body of the BPF map memory allocation
function with the kvmalloc_node helper function is not an option at
this point in time, given 1) kmalloc is non-optional for higher order
allocations, and 2) passing __GFP_RETRY_MAYFAIL to the kmalloc would
stress the slab allocator too much for large requests.
The change has been tested with the workloads mentioned above and by
observing oom_kill value from /proc/vmstat.
[1]: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/[email protected]/
Signed-off-by: Martynas Pumputis <[email protected]>
Acked-by: Yonghong Song <[email protected]>
Cc: Michal Hocko <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/[email protected]/
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/perf/scripts/python/export-to-sqlite.py')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions