.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 ============= Multi-Gen LRU ============= The multi-gen LRU is an alternative LRU implementation that optimizes page reclaim and improves performance under memory pressure. Page reclaim decides the kernel's caching policy and ability to overcommit memory. It directly impacts the kswapd CPU usage and RAM efficiency. Quick start =========== Build the kernel with the following configurations. * ``CONFIG_LRU_GEN=y`` * ``CONFIG_LRU_GEN_ENABLED=y`` All set! Runtime options =============== ``/sys/kernel/mm/lru_gen/`` contains stable ABIs described in the following subsections. Kill switch ----------- ``enabled`` accepts different values to enable or disable the following components. Its default value depends on ``CONFIG_LRU_GEN_ENABLED``. All the components should be enabled unless some of them have unforeseen side effects. Writing to ``enabled`` has no effect when a component is not supported by the hardware, and valid values will be accepted even when the main switch is off. ====== =============================================================== Values Components ====== =============================================================== 0x0001 The main switch for the multi-gen LRU. 0x0002 Clearing the accessed bit in leaf page table entries in large batches, when MMU sets it (e.g., on x86). This behavior can theoretically worsen lock contention (mmap_lock). If it is disabled, the multi-gen LRU will suffer a minor performance degradation for workloads that contiguously map hot pages, whose accessed bits can be otherwise cleared by fewer larger batches. 0x0004 Clearing the accessed bit in non-leaf page table entries as well, when MMU sets it (e.g., on x86). This behavior was not verified on x86 varieties other than Intel and AMD. If it is disabled, the multi-gen LRU will suffer a negligible performance degradation. 0x0008 Clearing the accessed bit in KVM page table entries in large batches, when KVM MMU sets it (e.g., on x86_64). This can improve the performance of guests when the host is under memory pressure. [yYnN] Apply to all the components above. ====== =============================================================== E.g., :: echo y >/sys/kernel/mm/lru_gen/enabled cat /sys/kernel/mm/lru_gen/enabled 0x000f echo 5 >/sys/kernel/mm/lru_gen/enabled cat /sys/kernel/mm/lru_gen/enabled 0x0005 Thrashing prevention -------------------- Personal computers are more sensitive to thrashing because it can cause janks (lags when rendering UI) and negatively impact user experience. The multi-gen LRU offers thrashing prevention to the majority of laptop and desktop users who do not have ``oomd``. Users can write ``N`` to ``min_ttl_ms`` to prevent the working set of ``N`` milliseconds from getting evicted. The OOM killer is triggered if this working set cannot be kept in memory. In other words, this option works as an adjustable pressure relief valve, and when open, it terminates applications that are hopefully not being used. Based on the average human detectable lag (~100ms), ``N=1000`` usually eliminates intolerable janks due to thrashing. Larger values like ``N=3000`` make janks less noticeable at the risk of premature OOM kills. The default value ``0`` means disabled. Experimental features ===================== ``/sys/kernel/debug/lru_gen`` accepts commands described in the following subsections. Multiple command lines are supported, so does concatenation with delimiters ``,`` and ``;``. ``/sys/kernel/debug/lru_gen_full`` provides additional stats for debugging. ``CONFIG_LRU_GEN_STATS=y`` keeps historical stats from evicted generations in this file. Working set estimation ---------------------- Working set estimation measures how much memory an application needs in a given time interval, and it is usually done with little impact on the performance of the application. E.g., data centers want to optimize job scheduling (bin packing) to improve memory utilizations. When a new job comes in, the job scheduler needs to find out whether each server it manages can allocate a certain amount of memory for this new job before it can pick a candidate. To do so, the job scheduler needs to estimate the working sets of the existing jobs. When it is read, ``lru_gen`` returns a histogram of numbers of pages accessed over different time intervals for each memcg and node. ``MAX_NR_GENS`` decides the number of bins for each histogram. The histograms are noncumulative. :: memcg memcg_id memcg_path node node_id min_gen_nr age_in_ms nr_anon_pages nr_file_pages ... max_gen_nr age_in_ms nr_anon_pages nr_file_pages Each bin contains an estimated number of pages that have been accessed within ``age_in_ms``. E.g., ``min_gen_nr`` contains the coldest pages and ``max_gen_nr`` contains the hottest pages, since ``age_in_ms`` of the former is the largest and that of the latter is the smallest. Users can write the following command to ``lru_gen`` to create a new generation ``max_gen_nr+1``: ``+ memcg_id node_id max_gen_nr [can_swap [force_scan]]`` ``can_swap`` defaults to the swap setting and, if it is set to ``1``, it forces the scan of anon pages when swap is off, and vice versa. ``force_scan`` defaults to ``1`` and, if it is set to ``0``, it employs heuristics to reduce the overhead, which is likely to reduce the coverage as well. A typical use case is that a job scheduler runs this command at a certain time interval to create new generations, and it ranks the servers it manages based on the sizes of their cold pages defined by this time interval. Proactive reclaim ----------------- Proactive reclaim induces page reclaim when there is no memory pressure. It usually targets cold pages only. E.g., when a new job comes in, the job scheduler wants to proactively reclaim cold pages on the server it selected, to improve the chance of successfully landing this new job. Users can write the following command to ``lru_gen`` to evict generations less than or equal to ``min_gen_nr``. ``- memcg_id node_id min_gen_nr [swappiness [nr_to_reclaim]]`` ``min_gen_nr`` should be less than ``max_gen_nr-1``, since ``max_gen_nr`` and ``max_gen_nr-1`` are not fully aged (equivalent to the active list) and therefore cannot be evicted. ``swappiness`` overrides the default value in ``/proc/sys/vm/swappiness``. ``nr_to_reclaim`` limits the number of pages to evict. A typical use case is that a job scheduler runs this command before it tries to land a new job on a server. If it fails to materialize enough cold pages because of the overestimation, it retries on the next server according to the ranking result obtained from the working set estimation step. This less forceful approach limits the impacts on the existing jobs.