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- Subsystem Trace Points: kmem
- The kmem tracing system captures events related to object and page allocation
- within the kernel. Broadly speaking there are five major subheadings.
- o Slab allocation of small objects of unknown type (kmalloc)
- o Slab allocation of small objects of known type
- o Page allocation
- o Per-CPU Allocator Activity
- o External Fragmentation
- This document describes what each of the tracepoints is and why they
- might be useful.
- 1. Slab allocation of small objects of unknown type
- ===================================================
- kmalloc call_site=%lx ptr=%p bytes_req=%zu bytes_alloc=%zu gfp_flags=%s
- kmalloc_node call_site=%lx ptr=%p bytes_req=%zu bytes_alloc=%zu gfp_flags=%s node=%d
- kfree call_site=%lx ptr=%p
- Heavy activity for these events may indicate that a specific cache is
- justified, particularly if kmalloc slab pages are getting significantly
- internal fragmented as a result of the allocation pattern. By correlating
- kmalloc with kfree, it may be possible to identify memory leaks and where
- the allocation sites were.
- 2. Slab allocation of small objects of known type
- =================================================
- kmem_cache_alloc call_site=%lx ptr=%p bytes_req=%zu bytes_alloc=%zu gfp_flags=%s
- kmem_cache_alloc_node call_site=%lx ptr=%p bytes_req=%zu bytes_alloc=%zu gfp_flags=%s node=%d
- kmem_cache_free call_site=%lx ptr=%p
- These events are similar in usage to the kmalloc-related events except that
- it is likely easier to pin the event down to a specific cache. At the time
- of writing, no information is available on what slab is being allocated from,
- but the call_site can usually be used to extrapolate that information.
- 3. Page allocation
- ==================
- mm_page_alloc page=%p pfn=%lu order=%d migratetype=%d gfp_flags=%s
- mm_page_alloc_zone_locked page=%p pfn=%lu order=%u migratetype=%d cpu=%d percpu_refill=%d
- mm_page_free page=%p pfn=%lu order=%d
- mm_page_free_batched page=%p pfn=%lu order=%d cold=%d
- These four events deal with page allocation and freeing. mm_page_alloc is
- a simple indicator of page allocator activity. Pages may be allocated from
- the per-CPU allocator (high performance) or the buddy allocator.
- If pages are allocated directly from the buddy allocator, the
- mm_page_alloc_zone_locked event is triggered. This event is important as high
- amounts of activity imply high activity on the zone->lock. Taking this lock
- impairs performance by disabling interrupts, dirtying cache lines between
- CPUs and serialising many CPUs.
- When a page is freed directly by the caller, the only mm_page_free event
- is triggered. Significant amounts of activity here could indicate that the
- callers should be batching their activities.
- When pages are freed in batch, the also mm_page_free_batched is triggered.
- Broadly speaking, pages are taken off the LRU lock in bulk and
- freed in batch with a page list. Significant amounts of activity here could
- indicate that the system is under memory pressure and can also indicate
- contention on the zone->lru_lock.
- 4. Per-CPU Allocator Activity
- =============================
- mm_page_alloc_zone_locked page=%p pfn=%lu order=%u migratetype=%d cpu=%d percpu_refill=%d
- mm_page_pcpu_drain page=%p pfn=%lu order=%d cpu=%d migratetype=%d
- In front of the page allocator is a per-cpu page allocator. It exists only
- for order-0 pages, reduces contention on the zone->lock and reduces the
- amount of writing on struct page.
- When a per-CPU list is empty or pages of the wrong type are allocated,
- the zone->lock will be taken once and the per-CPU list refilled. The event
- triggered is mm_page_alloc_zone_locked for each page allocated with the
- event indicating whether it is for a percpu_refill or not.
- When the per-CPU list is too full, a number of pages are freed, each one
- which triggers a mm_page_pcpu_drain event.
- The individual nature of the events is so that pages can be tracked
- between allocation and freeing. A number of drain or refill pages that occur
- consecutively imply the zone->lock being taken once. Large amounts of per-CPU
- refills and drains could imply an imbalance between CPUs where too much work
- is being concentrated in one place. It could also indicate that the per-CPU
- lists should be a larger size. Finally, large amounts of refills on one CPU
- and drains on another could be a factor in causing large amounts of cache
- line bounces due to writes between CPUs and worth investigating if pages
- can be allocated and freed on the same CPU through some algorithm change.
- 5. External Fragmentation
- =========================
- mm_page_alloc_extfrag page=%p pfn=%lu alloc_order=%d fallback_order=%d pageblock_order=%d alloc_migratetype=%d fallback_migratetype=%d fragmenting=%d change_ownership=%d
- External fragmentation affects whether a high-order allocation will be
- successful or not. For some types of hardware, this is important although
- it is avoided where possible. If the system is using huge pages and needs
- to be able to resize the pool over the lifetime of the system, this value
- is important.
- Large numbers of this event implies that memory is fragmenting and
- high-order allocations will start failing at some time in the future. One
- means of reducing the occurrence of this event is to increase the size of
- min_free_kbytes in increments of 3*pageblock_size*nr_online_nodes where
- pageblock_size is usually the size of the default hugepage size.
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