From: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
To: "Burakov, Anatoly" <anatoly.burakov@intel.com>
Cc: Ferruh Yigit <ferruh.yigit@intel.com>,
Francesco <francesco.montorsi@gmail.com>,
dev@dpdk.org
Subject: Re: [dpdk-dev] very high VIRT memory usage
Date: Wed, 10 Jun 2020 08:28:54 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20200610082854.381f68cb@hermes.lan> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <d46847e6-0bc8-4f01-5932-49d2f073b5f4@intel.com>
On Wed, 10 Jun 2020 10:24:44 +0100
"Burakov, Anatoly" <anatoly.burakov@intel.com> wrote:
> On 09-Jun-20 4:35 PM, Stephen Hemminger wrote:
> > On Tue, 9 Jun 2020 14:39:54 +0100
> > "Burakov, Anatoly" <anatoly.burakov@intel.com> wrote:
> >
> >> On 09-Jun-20 2:13 PM, Ferruh Yigit wrote:
> >>> On 6/9/2020 1:46 PM, Burakov, Anatoly wrote:
> >>>> On 08-Jun-20 12:03 PM, Francesco wrote:
> >>>>> Hi all,
> >>>>> I upgraded an old DPDK-based app which was using DPDK 17.11 to latest DPDK
> >>>>> 20.05 and I noticed that if I look at "top" I see that the VIRT memory
> >>>>> taken by my application is now 256.1GB while before it was <1GB.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> I've seen this same behavior with also "testpmd" example... is this a known
> >>>>> issue with latest DPDK versions?
> >>>>> Can I tweak some setting to have VIRT memory usage more or less similar to
> >>>>> RSS ?
> >>>>>
> >>>>> I forgot to add I'm working on Linux, Centos7
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Thanks,
> >>>>> Francesco Montorsi
> >>>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> There was a discussion on this not too long ago, but i can't seem to
> >>>> find it for some reason.
> >>>
> >>> Can it be "Big spike in DPDK VSZ" ?
> >>> http://inbox.dpdk.org/dev/CAGxAMwD6Wtfi=C2Txwjfk0zhFvRzeqBu7mFfE8ayh=EJi2aU-A@mail.gmail.com/#t
> >>>
> >>
> >> Yes, that's the one, thanks Ferruh :)
> >>
> >>>> Anyway, long story short, that's not a bug,
> >>>> that's by design.
> >>>>
> >>>> Since 18.11 (or 18.05 to be precise), there is a new memory subsystem in
> >>>> DPDK that allows growing and shrinking DPDK memory usage at runtime.
> >>>> That means, you can start with zero hugepages preallocated, and then
> >>>> allocate as you go, letting the memory subsystem decide how much memory
> >>>> you need.
> >>>>
> >>>> The catch is that all of this hugepage memory is allocated into
> >>>> somewhere, some virtual address space. And *that* address space is
> >>>> preallocated at startup, to allow for secondary processes to duplicate
> >>>> primary process's address space exactly, and allow dynamic allocation of
> >>>> *shared* memory at runtime.
> >>>>
> >>>> This memory will show up in top et al. but the truth is, it's zero cost,
> >>>> because it's anonymous memory. It isn't actually taking up any RAM. It
> >>>> will show up in dumps (20.05 has already fixed that issue, and the fixes
> >>>> will probably be backported to stable, including 18.11), so unless you
> >>>> have a very specific problem, i don't think that's anything you should
> >>>> be concerned about.
> >
> > The one concern is for cases like cgroup memory accounting thinking
> > the process is huge and OOM killing it.
> >
>
> Is there any way to know the *actual* memory usage of the process (i.e.
> not including anonymous memory)?
>
Huge pages do not count against the normal memory in cgroup.
There is a separate hugeTLB controller that limits that.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2020-06-10 15:29 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 12+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2020-06-08 11:03 Francesco
2020-06-09 12:46 ` Burakov, Anatoly
2020-06-09 13:13 ` Ferruh Yigit
2020-06-09 13:39 ` Burakov, Anatoly
2020-06-09 15:35 ` Stephen Hemminger
2020-06-10 9:24 ` Burakov, Anatoly
2020-06-10 15:28 ` Stephen Hemminger [this message]
2020-06-10 15:44 ` Burakov, Anatoly
2020-06-09 19:40 ` Francesco
2020-06-10 9:24 ` Burakov, Anatoly
2020-06-10 10:14 ` Francesco
2020-06-10 11:07 ` Burakov, Anatoly
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