El sáb., 11 jul. 2020 a las 16:39, Benjamin Berg (<bb...@redhat.com>) escribió:
> On Sat, 2020-07-11 at 14:31 -0300, Sergio Belkin wrote: > > My only question is if measuring memory pressure is a better indication. > > If nohang-desktop uses PSI, isn't it a more proper solution? > > The basic problem is that PSI can only be reactive. You need to measure > it over a period of time and then react if matters have turned bad for > long enough. Generally, I believe that you will be looking at reacting > after 10-30s, which is already a really bad situation. > > Also, to do this properly, you may want to have different rules > depending on which parts of the system (i.e. systemd unit or cgroup) is > under memory pressure. This requires a few things: > > 1. A daemon to monitor cgroups > (possibly nohang, but realistically you really want systemd-oomd) > 2. A desktop that properly places everything into separate cgroups > > Both of these items are work-in-progress areas. It is going to happen, > but we are not quite there yet (KDE is also working it). > > > Back to the original claim. If PSI requires measuring the pressure over > a period of time, then the reaction will only happen *after* the > situation has turned bad. In general this is a *good* thing, you don't > want to go into panic mode just because the system is sluggish for a > bit. However, it is also *bad*, because the graphical user interface > really should *not* freeze for 10-30s. > > This is where the uresourced proposal ("Reserve resources for active > users") that I submitted earlier ties in. It approaches the problem > from the other side, by protecting the core session processes from the > effects of memory pressure[1]. It does so by guaranteeing a memory > allocation of 250MiB to those important processes[2]. > > By doing this, the UI should remain reasonable responsive even if the > rest of the system is under huge memory pressure and is heavily > thrashing. > > > So, from my point of view the right thing here is to: > > 1. Go with a simple approach for now, because things are changing. > EarlyOOM probably fits the bill here. > 2. Also consider using uresourced, it is simple and should improve > things a bit further. > This only makes sense if KDE is already starting using systemd. > 3. Move to a purely PSI based approach once systemd-oomd comes along. > > Benjamin > > [1] The KDE systemd startup work is fully compatible. Not sure if that > is merged and usable in Fedora. > [2] From a memory management point of view the kernel basically behaves > as if those processes are using 250MiB less. Which means considerably > less swapping and such for those processes. > _______________________________________________ > devel mailing list -- devel@lists.fedoraproject.org > To unsubscribe send an email to devel-le...@lists.fedoraproject.org > Fedora Code of Conduct: > https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/project/code-of-conduct/ > List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines > List Archives: > https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject.org > Thanks Chris and Benjamin, I love this kind of constructive discussions :) -- -- Sergio Belkin LPIC-2 Certified - http://www.lpi.org
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