On Thu, 7 Sep 2017, Roman Gushchin wrote:

> On Thu, Sep 07, 2017 at 10:03:24AM -0500, Christopher Lameter wrote:
> > On Thu, 7 Sep 2017, Roman Gushchin wrote:
> >
> > > > Really? From what I know and worked on way back when: The reason was to 
> > > > be
> > > > able to contain the affected application in a cpuset. Multiple apps may
> > > > have been running in multiple cpusets on a large NUMA machine and the 
> > > > OOM
> > > > condition in one cpuset should not affect the other. It also helped to
> > > > isolate the application behavior causing the oom in numerous cases.
> > > >
> > > > Doesnt this requirement transfer to cgroups in the same way?
> > >
> > > We have per-node memory stats and plan to use them during the OOM victim
> > > selection. Hopefully it can help.
> >
> > One of the OOM causes could be that memory was restricted to a certain
> > node set. Killing the allocating task is (was?) default behavior in that
> > case so that the task that has the restrictions is killed. Not any task
> > that may not have the restrictions and woiuld not experience OOM.
>
> As I can see, it's not the default behavior these days. If we have a way
> to select a victim between memcgs/tasks which are actually using
> the corresponding type of memory, it's much better than to kill
> an allocating task.

Kill the whole set of processes constituting an app in a cgroup or so
sounds good to me.
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