Michal Hocko <mho...@kernel.org> writes: > On Tue 17-09-19 12:26:18, Eric W. Biederman wrote: >> Michal Hocko <mho...@kernel.org> writes: >> >> > On Tue 17-09-19 17:28:02, Heinrich Schuchardt wrote: >> >> >> >> On 9/17/19 12:03 PM, Michal Hocko wrote: >> >> > Hi, >> >> > I have just stumbled over 16db3d3f1170 ("kernel/sysctl.c: threads-max >> >> > observe limits") and I am really wondering what is the motivation behind >> >> > the patch. We've had a customer noticing the threads_max autoscaling >> >> > differences btween 3.12 and 4.4 kernels and wanted to override the auto >> >> > tuning from the userspace, just to find out that this is not possible. >> >> >> >> set_max_threads() sets the upper limit (max_threads_suggested) for >> >> threads such that at a maximum 1/8th of the total memory can be occupied >> >> by the thread's administrative data (of size THREADS_SIZE). On my 32 GiB >> >> system this results in 254313 threads. >> > >> > This is quite arbitrary, isn't it? What would happen if the limit was >> > twice as large? >> > >> >> With patch 16db3d3f1170 ("kernel/sysctl.c: threads-max observe limits") >> >> a user cannot set an arbitrarily high number for >> >> /proc/sys/kernel/threads-max which could lead to a system stalling >> >> because the thread headers occupy all the memory. >> > >> > This is still a decision of the admin to make. You can consume the >> > memory by other means and that is why we have measures in place. E.g. >> > memcg accounting. >> > >> >> When developing the patch I remarked that on a system where memory is >> >> installed dynamically it might be a good idea to recalculate this limit. >> >> If you have a system that boots with let's say 8 GiB and than >> >> dynamically installs a few TiB of RAM this might make sense. But such a >> >> dynamic update of thread_max_suggested was left out for the sake of >> >> simplicity. >> >> >> >> Anyway if more than 100,000 threads are used on a system, I would wonder >> >> if the software should not be changed to use thread-pools instead. >> > >> > You do not change the software to overcome artificial bounds based on >> > guessing. >> > >> > So can we get back to the justification of the patch. What kind of >> > real life problem does it solve and why is it ok to override an admin >> > decision? >> > If there is no strong justification then the patch should be reverted >> > because from what I have heard it has been noticed and it has broken >> > a certain deployment. I am not really clear about technical details yet >> > but it seems that there are workloads that believe they need to touch >> > this tuning and complain if that is not possible. >> >> Taking a quick look myself. >> >> I am completely mystified by both sides of this conversation. >> >> a) The logic to set the default number of threads in a system >> has not changed since 2.6.12-rc2 (the start of the git history). >> >> The implementation has changed but we should still get the same >> value. So anyone seeing threads_max autoscaling differences >> between kernels is either seeing a bug in the rewritten formula >> or something else weird is going on. >> >> Michal is it a very small effect your customers are seeing? >> Is it another bug somewhere else? > > I am still trying to get more information. Reportedly they see a > different auto tuned limit between two kernel versions which results in > an applicaton complaining. As already mentioned this might be a side > effect of something else and this is not yet fully analyzed. My main > point for bringing up this discussion is ...
Please this sounds like the kind of issue that will reveal something deeper about what is going on. > >> b) Not being able to bump threads_max to the physical limit of >> the machine is very clearly a regression. > > ... exactly this part. The changelog of the respective patch doesn't > really exaplain why it is needed except of "it sounds like a good idea > to be consistent". I suggest doing a partial revert to just: diff --git a/kernel/fork.c b/kernel/fork.c index 7a74ade4e7d6..de8264ea34a7 100644 --- a/kernel/fork.c +++ b/kernel/fork.c @@ -2943,7 +2943,7 @@ int sysctl_max_threads(struct ctl_table *table, int write, if (ret || !write) return ret; - set_max_threads(threads); + max_threads = threads; return 0; } proc_dointvec_minmax limiting the values to MIN_THREADS and MAX_THREADS is justifiable. Those are the minimum and maximum values the kernel can function with. With a good changelog we should be able to backport that change without any fear. Eric