Blame view

kernel/linux-rt-4.4.41/Documentation/vm/page_owner.txt 3.61 KB
5113f6f70   김현기   kernel add
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
  page owner: Tracking about who allocated each page
  -----------------------------------------------------------
  
  * Introduction
  
  page owner is for the tracking about who allocated each page.
  It can be used to debug memory leak or to find a memory hogger.
  When allocation happens, information about allocation such as call stack
  and order of pages is stored into certain storage for each page.
  When we need to know about status of all pages, we can get and analyze
  this information.
  
  Although we already have tracepoint for tracing page allocation/free,
  using it for analyzing who allocate each page is rather complex. We need
  to enlarge the trace buffer for preventing overlapping until userspace
  program launched. And, launched program continually dump out the trace
  buffer for later analysis and it would change system behviour with more
  possibility rather than just keeping it in memory, so bad for debugging.
  
  page owner can also be used for various purposes. For example, accurate
  fragmentation statistics can be obtained through gfp flag information of
  each page. It is already implemented and activated if page owner is
  enabled. Other usages are more than welcome.
  
  page owner is disabled in default. So, if you'd like to use it, you need
  to add "page_owner=on" into your boot cmdline. If the kernel is built
  with page owner and page owner is disabled in runtime due to no enabling
  boot option, runtime overhead is marginal. If disabled in runtime, it
  doesn't require memory to store owner information, so there is no runtime
  memory overhead. And, page owner inserts just two unlikely branches into
  the page allocator hotpath and if it returns false then allocation is
  done like as the kernel without page owner. These two unlikely branches
  would not affect to allocation performance. Following is the kernel's
  code size change due to this facility.
  
  - Without page owner
     text    data     bss     dec     hex filename
    40662    1493     644   42799    a72f mm/page_alloc.o
  
  - With page owner
     text    data     bss     dec     hex filename
    40892    1493     644   43029    a815 mm/page_alloc.o
     1427      24       8    1459     5b3 mm/page_ext.o
     2722      50       0    2772     ad4 mm/page_owner.o
  
  Although, roughly, 4 KB code is added in total, page_alloc.o increase by
  230 bytes and only half of it is in hotpath. Building the kernel with
  page owner and turning it on if needed would be great option to debug
  kernel memory problem.
  
  There is one notice that is caused by implementation detail. page owner
  stores information into the memory from struct page extension. This memory
  is initialized some time later than that page allocator starts in sparse
  memory system, so, until initialization, many pages can be allocated and
  they would have no owner information. To fix it up, these early allocated
  pages are investigated and marked as allocated in initialization phase.
  Although it doesn't mean that they have the right owner information,
  at least, we can tell whether the page is allocated or not,
  more accurately. On 2GB memory x86-64 VM box, 13343 early allocated pages
  are catched and marked, although they are mostly allocated from struct
  page extension feature. Anyway, after that, no page is left in
  un-tracking state.
  
  * Usage
  
  1) Build user-space helper
  	cd tools/vm
  	make page_owner_sort
  
  2) Enable page owner
  	Add "page_owner=on" to boot cmdline.
  
  3) Do the job what you want to debug
  
  4) Analyze information from page owner
  	cat /sys/kernel/debug/page_owner > page_owner_full.txt
  	grep -v ^PFN page_owner_full.txt > page_owner.txt
  	./page_owner_sort page_owner.txt sorted_page_owner.txt
  
  	See the result about who allocated each page
  	in the sorted_page_owner.txt.