On Wed 04-04-18 10:58:39, Zhaoyang Huang wrote: > On Tue, Apr 3, 2018 at 9:56 PM, Michal Hocko <mho...@kernel.org> wrote: > > On Tue 03-04-18 09:32:45, Steven Rostedt wrote: > >> On Tue, 3 Apr 2018 14:35:14 +0200 > >> Michal Hocko <mho...@kernel.org> wrote: > > [...] > >> > Being clever is OK if it doesn't add a tricky code. And relying on > >> > si_mem_available is definitely tricky and obscure. > >> > >> Can we get the mm subsystem to provide a better method to know if an > >> allocation will possibly succeed or not before trying it? It doesn't > >> have to be free of races. Just "if I allocate this many pages right > >> now, will it work?" If that changes from the time it asks to the time > >> it allocates, that's fine. I'm not trying to prevent OOM to never > >> trigger. I just don't want to to trigger consistently. > > > > How do you do that without an actuall allocation request? And more > > fundamentally, what if your _particular_ request is just fine but it > > will get us so close to the OOM edge that the next legit allocation > > request simply goes OOM? There is simply no sane interface I can think > > of that would satisfy a safe/sensible "will it cause OOM" semantic. > > > The point is the app which try to allocate the size over the line will escape > the OOM and let other innocent to be sacrificed. However, the one which you > mentioned above will be possibly selected by OOM that triggered by consequnce > failed allocation.
If you are afraid of that then you can have a look at {set,clear}_current_oom_origin() which will automatically select the current process as an oom victim and kill it. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs