On Sat, Mar 07, 2026 at 08:27:22PM +0800, Huang, Ying wrote:
> "JP Kobryn (Meta)" <[email protected]> writes:
> 
> >
> >   hit
> >     - for BIND and PREFERRED_MANY, allocation succeeded on node in nodemask
> >     - for other policies, allocation succeeded on intended node
> >     - counted on the node of the allocation
> >   miss
> >     - allocation intended for other node, but happened on this one
> >     - counted on other node
> >   foreign
> >     - allocation intended on this node, but happened on other node
> >     - counted on this node
> >
> > Counters are exposed per-memcg, per-node in memory.numa_stat and globally
> > in /proc/vmstat.
> 
> IMHO, it may be better to describe your workflow as an example to use
> the newly added statistics.  That can describe why we need them.  For
> example, what you have described in
> 
> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/[email protected]/
> 
> > 1) Pressure/OOMs reported while system-wide memory is free.
> > 2) Check per-node pgscan/pgsteal stats (provided by patch 2) to narrow
> > down node(s) under pressure. They become available in
> > /sys/devices/system/node/nodeN/vmstat.
> > 3) Check per-policy allocation counters (this patch) on that node to
> > find what policy was driving it. Same readout at nodeN/vmstat.
> > 4) Now use /proc/*/numa_maps to identify tasks using the policy.
> 
> One question.  If we have to search /proc/*/numa_maps, why can't we
> find all necessary information via /proc/*/numa_maps?  For example,
> which VMA uses the most pages on the node?  Which policy is used in the
> VMA? ...
> 

I am a little confused by this too - consider:

7f85dca86000 interleave=0,1 file=[...] mapped=14 mapmax=5 N0=3 N1=10 ...

Is n0=3 and N1=10 because we did those allocations according to the
policy but got fallbacks, or is it that way because we did 7/7 and
then things got migrated due to pressure?

Do these counters let you capture that, or does it just make the numbers
even more meaningless?

The page allocator will happily fallback to other nodes - even when a
mempolicy is present - because mempolicy is more of a suggestion rather
than a rule (unlike cpusets).  So I'd like to understand how these
counters are intended to be used a little better.

~Gregory

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