From: Eric Wong <e@yhbt.net>
To: Konstantin Ryabitsev <konstantin@linuxfoundation.org>
Cc: meta@public-inbox.org
Subject: Re: how's memory use? May 2020 edition
Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 05:23:14 +0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20200515052314.GA5471@dcvr> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20200514205748.nsdv444ft4oqndqh@chatter.i7.local>
Konstantin Ryabitsev <konstantin@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
> On Tue, May 12, 2020 at 08:37:34AM +0000, Eric Wong wrote:
> > Hey all, if possible; I'd like to know the memory use of your
> > daemons (particularly -httpd), relevant pmap(1) (or equivalent)
> > output, and version of public-inbox in use.
>
> This is on lore.kernel.org. We upgraded to 1.5.0 yesterday, so this is
> only after a day of running, but this usually covers a lot of traffic.
> We run with -W4, hence 4 different outputs:
Thanks for the info! I forgot to ask in the original post, but
having an idea of active connections per worker might be useful
too. I rarely see more than a few dozen, myself.
> # pgrep -f public-inbox-httpd | xargs pmap | grep anon
Would've been easier for humans to read the output if each
process were individually broken out, but I can figure it out
from addresses below :>
> 0000000002093000 23568K rw--- [ anon ]
OK, that looks like the heap of the master.
> 00007f981c6dc000 84K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f981d2c5000 4K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f982802f000 20K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f982824c000 16K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f982865c000 184K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9828da8000 8K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9828fc2000 8K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9829351000 4K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f982953f000 160K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9829572000 4K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9829575000 4K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007fffddbe2000 8K r-x-- [ anon ]
> ffffffffff600000 4K r-x-- [ anon ]
Probably somethings used by glibc internally, or maybe
SQLite, Xapian. Good thing is the above mappings now
get shared with children and are copy-on-write
OK, onto another process:
> 0000000002093000 23568K rw--- [ anon ]
That looks inherited with the parent.
> 0000000003797000 235060K rw--- [ anon ]
Ah, so that's probably the main heap after forking (I forget
my 64-bit process uses -W0, so no workers in that setup).
Anyways, 250-300MB seems a lot better than things were for lore
few months ago (closer to ~1G per worker, IIRC?).
I've still got a some pure Perl ideas (and plenty with
Inline::C), though I'll probably prioritize other things, first,
such as IMAP.
> 00007f981a8fd000 2736K rw--- [ anon ]
Not sure where the above comes from, but it's an odd allocation
that seems to get pulled in by most other workers, independently.
> 00007f981c6dc000 84K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f981d2c5000 4K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f982802f000 20K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f982824c000 16K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f982865c000 184K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9828da8000 8K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9828fc2000 8K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9829351000 4K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f982953f000 160K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9829572000 4K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9829575000 4K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007fffddbe2000 8K r-x-- [ anon ]
> ffffffffff600000 4K r-x-- [ anon ]
That all looks shared from the parent, good.
> 0000000002093000 23568K rw--- [ anon ]
> 0000000003797000 216568K rw--- [ anon ]
OK, similar to the other worker.
> 00007f98196cc000 4724K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f9819b69000 4876K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f981a02c000 2736K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f981aeb5000 3496K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f981b350000 1628K rw--- [ anon ]
Weird, going to need to source dive into other dependencies to
figure this out, but also not a lot compared to the main 200MB+
heap, either.
I've got some odd ones like those, too, and they seem to
persist...
<snip 00007f981c6dc000 - ffffffffff600000>
> 0000000002093000 23568K rw--- [ anon ]
> 0000000003797000 241724K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f981a8e2000 2736K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f981b16f000 1964K rw--- [ anon ]
> 00007f981b35a000 1300K rw--- [ anon ]
Ditto for these mysterious allocations
<snip 00007f981c6dc000 - ffffffffff600000>
> 0000000002093000 23568K rw--- [ anon ]
> 0000000003797000 202632K rw--- [ anon ]
Probably the least busy process, and no odd >1MB mappings.
Anyways, things seem looking much better than they were in the
past. Regexp matching and split() for MIME is still a problem,
and some lists like linux-mtd having some giant multi-MB spam
that gets crawled...
Thanks again for the info!
prev parent reply other threads:[~2020-05-15 5:23 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2020-05-12 8:37 how's memory use? May 2020 edition Eric Wong
2020-05-14 20:57 ` Konstantin Ryabitsev
2020-05-15 5:23 ` Eric Wong [this message]
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