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Date:      Sun, 04 Nov 2012 07:59:01 -0700
From:      Ian Lepore <freebsd@damnhippie.dyndns.org>
To:        Dylan Cochran <a134qaed@gmail.com>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org, freebsd-embedded@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: watchdogd, jemalloc, and mlockall
Message-ID:  <1352041141.1120.146.camel@revolution.hippie.lan>
In-Reply-To: <CA%2B8JZ0cRhHft7FsL=wO7e-1yOz4c-Whq=UXKokmK1ZWBOGepqA@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <1351967919.1120.102.camel@revolution.hippie.lan> <50957793.8060709@delphij.net> <1351973531.1120.118.camel@revolution.hippie.lan> <CA%2B8JZ0cRhHft7FsL=wO7e-1yOz4c-Whq=UXKokmK1ZWBOGepqA@mail.gmail.com>

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On Sun, 2012-11-04 at 09:16 -0500, Dylan Cochran wrote:
> Have you already tried something like opt.lg_chunk? This, combined
> with other options for the library (man 3 jemalloc), should reduce the
> space from 8MB down to 16K, or so. (approximation, I'm being liberal
> for jemalloc's internal bookkeeping size). For a special case like
> watchdogd, this would make more sense in general (given it should be
> designed to do no allocations/deletions during normal operation
> anyway). For other programs, this would be as unwise as statically
> linking them.
> 

I had completely missed the fact that jemalloc had its own manpage,
thank you.  

Given that new information I think the pieces are in place to put
watchdogd on a memory diet.  I'll work up a patch in the next couple
days

-- Ian

> The 'perfect' solution would obviously be improving the library
> manager (rtld) to only mmap() function pages it needs, though I will
> admit I'm not sure if the ELF format is even capable of supporting
> something like that, what other problems it would cause down the road,
> or if it even attempts to do this already (I haven't looked at the
> runtime linker code since 7.0).
> 
> By the way, remember that when you compare static v dynamic, that the
> runtime linker does allocate private memory to handle the resolving of
> symbols to virtual memory addresses. That may skew your memory usage
> figures a bit.
> 
> On Sat, Nov 3, 2012 at 4:12 PM, Ian Lepore
> <freebsd@damnhippie.dyndns.org> wrote:
> >
> > On Sat, 2012-11-03 at 12:59 -0700, Xin Li wrote:
> > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> > > Hash: SHA256
> > >
> > > On 11/3/12 11:38 AM, Ian Lepore wrote:
> > > > In an attempt to un-hijack the thread about memory usage increase
> > > > between 6.4 and 9.x, I'm starting a new thread here related to my
> > > > recent discovery that watchdogd uses a lot more memory since it
> > > > began using mlockall(2).
> > > >
> > > > I tried statically linking watchdogd and it made a small difference
> > > > in RSS, presumably because it doesn't wire down all of libc and
> > > > libm.
> > >
> > > Speaking for this, the last time I brought this up, someone (can't
> > > remember, I think it was phk@) argued that the shared library would
> > > use only one copy of memory, while statically linked ones would be
> > > duplicated and thus use more memory.  I haven't yet tried to prove or
> > > challenge that, though.
> >
> > That sounds right to me... if 3 or 4 daemons were to eventually be
> > statically linked because of mlockall(), then each of them would have
> > its own private copy of strlen(), and malloc(), and so on; we'd be back
> > to the bad old days before shared libs came along.  Each program would
> > contain its own copy of only the routines from the library that it uses,
> > not the entire library in each program.
> >
> > On the other hand, if even one daemon linked with shared libc uses
> > mlockall(), then all of libc gets wired.  As I understand it, only one
> > physical copy of libc would exist in memory, still shared by almost all
> > running apps.  The entire contents of the library would continuously
> > occupy physical memory, even the parts that no apps are using.
> >
> > It's hard to know how to weigh the various tradeoffs.  I suspect there's
> > no one correct answer.
> >
> > -- Ian
> >
> >
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