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GBs of memory wasted in Percpu thanks to stale cgroups
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eaf
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 19, 2024 6:48 pm    Post subject: GBs of memory wasted in Percpu thanks to stale cgroups Reply with quote

Hi,

I've been hunting a significant memory leak on my system where every day the amount of used memory would go up by a few GB. I'm not talking about caches, buffers, ARC, etc, I'm talking about Percpu in /proc/meminfo that climbed all the way up to 50GB at some point.

I think I've traced it down to cgroups (because I also noticed that I had an explosion of them) and then to elogind and OpenRC.

Apparently, elogind creates a new cgroup for every new login. With cgroups v.1 it was also setting a per-cgroup release_agent to /lib64/elogind/elogind-cgroups-agent that was supposed to be called when the corresponding cgroup became empty. That agent would then cleanup the empty cgroup. On systemd installations the cleanup would be done by systemd.

With cgroups v.2 the cleanup mechanism has changed, someone is now supposed to be monitoring the corresponding cgroup.events file, and when that file has "populated 0" in it, get rid of the cgroup. I guess, elogind does not support this cleanup mechanism, because tens of thousands of empty cgroups were left lying around on my system.

I think, and I may be totally wrong here, that the issue is that OpenRC by default mounts cgroups v.2 under /sys/fs/cgroup, and elogind doesn't know how to do cgroup cleanup for v.2.

Has anybody observed this pileup of unused cgroups and Percpu memory on their setups? Am I perhaps missing some sort of an /etc/init.d service that I neglected to activate and that would do this cleanup automatically thereby avoiding this pileup?

Thanks!
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pingtoo
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 19, 2024 7:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

How to find this "cground pile up" symptom? Or if I don't see it in a obvious way that mean I don't have this situation?
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eaf
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 19, 2024 7:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

"grep Percpu /proc/meminfo" was showing tens of GB allocated by "per cpu" allocators.

"cat /proc/cgroups" was showing tens of thousands of groups on my setup. Once I noticed that, I looked for cgroups in /sys/fs/cgroup that had empty cgroup.procs file or "populated 0" in cgroup.events file. Most of those groups counted by /proc/cgroups were found empty. Upon destroying them, the Percpu in /proc/meminfo dropped from 50GB to 2GB.

This box sees a ton of ssh and sftp traffic, which I guess accounts for the rapid growth of abandoned per-session cgroups.
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Hu
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 19, 2024 7:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

With what version(s) of elogind did you observe this? The output of emerge --pretend --verbose sys-apps/openrc sys-auth/elogind might be useful.
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eaf
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 19, 2024 7:42 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Code:
[ebuild   R    ] sys-apps/openrc-0.54.2::gentoo  USE="netifrc pam sysvinit unicode -audit -bash -caps -debug -newnet -s6 (-selinux) -sysv-utils" 245 KiB
[ebuild   R    ] sys-auth/elogind-252.9-r2::gentoo  USE="acl pam policykit -audit -cgroup-hybrid -debug -doc (-selinux) -test" 1,878 KiB
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pingtoo
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 19, 2024 8:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

eaf wrote:
"grep Percpu /proc/meminfo" was showing tens of GB allocated by "per cpu" allocators.

"cat /proc/cgroups" was showing tens of thousands of groups on my setup. Once I noticed that, I looked for cgroups in /sys/fs/cgroup that had empty cgroup.procs file or "populated 0" in cgroup.events file. Most of those groups counted by /proc/cgroups were found empty. Upon destroying them, the Percpu in /proc/meminfo dropped from 50GB to 2GB.

This box sees a ton of ssh and sftp traffic, which I guess accounts for the rapid growth of abandoned per-session cgroups.


Thanks for the information.

Code:
me@rpi5 ~ $ cat /proc/meminfo |grep Per
Percpu:             1664 kB


Code:
me@rpi5 ~ $ cat /proc/cgroups
#subsys_name   hierarchy   num_cgroups   enabled
cpuset   0   93   1
cpu   0   93   1
cpuacct   0   93   1
blkio   0   93   1
memory   0   93   0
devices   0   93   1
freezer   0   93   1
net_cls   0   93   1
perf_event   0   93   1
net_prio   0   93   1
pids   0   93   1


Linux rpi5 6.6.31+rpt-rpi-2712 #1 SMP PREEMPT Debian 1:6.6.31-1+rpt1 (2024-05-29) aarch64 GNU/Linux

This is on RPI 5 with rpi 16k page knernel.
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eaf
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 19, 2024 8:48 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

That's cool, and that's what I would expect to see too. But aren't you running Debian, and likely systemd too? I'm wondering, if perhaps I'm seeing some conflicting configuration on Gentoo where OpenRC mounts cgroups v.2 and elogind can't cope with it. But I didn't specially configure any of that, it's all default.
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pingtoo
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 19, 2024 9:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

eaf wrote:
That's cool, and that's what I would expect to see too. But aren't you running Debian, and likely systemd too? I'm wondering, if perhaps I'm seeing some conflicting configuration on Gentoo where OpenRC mounts cgroups v.2 and elogind can't cope with it. But I didn't specially configure any of that, it's all default.


No, I am just using the RPI's kernel, my rootfs is Gentoo based.

my make.profile is
Code:
make.profile -> ../../var/db/repos/gentoo/profiles/default/linux/arm64/23.0/desktop/gnome/systemd
So yes. I am using systemd.

Code:
me@rpi5 ~ $ mount|grep cgroup
cgroup2 on /sys/fs/cgroup type cgroup2 (rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime,nsdelegate,memory_recursiveprot)
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sublogic
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 19, 2024 11:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I see it too! But not on the same scale as eaf.
Code:
$ mount | grep cgroup
none on /sys/fs/cgroup type cgroup2 (rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime,nsdelegate)

$ ls /sys/fs/cgroup
10  31  51  70  92                      memory.stat
11  32  52  71  c1                      openrc.apt-cacher-ng
12  33  53  72  c2                      openrc.avahi-daemon
13  34  54  73  c3                      openrc.bluetooth
14  35  55  76  c4                      openrc.cronie
15  36  56  78  cgroup.controllers      openrc.cupsd
16  37  57  79  cgroup.max.depth        openrc.dbus
17  38  58  8   cgroup.max.descendants  openrc.display-manager
18  39  59  80  cgroup.procs            openrc.distccd
19  4   6   81  cgroup.stat             openrc.net.wlp6s0
20  40  60  82  cgroup.subtree_control  openrc.ntpd
21  41  61  83  cgroup.threads          openrc.rasdaemon
22  42  62  84  cpu.stat                openrc.rpc.idmapd
23  43  63  85  cpu.stat.local          openrc.rpc.statd
24  45  64  86  cpuset.cpus.effective    openrc.rpcbind
25  46  65  87  cpuset.mems.effective    openrc.rsyncd
26  47  66  88  elogind                 openrc.sshd
27  48  67  89  io.cost.model           openrc.sysklogd
28  49  68  9   io.cost.qos             openrc.udev
29  5   69  90  io.stat
30  50  7   91  memory.reclaim

Among the two-digit cgroups, 80 and c2 are my xfce4 session and a tigervnc session. The others are stale.
Code:
$ grep -l populated\ 1 /sys/fs/cgroup/??/cgroup.events
/sys/fs/cgroup/80/cgroup.events
/sys/fs/cgroup/c2/cgroup.events

$ grep -l populated\ 0 /sys/fs/cgroup/??/cgroup.events
/sys/fs/cgroup/10/cgroup.events
/sys/fs/cgroup/11/cgroup.events
...
/sys/fs/cgroup/91/cgroup.events
/sys/fs/cgroup/92/cgroup.events
/sys/fs/cgroup/c1/cgroup.events
/sys/fs/cgroup/c3/cgroup.events
/sys/fs/cgroup/c4/cgroup.events
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eaf
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PostPosted: Fri Dec 20, 2024 1:50 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

It's definitely elogind that's creating these groups:

Code:
mkdir("/sys/fs/cgroup/4041", 0755)      = 0


Interestingly, its source code does have some inotify handlers, and it should be able to recognize changes to cgroups_events and should be able to do cleanup. Yet, it doesn't.

Also, if I change /etc/rc.conf to mount /sys/fs/cgroup in "legacy" mode, then elogind starts creating cgroups in a different place, and then openrc controller takes care of the cleanup by running /lib/rc/sh/cgroup-release-agent.sh for each released group:

Code:
mkdir("/sys/fs/cgroup/openrc/5", 0755)  = 0


I figure, I'll open an issue with elogind devs, and perhaps they'll tell me right off the bat what's missing here.
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sam_
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 12:47 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

For completeness, the bug OP has filed seems to be https://github.com/elogind/elogind/issues/296
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eaf
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 6:14 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I poked around elogind source code, and I kinda wish I didn't. There's a lot of #if 0 sprinkled all over the place, hundreds of lines of commented code at a time, and the functions that are supposed to setup monitoring of cgroup.events files are never even called. It might be intentional, they do say right before a big chunk of disabled inotify code that "elogind is not init, and does not install the agent here." And I get it that elogind was extracted from systemd, so some scars are supposed to be present, but boy was that an invasive surgery, and things were just left patched and bandaged throughout the code. No reaction from elogind folks about the issue. I start thinking that we're just lucky that whatever works works.

So, the options to avoid the leak appear to be:

  • Switch to the original systemd;
  • Change /etc/rc.conf to mount cgroups v.1, and then openrc will take care of the cleanup;
  • Set up a cronjob to scan empty cgroups and delete them manually.
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sam_
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 4:23 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

eaf wrote:
I poked around elogind source code, and I kinda wish I didn't. There's a lot of #if 0 sprinkled all over the place, hundreds of lines of commented code at a time, and the functions that are supposed to setup monitoring of cgroup.events files are never even called. It might be intentional, they do say right before a big chunk of disabled inotify code that "elogind is not init, and does not install the agent here." And I get it that elogind was extracted from systemd, so some scars are supposed to be present, but boy was that an invasive surgery, and things were just left patched and bandaged throughout the code. No reaction from elogind folks about the issue. I start thinking that we're just lucky that whatever works works.
[...]


I'm afraid that I've held this opinion too for quite some time.
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