1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3=====================
4Fake NUMA For CPUSets
5=====================
6
7:Author: David Rientjes <rientjes@cs.washington.edu>
8
9Using numa=fake and CPUSets for Resource Management
10
11This document describes how the numa=fake x86_64 command-line option can be used
12in conjunction with cpusets for coarse memory management.  Using this feature,
13you can create fake NUMA nodes that represent contiguous chunks of memory and
14assign them to cpusets and their attached tasks.  This is a way of limiting the
15amount of system memory that are available to a certain class of tasks.
16
17For more information on the features of cpusets, see
18Documentation/admin-guide/cgroup-v1/cpusets.rst.
19There are a number of different configurations you can use for your needs.  For
20more information on the numa=fake command line option and its various ways of
21configuring fake nodes, see Documentation/arch/x86/x86_64/boot-options.rst.
22
23For the purposes of this introduction, we'll assume a very primitive NUMA
24emulation setup of "numa=fake=4*512,".  This will split our system memory into
25four equal chunks of 512M each that we can now use to assign to cpusets.  As
26you become more familiar with using this combination for resource control,
27you'll determine a better setup to minimize the number of nodes you have to deal
28with.
29
30A machine may be split as follows with "numa=fake=4*512," as reported by dmesg::
31
32	Faking node 0 at 0000000000000000-0000000020000000 (512MB)
33	Faking node 1 at 0000000020000000-0000000040000000 (512MB)
34	Faking node 2 at 0000000040000000-0000000060000000 (512MB)
35	Faking node 3 at 0000000060000000-0000000080000000 (512MB)
36	...
37	On node 0 totalpages: 130975
38	On node 1 totalpages: 131072
39	On node 2 totalpages: 131072
40	On node 3 totalpages: 131072
41
42Now following the instructions for mounting the cpusets filesystem from
43Documentation/admin-guide/cgroup-v1/cpusets.rst, you can assign fake nodes (i.e. contiguous memory
44address spaces) to individual cpusets::
45
46	[root@xroads /]# mkdir exampleset
47	[root@xroads /]# mount -t cpuset none exampleset
48	[root@xroads /]# mkdir exampleset/ddset
49	[root@xroads /]# cd exampleset/ddset
50	[root@xroads /exampleset/ddset]# echo 0-1 > cpus
51	[root@xroads /exampleset/ddset]# echo 0-1 > mems
52
53Now this cpuset, 'ddset', will only allowed access to fake nodes 0 and 1 for
54memory allocations (1G).
55
56You can now assign tasks to these cpusets to limit the memory resources
57available to them according to the fake nodes assigned as mems::
58
59	[root@xroads /exampleset/ddset]# echo $$ > tasks
60	[root@xroads /exampleset/ddset]# dd if=/dev/zero of=tmp bs=1024 count=1G
61	[1] 13425
62
63Notice the difference between the system memory usage as reported by
64/proc/meminfo between the restricted cpuset case above and the unrestricted
65case (i.e. running the same 'dd' command without assigning it to a fake NUMA
66cpuset):
67
68	========	============	==========
69	Name		Unrestricted	Restricted
70	========	============	==========
71	MemTotal	3091900 kB	3091900 kB
72	MemFree		42113 kB	1513236 kB
73	========	============	==========
74
75This allows for coarse memory management for the tasks you assign to particular
76cpusets.  Since cpusets can form a hierarchy, you can create some pretty
77interesting combinations of use-cases for various classes of tasks for your
78memory management needs.
79