xref: /linux/Documentation/admin-guide/sysctl/vm.rst (revision c25f2fb1f469deaed2df8db524d91f3321a0f816)
1===============================
2Documentation for /proc/sys/vm/
3===============================
4
5kernel version 2.6.29
6
7Copyright (c) 1998, 1999,  Rik van Riel <riel@nl.linux.org>
8
9Copyright (c) 2008         Peter W. Morreale <pmorreale@novell.com>
10
11For general info and legal blurb, please look in index.rst.
12
13------------------------------------------------------------------------------
14
15This file contains the documentation for the sysctl files in
16/proc/sys/vm and is valid for Linux kernel version 2.6.29.
17
18The files in this directory can be used to tune the operation
19of the virtual memory (VM) subsystem of the Linux kernel and
20the writeout of dirty data to disk.
21
22Default values and initialization routines for most of these
23files can be found in mm/swap.c.
24
25Currently, these files are in /proc/sys/vm:
26
27- admin_reserve_kbytes
28- compact_memory
29- compaction_proactiveness
30- compact_unevictable_allowed
31- defrag_mode
32- dirty_background_bytes
33- dirty_background_ratio
34- dirty_bytes
35- dirty_expire_centisecs
36- dirty_ratio
37- dirtytime_expire_seconds
38- dirty_writeback_centisecs
39- drop_caches
40- enable_soft_offline
41- extfrag_threshold
42- highmem_is_dirtyable
43- hugetlb_shm_group
44- laptop_mode
45- legacy_va_layout
46- lowmem_reserve_ratio
47- max_map_count
48- mem_profiling         (only if CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING=y)
49- memory_failure_early_kill
50- memory_failure_recovery
51- min_free_kbytes
52- min_slab_ratio
53- min_unmapped_ratio
54- mmap_min_addr
55- mmap_rnd_bits
56- mmap_rnd_compat_bits
57- nr_hugepages
58- nr_hugepages_mempolicy
59- nr_overcommit_hugepages
60- nr_trim_pages         (only if CONFIG_MMU=n)
61- numa_zonelist_order
62- oom_dump_tasks
63- oom_kill_allocating_task
64- overcommit_kbytes
65- overcommit_memory
66- overcommit_ratio
67- page-cluster
68- page_lock_unfairness
69- panic_on_oom
70- percpu_pagelist_high_fraction
71- stat_interval
72- stat_refresh
73- numa_stat
74- swappiness
75- unprivileged_userfaultfd
76- user_reserve_kbytes
77- vfs_cache_pressure
78- vfs_cache_pressure_denom
79- watermark_boost_factor
80- watermark_scale_factor
81- zone_reclaim_mode
82
83
84admin_reserve_kbytes
85====================
86
87The amount of free memory in the system that should be reserved for users
88with the capability cap_sys_admin.
89
90admin_reserve_kbytes defaults to min(3% of free pages, 8MB)
91
92That should provide enough for the admin to log in and kill a process,
93if necessary, under the default overcommit 'guess' mode.
94
95Systems running under overcommit 'never' should increase this to account
96for the full Virtual Memory Size of programs used to recover. Otherwise,
97root may not be able to log in to recover the system.
98
99How do you calculate a minimum useful reserve?
100
101sshd or login + bash (or some other shell) + top (or ps, kill, etc.)
102
103For overcommit 'guess', we can sum resident set sizes (RSS).
104On x86_64 this is about 8MB.
105
106For overcommit 'never', we can take the max of their virtual sizes (VSZ)
107and add the sum of their RSS.
108On x86_64 this is about 128MB.
109
110Changing this takes effect whenever an application requests memory.
111
112
113compact_memory
114==============
115
116Available only when CONFIG_COMPACTION is set. When 1 is written to the file,
117all zones are compacted such that free memory is available in contiguous
118blocks where possible. This can be important for example in the allocation of
119huge pages although processes will also directly compact memory as required.
120
121compaction_proactiveness
122========================
123
124This tunable takes a value in the range [0, 100] with a default value of
12520. This tunable determines how aggressively compaction is done in the
126background. Write of a non zero value to this tunable will immediately
127trigger the proactive compaction. Setting it to 0 disables proactive compaction.
128
129Note that compaction has a non-trivial system-wide impact as pages
130belonging to different processes are moved around, which could also lead
131to latency spikes in unsuspecting applications. The kernel employs
132various heuristics to avoid wasting CPU cycles if it detects that
133proactive compaction is not being effective.
134
135Setting the value above 80 will, in addition to lowering the acceptable level
136of fragmentation, make the compaction code more sensitive to increases in
137fragmentation, i.e. compaction will trigger more often, but reduce
138fragmentation by a smaller amount.
139This makes the fragmentation level more stable over time.
140
141Be careful when setting it to extreme values like 100, as that may
142cause excessive background compaction activity.
143
144compact_unevictable_allowed
145===========================
146
147Available only when CONFIG_COMPACTION is set. When set to 1, compaction is
148allowed to examine the unevictable lru (mlocked pages) for pages to compact.
149This should be used on systems where stalls for minor page faults are an
150acceptable trade for large contiguous free memory.  Set to 0 to prevent
151compaction from moving pages that are unevictable.  Default value is 1.
152On CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT the default value is 0 in order to avoid a page fault, due
153to compaction, which would block the task from becoming active until the fault
154is resolved.
155
156defrag_mode
157===========
158
159When set to 1, the page allocator tries harder to avoid fragmentation
160and maintain the ability to produce huge pages / higher-order pages.
161
162It is recommended to enable this right after boot, as fragmentation,
163once it occurred, can be long-lasting or even permanent.
164
165dirty_background_bytes
166======================
167
168Contains the amount of dirty memory at which the background kernel
169flusher threads will start writeback.
170
171Note:
172  dirty_background_bytes is the counterpart of dirty_background_ratio. Only
173  one of them may be specified at a time. When one sysctl is written it is
174  immediately taken into account to evaluate the dirty memory limits and the
175  other appears as 0 when read.
176
177
178dirty_background_ratio
179======================
180
181Contains, as a percentage of total available memory that contains free pages
182and reclaimable pages, the number of pages at which the background kernel
183flusher threads will start writing out dirty data.
184
185The total available memory is not equal to total system memory.
186
187
188dirty_bytes
189===========
190
191Contains the amount of dirty memory at which a process generating disk writes
192will itself start writeback.
193
194Note: dirty_bytes is the counterpart of dirty_ratio. Only one of them may be
195specified at a time. When one sysctl is written it is immediately taken into
196account to evaluate the dirty memory limits and the other appears as 0 when
197read.
198
199Note: the minimum value allowed for dirty_bytes is two pages (in bytes); any
200value lower than this limit will be ignored and the old configuration will be
201retained.
202
203
204dirty_expire_centisecs
205======================
206
207This tunable is used to define when dirty data is old enough to be eligible
208for writeout by the kernel flusher threads.  It is expressed in 100'ths
209of a second.  Data which has been dirty in-memory for longer than this
210interval will be written out next time a flusher thread wakes up.
211
212
213dirty_ratio
214===========
215
216Contains, as a percentage of total available memory that contains free pages
217and reclaimable pages, the number of pages at which a process which is
218generating disk writes will itself start writing out dirty data.
219
220The total available memory is not equal to total system memory.
221
222
223dirtytime_expire_seconds
224========================
225
226When a lazytime inode is constantly having its pages dirtied, the inode with
227an updated timestamp will never get chance to be written out.  And, if the
228only thing that has happened on the file system is a dirtytime inode caused
229by an atime update, a worker will be scheduled to make sure that inode
230eventually gets pushed out to disk.  This tunable is used to define when dirty
231inode is old enough to be eligible for writeback by the kernel flusher threads.
232And, it is also used as the interval to wakeup dirtytime_writeback thread.
233
234
235dirty_writeback_centisecs
236=========================
237
238The kernel flusher threads will periodically wake up and write `old` data
239out to disk.  This tunable expresses the interval between those wakeups, in
240100'ths of a second.
241
242Setting this to zero disables periodic writeback altogether.
243
244
245drop_caches
246===========
247
248Writing to this will cause the kernel to drop clean caches, as well as
249reclaimable slab objects like dentries and inodes.  Once dropped, their
250memory becomes free.
251
252To free pagecache::
253
254	echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
255
256To free reclaimable slab objects (includes dentries and inodes)::
257
258	echo 2 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
259
260To free slab objects and pagecache::
261
262	echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
263
264This is a non-destructive operation and will not free any dirty objects.
265To increase the number of objects freed by this operation, the user may run
266`sync` prior to writing to /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches.  This will minimize the
267number of dirty objects on the system and create more candidates to be
268dropped.
269
270This file is not a means to control the growth of the various kernel caches
271(inodes, dentries, pagecache, etc...)  These objects are automatically
272reclaimed by the kernel when memory is needed elsewhere on the system.
273
274Use of this file can cause performance problems.  Since it discards cached
275objects, it may cost a significant amount of I/O and CPU to recreate the
276dropped objects, especially if they were under heavy use.  Because of this,
277use outside of a testing or debugging environment is not recommended.
278
279You may see informational messages in your kernel log when this file is
280used::
281
282	cat (1234): drop_caches: 3
283
284These are informational only.  They do not mean that anything is wrong
285with your system.  To disable them, echo 4 (bit 2) into drop_caches.
286
287enable_soft_offline
288===================
289Correctable memory errors are very common on servers. Soft-offline is kernel's
290solution for memory pages having (excessive) corrected memory errors.
291
292For different types of page, soft-offline has different behaviors / costs.
293
294- For a raw error page, soft-offline migrates the in-use page's content to
295  a new raw page.
296
297- For a page that is part of a transparent hugepage, soft-offline splits the
298  transparent hugepage into raw pages, then migrates only the raw error page.
299  As a result, user is transparently backed by 1 less hugepage, impacting
300  memory access performance.
301
302- For a page that is part of a HugeTLB hugepage, soft-offline first migrates
303  the entire HugeTLB hugepage, during which a free hugepage will be consumed
304  as migration target.  Then the original hugepage is dissolved into raw
305  pages without compensation, reducing the capacity of the HugeTLB pool by 1.
306
307It is user's call to choose between reliability (staying away from fragile
308physical memory) vs performance / capacity implications in transparent and
309HugeTLB cases.
310
311For all architectures, enable_soft_offline controls whether to soft offline
312memory pages.  When set to 1, kernel attempts to soft offline the pages
313whenever it thinks needed.  When set to 0, kernel returns EOPNOTSUPP to
314the request to soft offline the pages.  Its default value is 1.
315
316It is worth mentioning that after setting enable_soft_offline to 0, the
317following requests to soft offline pages will not be performed:
318
319- Request to soft offline pages from RAS Correctable Errors Collector.
320
321- On ARM, the request to soft offline pages from GHES driver.
322
323- On PARISC, the request to soft offline pages from Page Deallocation Table.
324
325extfrag_threshold
326=================
327
328This parameter affects whether the kernel will compact memory or direct
329reclaim to satisfy a high-order allocation. The extfrag/extfrag_index file in
330debugfs shows what the fragmentation index for each order is in each zone in
331the system. Values tending towards 0 imply allocations would fail due to lack
332of memory, values towards 1000 imply failures are due to fragmentation and -1
333implies that the allocation will succeed as long as watermarks are met.
334
335The kernel will not compact memory in a zone if the
336fragmentation index is <= extfrag_threshold. The default value is 500.
337
338
339highmem_is_dirtyable
340====================
341
342Available only for systems with CONFIG_HIGHMEM enabled (32b systems).
343
344This parameter controls whether the high memory is considered for dirty
345writers throttling.  This is not the case by default which means that
346only the amount of memory directly visible/usable by the kernel can
347be dirtied. As a result, on systems with a large amount of memory and
348lowmem basically depleted writers might be throttled too early and
349streaming writes can get very slow.
350
351Changing the value to non zero would allow more memory to be dirtied
352and thus allow writers to write more data which can be flushed to the
353storage more effectively. Note this also comes with a risk of pre-mature
354OOM killer because some writers (e.g. direct block device writes) can
355only use the low memory and they can fill it up with dirty data without
356any throttling.
357
358
359hugetlb_shm_group
360=================
361
362hugetlb_shm_group contains group id that is allowed to create SysV
363shared memory segment using hugetlb page.
364
365
366laptop_mode
367===========
368
369laptop_mode is a knob that controls "laptop mode". All the things that are
370controlled by this knob are discussed in Documentation/admin-guide/laptops/laptop-mode.rst.
371
372
373legacy_va_layout
374================
375
376If non-zero, this sysctl disables the new 32-bit mmap layout - the kernel
377will use the legacy (2.4) layout for all processes.
378
379
380lowmem_reserve_ratio
381====================
382
383For some specialised workloads on highmem machines it is dangerous for
384the kernel to allow process memory to be allocated from the "lowmem"
385zone.  This is because that memory could then be pinned via the mlock()
386system call, or by unavailability of swapspace.
387
388And on large highmem machines this lack of reclaimable lowmem memory
389can be fatal.
390
391So the Linux page allocator has a mechanism which prevents allocations
392which *could* use highmem from using too much lowmem.  This means that
393a certain amount of lowmem is defended from the possibility of being
394captured into pinned user memory.
395
396(The same argument applies to the old 16 megabyte ISA DMA region.  This
397mechanism will also defend that region from allocations which could use
398highmem or lowmem).
399
400The `lowmem_reserve_ratio` tunable determines how aggressive the kernel is
401in defending these lower zones.
402
403If you have a machine which uses highmem or ISA DMA and your
404applications are using mlock(), or if you are running with no swap then
405you probably should change the lowmem_reserve_ratio setting.
406
407The lowmem_reserve_ratio is an array. You can see them by reading this file::
408
409	% cat /proc/sys/vm/lowmem_reserve_ratio
410	256     256     32
411
412But, these values are not used directly. The kernel calculates # of protection
413pages for each zones from them. These are shown as array of protection pages
414in /proc/zoneinfo like the following. (This is an example of x86-64 box).
415Each zone has an array of protection pages like this::
416
417  Node 0, zone      DMA
418    pages free     1355
419          min      3
420          low      3
421          high     4
422	:
423	:
424      numa_other   0
425          protection: (0, 2004, 2004, 2004)
426	^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
427    pagesets
428      cpu: 0 pcp: 0
429          :
430
431These protections are added to score to judge whether this zone should be used
432for page allocation or should be reclaimed.
433
434In this example, if normal pages (index=2) are required to this DMA zone and
435watermark[WMARK_HIGH] is used for watermark, the kernel judges this zone should
436not be used because pages_free(1355) is smaller than watermark + protection[2]
437(4 + 2004 = 2008). If this protection value is 0, this zone would be used for
438normal page requirement. If requirement is DMA zone(index=0), protection[0]
439(=0) is used.
440
441zone[i]'s protection[j] is calculated by following expression::
442
443  (i < j):
444    zone[i]->protection[j]
445    = (total sums of managed_pages from zone[i+1] to zone[j] on the node)
446      / lowmem_reserve_ratio[i];
447  (i = j):
448     (should not be protected. = 0;
449  (i > j):
450     (not necessary, but looks 0)
451
452The default values of lowmem_reserve_ratio[i] are
453
454    === ====================================
455    256 (if zone[i] means DMA or DMA32 zone)
456    32  (others)
457    === ====================================
458
459As above expression, they are reciprocal number of ratio.
460256 means 1/256. # of protection pages becomes about "0.39%" of total managed
461pages of higher zones on the node.
462
463If you would like to protect more pages, smaller values are effective.
464The minimum value is 1 (1/1 -> 100%). The value less than 1 completely
465disables protection of the pages.
466
467
468max_map_count
469=============
470
471This file contains the maximum number of memory map areas a process
472may have. Memory map areas are used as a side-effect of calling
473malloc, directly by mmap, mprotect, and madvise, and also when loading
474shared libraries.
475
476While most applications need less than a thousand maps, certain
477programs, particularly malloc debuggers, may consume lots of them,
478e.g., up to one or two maps per allocation.
479
480The default value is 65530.
481
482
483mem_profiling
484==============
485
486Enable memory profiling (when CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING=y)
487
4881: Enable memory profiling.
489
4900: Disable memory profiling.
491
492Enabling memory profiling introduces a small performance overhead for all
493memory allocations.
494
495The default value depends on CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING_ENABLED_BY_DEFAULT.
496
497When CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING_DEBUG=y, this control is read-only to avoid
498warnings produced by allocations made while profiling is disabled and freed
499when it's enabled.
500
501
502memory_failure_early_kill
503=========================
504
505Control how to kill processes when uncorrected memory error (typically
506a 2bit error in a memory module) is detected in the background by hardware
507that cannot be handled by the kernel. In some cases (like the page
508still having a valid copy on disk) the kernel will handle the failure
509transparently without affecting any applications. But if there is
510no other up-to-date copy of the data it will kill to prevent any data
511corruptions from propagating.
512
5131: Kill all processes that have the corrupted and not reloadable page mapped
514as soon as the corruption is detected.  Note this is not supported
515for a few types of pages, like kernel internally allocated data or
516the swap cache, but works for the majority of user pages.
517
5180: Only unmap the corrupted page from all processes and only kill a process
519who tries to access it.
520
521The kill is done using a catchable SIGBUS with BUS_MCEERR_AO, so processes can
522handle this if they want to.
523
524This is only active on architectures/platforms with advanced machine
525check handling and depends on the hardware capabilities.
526
527Applications can override this setting individually with the PR_MCE_KILL prctl
528
529
530memory_failure_recovery
531=======================
532
533Enable memory failure recovery (when supported by the platform)
534
5351: Attempt recovery.
536
5370: Always panic on a memory failure.
538
539
540min_free_kbytes
541===============
542
543This is used to force the Linux VM to keep a minimum number
544of kilobytes free.  The VM uses this number to compute a
545watermark[WMARK_MIN] value for each lowmem zone in the system.
546Each lowmem zone gets a number of reserved free pages based
547proportionally on its size.
548
549Some minimal amount of memory is needed to satisfy PF_MEMALLOC
550allocations; if you set this to lower than 1024KB, your system will
551become subtly broken, and prone to deadlock under high loads.
552
553Setting this too high will OOM your machine instantly.
554
555
556min_slab_ratio
557==============
558
559This is available only on NUMA kernels.
560
561A percentage of the total pages in each zone.  On Zone reclaim
562(fallback from the local zone occurs) slabs will be reclaimed if more
563than this percentage of pages in a zone are reclaimable slab pages.
564This insures that the slab growth stays under control even in NUMA
565systems that rarely perform global reclaim.
566
567The default is 5 percent.
568
569Note that slab reclaim is triggered in a per zone / node fashion.
570The process of reclaiming slab memory is currently not node specific
571and may not be fast.
572
573
574min_unmapped_ratio
575==================
576
577This is available only on NUMA kernels.
578
579This is a percentage of the total pages in each zone. Zone reclaim will
580only occur if more than this percentage of pages are in a state that
581zone_reclaim_mode allows to be reclaimed.
582
583If zone_reclaim_mode has the value 4 OR'd, then the percentage is compared
584against all file-backed unmapped pages including swapcache pages and tmpfs
585files. Otherwise, only unmapped pages backed by normal files but not tmpfs
586files and similar are considered.
587
588The default is 1 percent.
589
590
591mmap_min_addr
592=============
593
594This file indicates the amount of address space  which a user process will
595be restricted from mmapping.  Since kernel null dereference bugs could
596accidentally operate based on the information in the first couple of pages
597of memory userspace processes should not be allowed to write to them.  By
598default this value is set to 0 and no protections will be enforced by the
599security module.  Setting this value to something like 64k will allow the
600vast majority of applications to work correctly and provide defense in depth
601against future potential kernel bugs.
602
603
604mmap_rnd_bits
605=============
606
607This value can be used to select the number of bits to use to
608determine the random offset to the base address of vma regions
609resulting from mmap allocations on architectures which support
610tuning address space randomization.  This value will be bounded
611by the architecture's minimum and maximum supported values.
612
613This value can be changed after boot using the
614/proc/sys/vm/mmap_rnd_bits tunable
615
616
617mmap_rnd_compat_bits
618====================
619
620This value can be used to select the number of bits to use to
621determine the random offset to the base address of vma regions
622resulting from mmap allocations for applications run in
623compatibility mode on architectures which support tuning address
624space randomization.  This value will be bounded by the
625architecture's minimum and maximum supported values.
626
627This value can be changed after boot using the
628/proc/sys/vm/mmap_rnd_compat_bits tunable
629
630
631nr_hugepages
632============
633
634Change the minimum size of the hugepage pool.
635
636See Documentation/admin-guide/mm/hugetlbpage.rst
637
638
639hugetlb_optimize_vmemmap
640========================
641
642This knob is not available when the size of 'struct page' (a structure defined
643in include/linux/mm_types.h) is not power of two (an unusual system config could
644result in this).
645
646Enable (set to 1) or disable (set to 0) HugeTLB Vmemmap Optimization (HVO).
647
648Once enabled, the vmemmap pages of subsequent allocation of HugeTLB pages from
649buddy allocator will be optimized (7 pages per 2MB HugeTLB page and 4095 pages
650per 1GB HugeTLB page), whereas already allocated HugeTLB pages will not be
651optimized.  When those optimized HugeTLB pages are freed from the HugeTLB pool
652to the buddy allocator, the vmemmap pages representing that range needs to be
653remapped again and the vmemmap pages discarded earlier need to be rellocated
654again.  If your use case is that HugeTLB pages are allocated 'on the fly' (e.g.
655never explicitly allocating HugeTLB pages with 'nr_hugepages' but only set
656'nr_overcommit_hugepages', those overcommitted HugeTLB pages are allocated 'on
657the fly') instead of being pulled from the HugeTLB pool, you should weigh the
658benefits of memory savings against the more overhead (~2x slower than before)
659of allocation or freeing HugeTLB pages between the HugeTLB pool and the buddy
660allocator.  Another behavior to note is that if the system is under heavy memory
661pressure, it could prevent the user from freeing HugeTLB pages from the HugeTLB
662pool to the buddy allocator since the allocation of vmemmap pages could be
663failed, you have to retry later if your system encounter this situation.
664
665Once disabled, the vmemmap pages of subsequent allocation of HugeTLB pages from
666buddy allocator will not be optimized meaning the extra overhead at allocation
667time from buddy allocator disappears, whereas already optimized HugeTLB pages
668will not be affected.  If you want to make sure there are no optimized HugeTLB
669pages, you can set "nr_hugepages" to 0 first and then disable this.  Note that
670writing 0 to nr_hugepages will make any "in use" HugeTLB pages become surplus
671pages.  So, those surplus pages are still optimized until they are no longer
672in use.  You would need to wait for those surplus pages to be released before
673there are no optimized pages in the system.
674
675
676nr_hugepages_mempolicy
677======================
678
679Change the size of the hugepage pool at run-time on a specific
680set of NUMA nodes.
681
682See Documentation/admin-guide/mm/hugetlbpage.rst
683
684
685nr_overcommit_hugepages
686=======================
687
688Change the maximum size of the hugepage pool. The maximum is
689nr_hugepages + nr_overcommit_hugepages.
690
691See Documentation/admin-guide/mm/hugetlbpage.rst
692
693
694nr_trim_pages
695=============
696
697This is available only on NOMMU kernels.
698
699This value adjusts the excess page trimming behaviour of power-of-2 aligned
700NOMMU mmap allocations.
701
702A value of 0 disables trimming of allocations entirely, while a value of 1
703trims excess pages aggressively. Any value >= 1 acts as the watermark where
704trimming of allocations is initiated.
705
706The default value is 1.
707
708See Documentation/admin-guide/mm/nommu-mmap.rst for more information.
709
710
711numa_zonelist_order
712===================
713
714This sysctl is only for NUMA and it is deprecated. Anything but
715Node order will fail!
716
717'where the memory is allocated from' is controlled by zonelists.
718
719(This documentation ignores ZONE_HIGHMEM/ZONE_DMA32 for simple explanation.
720you may be able to read ZONE_DMA as ZONE_DMA32...)
721
722In non-NUMA case, a zonelist for GFP_KERNEL is ordered as following.
723ZONE_NORMAL -> ZONE_DMA
724This means that a memory allocation request for GFP_KERNEL will
725get memory from ZONE_DMA only when ZONE_NORMAL is not available.
726
727In NUMA case, you can think of following 2 types of order.
728Assume 2 node NUMA and below is zonelist of Node(0)'s GFP_KERNEL::
729
730  (A) Node(0) ZONE_NORMAL -> Node(0) ZONE_DMA -> Node(1) ZONE_NORMAL
731  (B) Node(0) ZONE_NORMAL -> Node(1) ZONE_NORMAL -> Node(0) ZONE_DMA.
732
733Type(A) offers the best locality for processes on Node(0), but ZONE_DMA
734will be used before ZONE_NORMAL exhaustion. This increases possibility of
735out-of-memory(OOM) of ZONE_DMA because ZONE_DMA is tend to be small.
736
737Type(B) cannot offer the best locality but is more robust against OOM of
738the DMA zone.
739
740Type(A) is called as "Node" order. Type (B) is "Zone" order.
741
742"Node order" orders the zonelists by node, then by zone within each node.
743Specify "[Nn]ode" for node order
744
745"Zone Order" orders the zonelists by zone type, then by node within each
746zone.  Specify "[Zz]one" for zone order.
747
748Specify "[Dd]efault" to request automatic configuration.
749
750On 32-bit, the Normal zone needs to be preserved for allocations accessible
751by the kernel, so "zone" order will be selected.
752
753On 64-bit, devices that require DMA32/DMA are relatively rare, so "node"
754order will be selected.
755
756Default order is recommended unless this is causing problems for your
757system/application.
758
759
760oom_dump_tasks
761==============
762
763Enables a system-wide task dump (excluding kernel threads) to be produced
764when the kernel performs an OOM-killing and includes such information as
765pid, uid, tgid, vm size, rss, pgtables_bytes, swapents, oom_score_adj
766score, and name.  This is helpful to determine why the OOM killer was
767invoked, to identify the rogue task that caused it, and to determine why
768the OOM killer chose the task it did to kill.
769
770If this is set to zero, this information is suppressed.  On very
771large systems with thousands of tasks it may not be feasible to dump
772the memory state information for each one.  Such systems should not
773be forced to incur a performance penalty in OOM conditions when the
774information may not be desired.
775
776If this is set to non-zero, this information is shown whenever the
777OOM killer actually kills a memory-hogging task.
778
779The default value is 1 (enabled).
780
781
782oom_kill_allocating_task
783========================
784
785This enables or disables killing the OOM-triggering task in
786out-of-memory situations.
787
788If this is set to zero, the OOM killer will scan through the entire
789tasklist and select a task based on heuristics to kill.  This normally
790selects a rogue memory-hogging task that frees up a large amount of
791memory when killed.
792
793If this is set to non-zero, the OOM killer simply kills the task that
794triggered the out-of-memory condition.  This avoids the expensive
795tasklist scan.
796
797If panic_on_oom is selected, it takes precedence over whatever value
798is used in oom_kill_allocating_task.
799
800The default value is 0.
801
802
803overcommit_kbytes
804=================
805
806When overcommit_memory is set to 2, the committed address space is not
807permitted to exceed swap plus this amount of physical RAM. See below.
808
809Note: overcommit_kbytes is the counterpart of overcommit_ratio. Only one
810of them may be specified at a time. Setting one disables the other (which
811then appears as 0 when read).
812
813
814overcommit_memory
815=================
816
817This value contains a flag that enables memory overcommitment.
818
819When this flag is 0, the kernel compares the userspace memory request
820size against total memory plus swap and rejects obvious overcommits.
821
822When this flag is 1, the kernel pretends there is always enough
823memory until it actually runs out.
824
825When this flag is 2, the kernel uses a "never overcommit"
826policy that attempts to prevent any overcommit of memory.
827Note that user_reserve_kbytes affects this policy.
828
829This feature can be very useful because there are a lot of
830programs that malloc() huge amounts of memory "just-in-case"
831and don't use much of it.
832
833The default value is 0.
834
835See Documentation/mm/overcommit-accounting.rst and
836mm/util.c::__vm_enough_memory() for more information.
837
838
839overcommit_ratio
840================
841
842When overcommit_memory is set to 2, the committed address
843space is not permitted to exceed swap plus this percentage
844of physical RAM.  See above.
845
846
847page-cluster
848============
849
850page-cluster controls the number of pages up to which consecutive pages
851are read in from swap in a single attempt. This is the swap counterpart
852to page cache readahead.
853The mentioned consecutivity is not in terms of virtual/physical addresses,
854but consecutive on swap space - that means they were swapped out together.
855
856It is a logarithmic value - setting it to zero means "1 page", setting
857it to 1 means "2 pages", setting it to 2 means "4 pages", etc.
858Zero disables swap readahead completely.
859
860The default value is three (eight pages at a time).  There may be some
861small benefits in tuning this to a different value if your workload is
862swap-intensive.
863
864Lower values mean lower latencies for initial faults, but at the same time
865extra faults and I/O delays for following faults if they would have been part of
866that consecutive pages readahead would have brought in.
867
868
869page_lock_unfairness
870====================
871
872This value determines the number of times that the page lock can be
873stolen from under a waiter. After the lock is stolen the number of times
874specified in this file (default is 5), the "fair lock handoff" semantics
875will apply, and the waiter will only be awakened if the lock can be taken.
876
877panic_on_oom
878============
879
880This enables or disables panic on out-of-memory feature.
881
882If this is set to 0, the kernel will kill some rogue process,
883called oom_killer.  Usually, oom_killer can kill rogue processes and
884system will survive.
885
886If this is set to 1, the kernel panics when out-of-memory happens.
887However, if a process limits using nodes by mempolicy/cpusets,
888and those nodes become memory exhaustion status, one process
889may be killed by oom-killer. No panic occurs in this case.
890Because other nodes' memory may be free. This means system total status
891may be not fatal yet.
892
893If this is set to 2, the kernel panics compulsorily even on the
894above-mentioned. Even oom happens under memory cgroup, the whole
895system panics.
896
897The default value is 0.
898
8991 and 2 are for failover of clustering. Please select either
900according to your policy of failover.
901
902panic_on_oom=2+kdump gives you very strong tool to investigate
903why oom happens. You can get snapshot.
904
905
906percpu_pagelist_high_fraction
907=============================
908
909This is the fraction of pages in each zone that are can be stored to
910per-cpu page lists. It is an upper boundary that is divided depending
911on the number of online CPUs. The min value for this is 8 which means
912that we do not allow more than 1/8th of pages in each zone to be stored
913on per-cpu page lists. This entry only changes the value of hot per-cpu
914page lists. A user can specify a number like 100 to allocate 1/100th of
915each zone between per-cpu lists.
916
917The batch value of each per-cpu page list remains the same regardless of
918the value of the high fraction so allocation latencies are unaffected.
919
920The initial value is zero. Kernel uses this value to set the high pcp->high
921mark based on the low watermark for the zone and the number of local
922online CPUs.  If the user writes '0' to this sysctl, it will revert to
923this default behavior.
924
925
926stat_interval
927=============
928
929The time interval between which vm statistics are updated.  The default
930is 1 second.
931
932
933stat_refresh
934============
935
936Any read or write (by root only) flushes all the per-cpu vm statistics
937into their global totals, for more accurate reports when testing
938e.g. cat /proc/sys/vm/stat_refresh /proc/meminfo
939
940As a side-effect, it also checks for negative totals (elsewhere reported
941as 0) and "fails" with EINVAL if any are found, with a warning in dmesg.
942(At time of writing, a few stats are known sometimes to be found negative,
943with no ill effects: errors and warnings on these stats are suppressed.)
944
945
946numa_stat
947=========
948
949This interface allows runtime configuration of numa statistics.
950
951When page allocation performance becomes a bottleneck and you can tolerate
952some possible tool breakage and decreased numa counter precision, you can
953do::
954
955	echo 0 > /proc/sys/vm/numa_stat
956
957When page allocation performance is not a bottleneck and you want all
958tooling to work, you can do::
959
960	echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/numa_stat
961
962
963swappiness
964==========
965
966This control is used to define the rough relative IO cost of swapping
967and filesystem paging, as a value between 0 and 200. At 100, the VM
968assumes equal IO cost and will thus apply memory pressure to the page
969cache and swap-backed pages equally; lower values signify more
970expensive swap IO, higher values indicates cheaper.
971
972Keep in mind that filesystem IO patterns under memory pressure tend to
973be more efficient than swap's random IO. An optimal value will require
974experimentation and will also be workload-dependent.
975
976The default value is 60.
977
978For in-memory swap, like zram or zswap, as well as hybrid setups that
979have swap on faster devices than the filesystem, values beyond 100 can
980be considered. For example, if the random IO against the swap device
981is on average 2x faster than IO from the filesystem, swappiness should
982be 133 (x + 2x = 200, 2x = 133.33).
983
984At 0, the kernel will not initiate swap until the amount of free and
985file-backed pages is less than the high watermark in a zone.
986
987
988unprivileged_userfaultfd
989========================
990
991This flag controls the mode in which unprivileged users can use the
992userfaultfd system calls. Set this to 0 to restrict unprivileged users
993to handle page faults in user mode only. In this case, users without
994SYS_CAP_PTRACE must pass UFFD_USER_MODE_ONLY in order for userfaultfd to
995succeed. Prohibiting use of userfaultfd for handling faults from kernel
996mode may make certain vulnerabilities more difficult to exploit.
997
998Set this to 1 to allow unprivileged users to use the userfaultfd system
999calls without any restrictions.
1000
1001The default value is 0.
1002
1003Another way to control permissions for userfaultfd is to use
1004/dev/userfaultfd instead of userfaultfd(2). See
1005Documentation/admin-guide/mm/userfaultfd.rst.
1006
1007user_reserve_kbytes
1008===================
1009
1010When overcommit_memory is set to 2, "never overcommit" mode, reserve
1011min(3% of current process size, user_reserve_kbytes) of free memory.
1012This is intended to prevent a user from starting a single memory hogging
1013process, such that they cannot recover (kill the hog).
1014
1015user_reserve_kbytes defaults to min(3% of the current process size, 128MB).
1016
1017If this is reduced to zero, then the user will be allowed to allocate
1018all free memory with a single process, minus admin_reserve_kbytes.
1019Any subsequent attempts to execute a command will result in
1020"fork: Cannot allocate memory".
1021
1022Changing this takes effect whenever an application requests memory.
1023
1024
1025vfs_cache_pressure
1026==================
1027
1028This percentage value controls the tendency of the kernel to reclaim
1029the memory which is used for caching of directory and inode objects.
1030
1031At the default value of vfs_cache_pressure=vfs_cache_pressure_denom the kernel
1032will attempt to reclaim dentries and inodes at a "fair" rate with respect to
1033pagecache and swapcache reclaim.  Decreasing vfs_cache_pressure causes the
1034kernel to prefer to retain dentry and inode caches. When vfs_cache_pressure=0,
1035the kernel will never reclaim dentries and inodes due to memory pressure and
1036this can easily lead to out-of-memory conditions. Increasing vfs_cache_pressure
1037beyond vfs_cache_pressure_denom causes the kernel to prefer to reclaim dentries
1038and inodes.
1039
1040Increasing vfs_cache_pressure significantly beyond vfs_cache_pressure_denom may
1041have negative performance impact. Reclaim code needs to take various locks to
1042find freeable directory and inode objects. When vfs_cache_pressure equals
1043(10 * vfs_cache_pressure_denom), it will look for ten times more freeable
1044objects than there are.
1045
1046Note: This setting should always be used together with vfs_cache_pressure_denom.
1047
1048vfs_cache_pressure_denom
1049========================
1050
1051Defaults to 100 (minimum allowed value). Requires corresponding
1052vfs_cache_pressure setting to take effect.
1053
1054watermark_boost_factor
1055======================
1056
1057This factor controls the level of reclaim when memory is being fragmented.
1058It defines the percentage of the high watermark of a zone that will be
1059reclaimed if pages of different mobility are being mixed within pageblocks.
1060The intent is that compaction has less work to do in the future and to
1061increase the success rate of future high-order allocations such as SLUB
1062allocations, THP and hugetlbfs pages.
1063
1064To make it sensible with respect to the watermark_scale_factor
1065parameter, the unit is in fractions of 10,000. The default value of
106615,000 means that up to 150% of the high watermark will be reclaimed in the
1067event of a pageblock being mixed due to fragmentation. The level of reclaim
1068is determined by the number of fragmentation events that occurred in the
1069recent past. If this value is smaller than a pageblock then a pageblocks
1070worth of pages will be reclaimed (e.g.  2MB on 64-bit x86). A boost factor
1071of 0 will disable the feature.
1072
1073
1074watermark_scale_factor
1075======================
1076
1077This factor controls the aggressiveness of kswapd. It defines the
1078amount of memory left in a node/system before kswapd is woken up and
1079how much memory needs to be free before kswapd goes back to sleep.
1080
1081The unit is in fractions of 10,000. The default value of 10 means the
1082distances between watermarks are 0.1% of the available memory in the
1083node/system. The maximum value is 3000, or 30% of memory.
1084
1085A high rate of threads entering direct reclaim (allocstall) or kswapd
1086going to sleep prematurely (kswapd_low_wmark_hit_quickly) can indicate
1087that the number of free pages kswapd maintains for latency reasons is
1088too small for the allocation bursts occurring in the system. This knob
1089can then be used to tune kswapd aggressiveness accordingly.
1090
1091
1092zone_reclaim_mode
1093=================
1094
1095Zone_reclaim_mode allows someone to set more or less aggressive approaches to
1096reclaim memory when a zone runs out of memory. If it is set to zero then no
1097zone reclaim occurs. Allocations will be satisfied from other zones / nodes
1098in the system.
1099
1100This is value OR'ed together of
1101
1102=	===================================
11031	Zone reclaim on
11042	Zone reclaim writes dirty pages out
11054	Zone reclaim swaps pages
1106=	===================================
1107
1108zone_reclaim_mode is disabled by default.  For file servers or workloads
1109that benefit from having their data cached, zone_reclaim_mode should be
1110left disabled as the caching effect is likely to be more important than
1111data locality.
1112
1113Consider enabling one or more zone_reclaim mode bits if it's known that the
1114workload is partitioned such that each partition fits within a NUMA node
1115and that accessing remote memory would cause a measurable performance
1116reduction.  The page allocator will take additional actions before
1117allocating off node pages.
1118
1119Allowing zone reclaim to write out pages stops processes that are
1120writing large amounts of data from dirtying pages on other nodes. Zone
1121reclaim will write out dirty pages if a zone fills up and so effectively
1122throttle the process. This may decrease the performance of a single process
1123since it cannot use all of system memory to buffer the outgoing writes
1124anymore but it preserve the memory on other nodes so that the performance
1125of other processes running on other nodes will not be affected.
1126
1127Allowing regular swap effectively restricts allocations to the local
1128node unless explicitly overridden by memory policies or cpuset
1129configurations.
1130