Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Memory at Your Service: Fast Memory Allocation for Latency-critical Services

Published 7 Sep 2021 in cs.DC | (2109.02922v1)

Abstract: Co-location and memory sharing between latency-critical services, such as key-value store and web search, and best-effort batch jobs is an appealing approach to improving memory utilization in multi-tenant datacenter systems. However, we find that the very diverse goals of job co-location and the GNU/Linux system stack can lead to severe performance degradation of latency-critical services under memory pressure in a multi-tenant system. We address memory pressure for latency-critical services via fast memory allocation and proactive reclamation. We find that memory allocation latency dominates the overall query latency, especially under memory pressure. We analyze the default memory management mechanism provided by GNU/Linux system stack and identify the reasons why it is inefficient for latency-critical services in a multi-tenant system. We present Hermes, a fast memory allocation mechanism in user space that adaptively reserves memory for latency-critical services. It advises Linux OS to proactively reclaim memory of batch jobs. We implement Hermes in GNU C Library. Experimental result shows that Hermes reduces the average and the $99{th}$ percentile memory allocation latency by up to 54.4% and 62.4% for a micro benchmark, respectively. For two real-world latency-critical services, Hermes reduces both the average and the $99{th}$ percentile tail query latency by up to 40.3%. Compared to the default Glibc, jemalloc and TCMalloc, Hermes reduces Service Level Objective violation by up to 84.3% under memory pressure.

Citations (6)

Summary

Paper to Video (Beta)

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.