Re: [PATCH 8/8] vm: Add an tuning knob for vm.max_writeback_mb

From: Wu Fengguang
Date: Wed Sep 09 2009 - 10:38:18 EST


On Wed, Sep 09, 2009 at 10:23:15PM +0800, Jan Kara wrote:
> On Tue 08-09-09 20:32:26, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > On Tue, 2009-09-08 at 19:55 +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > >
> > > I think I'm somewhat confused here though..
> > >
> > > There's kernel threads doing writeout, and there's apps getting stuck in
> > > balance_dirty_pages().
> > >
> > > If we want all writeout to be done by kernel threads (bdi/pd-flush like
> > > things) then we still need to manage the actual apps and delay them.
> > >
> > > As things stand now, we kick pdflush into action when dirty levels are
> > > above the background level, and start writing out from the app task when
> > > we hit the full dirty level.
> > >
> > > Moving all writeout to a kernel thread sounds good from writing linear
> > > stuff pov, but what do we make apps wait on then?
> >
> > OK, so like said in the previous email, we could have these app tasks
> > simply sleep on a waitqueue which gets periodic wakeups from
> > __bdi_writeback_inc() every time the dirty threshold drops.
> >
> > The woken tasks would then check their bdi dirty limit (its task
> > dependent) against the current values and either go back to sleep or
> > back to work.
> Well, what I imagined we could do is:
> Have a per-bdi variable 'pages_written' - that would reflect the amount of
> pages written to the bdi since boot (OK, we'd have to handle overflows but
> that's doable).
>
> There will be a per-bdi variable 'pages_waited'. When a thread should sleep
> in balance_dirty_pages() because we are over limits, it kicks writeback thread
> and does:
> to_wait = max(pages_waited, pages_written) + sync_dirty_pages() (or
> whatever number we decide)
> pages_waited = to_wait
> sleep until pages_written reaches to_wait or we drop below dirty limits.
>
> That will make sure each thread will sleep until writeback threads have done
> their duty for the writing thread.
>
> If we make sure sleeping threads are properly ordered on the wait queue,
> we could always wakeup just the first one and thus avoid the herding
> effect. When we drop below dirty limits, we would just wakeup the whole
> waitqueue.
>
> Does this sound reasonable?

Yup! I have a similar idea: for each chunk the kernel writeback thread
synced, it 'honours' so many pages of quota to some waiting/sleeping
dirtier task to consume (so that it can continue dirty so many pages).

This makes it possible to control the relative/absolute writeback
bandwidth for each dirtier tasks. Something like IO controller.

Thanks,
Fengguang

> > The only problem would be the mass wakeups when lots of tasks are
> > blocked on dirty, but I'm guessing there's no way around that anyway,
> > and its better to have a limited number of writers than have everybody
> > write something, which would result in massive write fragmentation.
>
> Honza
> --
> Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx>
> SUSE Labs, CR
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