Re: [RFC PATCH 0/3] Avoid the use of congestion_wait under zonepressure

From: Mel Gorman
Date: Thu Mar 18 2010 - 13:42:45 EST


On Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 01:09:35PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Mon, 15 Mar 2010 13:34:50 +0100
> Christian Ehrhardt <ehrhardt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > c) If direct reclaim did reasonable progress in try_to_free but did not
> > get a page, AND there is no write in flight at all then let it try again
> > to free up something.
> > This could be extended by some kind of max retry to avoid some weird
> > looping cases as well.
> >
> > d) Another way might be as easy as letting congestion_wait return
> > immediately if there are no outstanding writes - this would keep the
> > behavior for cases with write and avoid the "running always in full
> > timeout" issue without writes.
>
> They're pretty much equivalent and would work. But there are two
> things I still don't understand:
>
> 1: Why is direct reclaim calling congestion_wait() at all? If no
> writes are going on there's lots of clean pagecache around so reclaim
> should trivially succeed. What's preventing it from doing so?
>
> 2: This is, I think, new behaviour. A regression. What caused it?
>

I looked at this a bit closer using an iozone test very similar to
Christian's. Despite buying a number of disks, I still can't reproduce his
problem but I instrumented congestion_wait counts and times similar to
what he did.

2.6.29-instrument:congestion_waittime 990
2.6.30-instrument:congestion_waittime 2823
2.6.31-instrument:congestion_waittime 193169
2.6.32-instrument:congestion_waittime 228890
2.6.33-instrument:congestion_waittime 785529
2.6.34-rc1-instrument:congestion_waittime 797178

So in the problem window, there was *definite* increases in the time spent
in congestion_wait and the number of times it was called. I'll look
closer at this tomorrow and Monday and see can I pin down what is
happening.

--
Mel Gorman
Part-time Phd Student Linux Technology Center
University of Limerick IBM Dublin Software Lab
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