Re: forcing write-back from FS - again

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Mon Oct 22 2007 - 05:06:16 EST


On Mon, 22 Oct 2007 11:52:33 +0300 Artem Bityutskiy <dedekind@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> > It _should_ be the case that the number of locked-and-dirty pages which
> > writeback encounters is very small, so skipping locked pages during
> > writeback-for-memory-flushing won't have any significant effect. The first
> > step should be to add a new /proc/vmstat field to count these pages and
> > then do broad testing (especially on blocksize<pagesize filesystems) to
> > confirm the theory.
> >
> > We'll still need to synchronously lock the page in
> > writeback-for-data-integrity mode though.
>
> Thanks for suggestion. It sounds as a separate big job to enhance existing
> WB_SYNC_NONE. I've just introduced new WB mode, and it seems to work fine:
>
> diff --git a/include/linux/writeback.h b/include/linux/writeback.h
> @@ -28,6 +28,7 @@ static inline int task_is_pdflush(struct task_struct *task)
> */
> enum writeback_sync_modes {
> WB_SYNC_NONE, /* Don't wait on anything */
> + WB_SYNC_NONE_PG,/* Don't wait on anything, don't touch locked pages */
> WB_SYNC_ALL, /* Wait on every mapping */
> WB_SYNC_HOLD, /* Hold the inode on sb_dirty for sys_sync() */
> };

It would be simpler/safer/saner to add a new bitflag to writeback_control
and use that directly. The WB_SYNC_foo flags are a holdover from an
earlier time and really should be made to go away, in favour of directly
setting up an appropriate writeback_control.


> diff --git a/mm/page-writeback.c b/mm/page-writeback.c
> @@ -641,6 +641,10 @@ retry:
> for (i = 0; i < nr_pages; i++) {
> struct page *page = pvec.pages[i];
>
> + if (wbc->sync_mode == WB_SYNC_NONE_PG &&
> + PageLocked(page))
> + continue;
> +
>
> My only concern is - what if the page we skipped because of WB_SYNC_NONE_PG
> will somehow loose its dirty TAG and will never be written-back? But it is
> because of my poor knowledge of Linux MM internals. Could you please comment on
> this?

Well it might lose its dirty tag, if the thread which has a lock on the
page is about to write it out or truncate it. But that shouldn't concern
you here.

The code you have there looks racy: if someone else locks the page in that
little window after the PageLocked() test we'll still block in lock_page().
That's unlikely to happen in your application (apart from a remaining
ab/ba scenario) but we should make it robust:

if (wbc->skip_locked_pages) {
if (TestSetPageLocked(page))
continue;
} else {
lock_page(page);
}


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