Re: sync_file_range(SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE) blocks?
From: Andrew Morton
Date: Tue Jun 17 2008 - 00:55:54 EST
On Mon, 16 Jun 2008 16:53:51 -0400 Rik van Riel <riel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Mon, 2 Jun 2008 13:40:28 +0100 (BST)
> Hugh Dickins <hugh@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Mon, 2 Jun 2008, Jens Axboe wrote:
> > > On Sun, Jun 01 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Well if you're asking the syscall to shove more data into the block
> > > > layer than it can concurrently handle, sure, the block layer will
> > > > block. It's tunable...
> > >
> > > Ehm, lets get the history right, please :-)
> > >
> > > The block layer pretty much doesn't care about how large the queue
> > > size is, it's largely at 128 to prevent the vm from shitting itself
> > > like it has done in the past (and continues to do I guess, though
> > > your reply leaves me wondering).
> > >
> > > So you think the vm will be fine with a huge number of requests?
> > > It wont go nuts scanning and reclaiming, wasting oodles of CPU
> > > cycles?
> >
> > Interesting. I wonder. I may be quite wrong (Cc'ed Rik and Lee
> > who I think are currently most in touch with what goes on there),
> > but my impression is that whereas vmscan.c takes pages off LRU
> > while it's doing writeback on them, and arranges for them to go
> > back to the reclaimable tail of the LRU
>
> The problem with lots of CFQ requests is simpler.
>
> If you look at balance_dirty_pages() you will see that it only
> takes dirty and NFS unstable pages into account when checking
> the dirty limit. The pages that are in flight (under IO) are
> not counted at all.
That would be totally busted. All that nr_writeback logic in there is very
much supposed to handle under-writeback pages?
> If you have 8192 CFQ requests and large streaming IO, most of
> the IOs will be mergeable and it is possible to pin all of
> memory in in-flight (PG_writeback - and other?) pages.
>
> I suspect that balance_dirty_pages() will have to take the
> writeback pages into account, though that may cause problems
> with FUSE. Maybe it should at least wait for some IO to
> complete?
Worried. One of us is missing something here.
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