Re: Likley stupid question on "throttle_vm_writeout"

From: Wu Fengguang
Date: Tue Nov 10 2009 - 08:08:41 EST


On Tue, Nov 10, 2009 at 08:01:47PM +0800, Martin Knoblauch wrote:
> ----- Original Message ----
>
> > From: Wu Fengguang <fengguang.wu@xxxxxxxxx>
> > To: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > Cc: Martin Knoblauch <spamtrap@xxxxxxxxxxxx>; linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > Sent: Tue, November 10, 2009 3:08:58 AM
> > Subject: Re: Likley stupid question on "throttle_vm_writeout"
> >
> > On Mon, Nov 09, 2009 at 04:26:33PM +0100, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > > On Mon, 2009-11-09 at 07:15 -0800, Martin Knoblauch wrote:
> > > > Hi, (please CC me on replies)
> > > >
> > > > I have a likely stupid question on the function "throttle_vm_writeout".
> > Looking at the code I find:
> > > >
> > > > if (global_page_state(NR_UNSTABLE_NFS) +
> > > > global_page_state(NR_WRITEBACK) <= dirty_thresh)
> > > > break;
> > > > congestion_wait(WRITE, HZ/10);
> > > >
> > > > Shouldn't the NR_FILE_DIRTY pages be considered as well?
> > >
> > > Ha, you just trod onto a piece of ugly I'd totally forgotten about ;-)
> > >
> > > The intent of throttle_vm_writeout() is to limit the total pages in
> > > writeout and to wait for them to go-away.
> >
> > Like this:
> >
> > vmscan fast => large NR_WRITEBACK => throttle vmscan based on it
> >
> > > Everybody hates the function, nobody managed to actually come up with
> > > anything better.
> >
> > btw, here is another reason to limit NR_WRITEBACK: I saw many
> > throttle_vm_writeout() waits if there is no wait queue to limit
> > NR_WRITEBACK (eg. NFS). In that case the (steadily) big NR_WRITEBACK
> > is _not_ caused by fast vmscan..
> >
>
> That is exactely what made me look again into the code. My observation is that when doing something like:
>
> dd if=/dev/zero of=fast-local-disk bs=1M count=15000
>
> most of the "dirty" pages are in NR_FILE_DIRTY with some relatively small amount (10% or so) in NR_WRITEBACK. If I do:
>
> dd if=/dev/zero of=some-nfs-mount bs=1M count=15000
>
> NR_WRITEBACK almost immediatelly goes up to dirty_ratio, with
> NR_UNSTABLE_NFS small. Over time NR_UNSTABLE_NFS grows, but is
> always lower than NR_WRITEBACK (maybe 40/60).

This is interesting, though I don't see explicit NFS code to limit
NR_UNSTABLE_NFS. Maybe there are some implicit rules.

> But don't ask what happens if I do both in parallel.... The local
> IO really slows to a crawl and sometimes the system just becomes
> very unresponsive. Have we heard that before? :-)

You may be the first reporter as far as I can tell :)

> Somehow I have the impression that NFS writeout is able to
> absolutely dominate the dirty pages to an extent that the system is
> unusable.

This is why I want to limit NR_WRITEBACK for NFS:

[PATCH] NFS: introduce writeback wait queue
http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/10/3/198

Thanks,
Fengguang
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