Re: [PATCH 10/12] writeback: only allow one inflight and pending full flush
From: Andrew Morton
Date: Thu Sep 28 2017 - 17:41:07 EST
On Wed, 27 Sep 2017 14:13:57 -0600 Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> When someone calls wakeup_flusher_threads() or
> wakeup_flusher_threads_bdi(), they schedule writeback of all dirty
> pages in the system (or on that bdi). If we are tight on memory, we
> can get tons of these queued from kswapd/vmscan. This causes (at
> least) two problems:
>
> 1) We consume a ton of memory just allocating writeback work items.
> We've seen as much as 600 million of these writeback work items
> pending. That's a lot of memory to pointlessly hold hostage,
> while the box is under memory pressure.
>
> 2) We spend so much time processing these work items, that we
> introduce a softlockup in writeback processing. This is because
> each of the writeback work items don't end up doing any work (it's
> hard when you have millions of identical ones coming in to the
> flush machinery), so we just sit in a tight loop pulling work
> items and deleting/freeing them.
>
> Fix this by adding a 'start_all' bit to the writeback structure, and
> set that when someone attempts to flush all dirty pages. The bit is
> cleared when we start writeback on that work item. If the bit is
> already set when we attempt to queue !nr_pages writeback, then we
> simply ignore it.
>
> This provides us one full flush in flight, with one pending as well,
> and makes for more efficient handling of this type of writeback.
>
> ...
>
> @@ -953,12 +954,27 @@ static void wb_start_writeback(struct bdi_writeback *wb, bool range_cyclic,
> return;
>
> /*
> + * All callers of this function want to start writeback of all
> + * dirty pages. Places like vmscan can call this at a very
> + * high frequency, causing pointless allocations of tons of
> + * work items and keeping the flusher threads busy retrieving
> + * that work. Ensure that we only allow one of them pending and
> + * inflight at the time. It doesn't matter if we race a little
> + * bit on this, so use the faster separate test/set bit variants.
> + */
> + if (test_bit(WB_start_all, &wb->state))
> + return;
> +
> + set_bit(WB_start_all, &wb->state);
test_and_set_bit()?