Hi,
On Wed 31-03-10 19:07:31, Denys Fedorysychenko wrote:
> I have a proxy server with "loaded" squid. On some moment i did sync, and
> expecting it to finish in reasonable time. Waited more than 30 minutes, still
> "sync". Can be reproduced easily.
>
> Here is some stats and info:
>
> Linux SUPERPROXY 2.6.33.1-build-0051 #16 SMP Wed Mar 31 17:23:28 EEST 2010
> i686 GNU/Linux
>
> SUPERPROXY ~ # iostat -k -x -d 30
> Linux 2.6.33.1-build-0051 (SUPERPROXY) 03/31/10 _i686_ (4 CPU)
>
> Device: rrqm/s wrqm/s r/s w/s rkB/s wkB/s avgrq-sz
> avgqu-sz await svctm %util
> sda 0.16 0.01 0.08 0.03 3.62 1.33 88.94
> 0.15 1389.89 59.15 0.66
> sdb 4.14 61.25 6.22 25.55 44.52 347.21 24.66
> 2.24 70.60 2.36 7.49
> sdc 4.37 421.28 9.95 98.31 318.27 2081.95 44.34
> 20.93 193.21 2.31 24.96
> sdd 2.34 339.90 3.97 117.47 95.48 1829.52 31.70
> 1.73 14.23 8.09 98.20
> sde 2.29 71.40 2.34 27.97 22.56 397.81 27.74
> 2.34 77.34 1.66 5.04
> dm-0 0.00 0.00 0.19 0.02 3.48 0.02 32.96
> 0.05 252.11 28.05 0.60
>
> Device: rrqm/s wrqm/s r/s w/s rkB/s wkB/s avgrq-sz
> avgqu-sz await svctm %util
> sda 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
> 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
> sdb 0.00 54.67 2.93 26.87 12.27 326.13 22.71
> 2.19 73.49 1.91 5.68
> sdc 0.00 420.50 3.43 110.53 126.40 2127.73 39.56
> 23.82 209.00 2.06 23.44
> sdd 0.00 319.63 2.30 122.03 121.87 1765.87 30.37
> 1.72 13.83 7.99 99.37
> sde 0.00 71.67 0.83 30.63 6.93 409.33 26.46
> 2.66 84.68 1.51 4.76
> dm-0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
> 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
>
>
> CPU: 8.4% usr 7.7% sys 0.0% nic 50.7% idle 27.7% io 0.6% irq 4.7% sirq
> Load average: 5.57 4.82 4.46 2/243 2032
> PID PPID USER STAT VSZ %MEM CPU %CPU COMMAND
> 1769 1552 squid R 668m 8.3 3 11.7 /usr/sbin/squid -N
> 1546 1545 root R 10800 0.1 2 6.0 /config/globax
> /config/globax.conf
> 1549 1548 root S 43264 0.5 2 1.5 /config/globax /config/globax-
> dld.conf
> 1531 2 root DW 0 0.0 0 0.3 [jbd2/sdd1-8]
> 1418 1 root S 2500 0.0 3 0.0 /sbin/syslogd -R 80.83.17.2
> 1524 2 root SW 0 0.0 0 0.0 [flush-8:32]
> 1525 2 root SW 0 0.0 1 0.0 [jbd2/sdc1-8]
> 1604 2 root DW 0 0.0 0 0.0 [flush-8:48]
> 1537 2 root SW 0 0.0 1 0.0 [jbd2/sde1-8]
> 18 2 root SW 0 0.0 3 0.0 [events/3]
> 1545 1 root S 3576 0.0 1 0.0 /config/globax
> /config/globax.conf
> 1548 1 root S 3576 0.0 0 0.0 /config/globax /config/globax-
> dld.conf
> 1918 1 ntp S 3316 0.0 3 0.0 /usr/sbin/ntpd -s
> 1919 1 root S 3268 0.0 3 0.0 /usr/sbin/ntpd -s
> 1 0 root S 2504 0.0 0 0.0 /bin/sh /init trynew trynew
> trynew trynew
> 1923 1257 root S 2504 0.0 1 0.0 /sbin/getty 38400 tty1
> 1924 1257 root S 2504 0.0 0 0.0 /sbin/getty 38400 tty2
> 1927 1257 root S 2504 0.0 0 0.0 /sbin/getty 38400 tty3
> 2015 2014 root S 2504 0.0 1 0.0 -ash
> 2032 2015 root R 2504 0.0 3 0.0 top
> 1584 1 root S 2500 0.0 1 0.0 /usr/bin/ifplugd -i eth0 -a -r
> /etc/startup/rc.ifup -t 1 -u 1 -d 1
> 1592 1 root S 2500 0.0 1 0.0 /usr/bin/ifplugd -i eth2 -a -r
> /etc/startup/rc.ifup -t 1 -u 1 -d 1
> 1587 1 root S 2500 0.0 1 0.0 /usr/bin/ifplugd -i eth1 -a -r
> /etc/startup/rc.ifup -t 1 -u 1 -d 1
> 1595 1 root S 2500 0.0 1 0.0 /usr/bin/ifplugd -i eth3 -a -r
> /etc/startup/rc.ifup -t 1 -u 1 -d 1
> 1257 1 root S 2500 0.0 0 0.0 init
> 1420 1 root S 2500 0.0 1 0.0 /sbin/klogd
> 1432 1 root S 2500 0.0 3 0.0 /usr/sbin/telnetd -f
> /etc/issue.telnet
> 1552 1 root S 2500 0.0 1 0.0 /bin/sh /bin/squidloop
> 1743 1742 root S 2500 0.0 3 0.0 ash -c gs newkernel
> 1744 1743 root S 2500 0.0 0 0.0 /bin/sh /bin/gs newkernel
> 1753 1744 root D 2368 0.0 0 0.0 sync
>
>
> SUPERPROXY ~ # cat /proc/1753/stack
> [<c019a93c>] bdi_sched_wait+0x8/0xc
> [<c019a807>] wait_on_bit+0x20/0x2c
> [<c019a9af>] sync_inodes_sb+0x6f/0x10a
> [<c019dd53>] __sync_filesystem+0x28/0x49
> [<c019ddf3>] sync_filesystems+0x7f/0xc0
> [<c019de7a>] sys_sync+0x1b/0x2d
> [<c02f7a25>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb
> [<ffffffff>] 0xffffffff
Hmm, I guess you are observing the problem reported in
https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14830
There seem to be several issues in the per-bdi writeback code that
cause sync on a busy filesystem to last almost forever. To that bug are
attached two patches that fix two issues but apparently it's not all.
I'm still looking into it...
Honza
--
Jan Kara <[email protected]>
SUSE Labs, CR
> > SUPERPROXY ~ # cat /proc/1753/stack
> > [<c019a93c>] bdi_sched_wait+0x8/0xc
> > [<c019a807>] wait_on_bit+0x20/0x2c
> > [<c019a9af>] sync_inodes_sb+0x6f/0x10a
> > [<c019dd53>] __sync_filesystem+0x28/0x49
> > [<c019ddf3>] sync_filesystems+0x7f/0xc0
> > [<c019de7a>] sys_sync+0x1b/0x2d
> > [<c02f7a25>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb
> > [<ffffffff>] 0xffffffff
>
> Hmm, I guess you are observing the problem reported in
> https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14830
> There seem to be several issues in the per-bdi writeback code that
> cause sync on a busy filesystem to last almost forever. To that bug are
> attached two patches that fix two issues but apparently it's not all.
> I'm still looking into it...
>
> Honza
>
Hi
Thanks for info, i will try to test them as soon as i finish with my current
issues, and kernel will reach at least rc5, because servers where i test -
loaded and production.
On Thu, Apr 08, 2010 at 11:28:50AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> On Wed 31-03-10 19:07:31, Denys Fedorysychenko wrote:
> > I have a proxy server with "loaded" squid. On some moment i did sync, and
> > expecting it to finish in reasonable time. Waited more than 30 minutes, still
> > "sync". Can be reproduced easily.
....
> >
> > SUPERPROXY ~ # cat /proc/1753/stack
> > [<c019a93c>] bdi_sched_wait+0x8/0xc
> > [<c019a807>] wait_on_bit+0x20/0x2c
> > [<c019a9af>] sync_inodes_sb+0x6f/0x10a
> > [<c019dd53>] __sync_filesystem+0x28/0x49
> > [<c019ddf3>] sync_filesystems+0x7f/0xc0
> > [<c019de7a>] sys_sync+0x1b/0x2d
> > [<c02f7a25>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb
> > [<ffffffff>] 0xffffffff
> Hmm, I guess you are observing the problem reported in
> https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14830
> There seem to be several issues in the per-bdi writeback code that
> cause sync on a busy filesystem to last almost forever. To that bug are
> attached two patches that fix two issues but apparently it's not all.
> I'm still looking into it...
Jan, just another data point that i haven't had a chance to look
into yet - I noticed that 2.6.34-rc1 writeback patterns have changed
on XFS from looking at blocktrace.
The bdi-flush background write threadi almost never completes - it
blocks in get_request() and it is doing 1-2 page IOs. If I do a
large dd write, the writeback thread starts with 512k IOs for a
short while, then suddenly degrades to 1-2 page IOs that get merged
in the elevator to 512k IOs.
My theory is that the inode is getting dirtied by the concurrent
write() and the inode is never moving back to the dirty list and
having it's dirtied_when time reset - it's being moved to the
b_more_io list in writeback_single_inode(), wbc->more_io is being
set, and then we re-enter writeback_inodes_wb() which splices the
b_more_io list back onto the b_io list and we try to write it out
again.
Because I have so many dirty pages in memory, nr_pages is quite high
and this pattern continues for some time until it is exhausted, at
which time throttling triggers background sync to run again and the
1-2 page IO pattern continues.
And for sync(), nr_pages is set to LONG_MAX, so regardless of how
many pages were dirty, if we keep dirtying pages it will stay in
this loop until LONG_MAX pages are written....
Anyway, that's my theory - if we had trace points in the writeback
code, I could confirm/deny this straight away. First thing I need to
do, though, is to forward port the original writeback tracng code
Jens posted a while back....
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
[email protected]
On Thu, Apr 08, 2010 at 11:28:50AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > SUPERPROXY ~ # cat /proc/1753/stack
> > [<c019a93c>] bdi_sched_wait+0x8/0xc
> > [<c019a807>] wait_on_bit+0x20/0x2c
> > [<c019a9af>] sync_inodes_sb+0x6f/0x10a
> > [<c019dd53>] __sync_filesystem+0x28/0x49
> > [<c019ddf3>] sync_filesystems+0x7f/0xc0
> > [<c019de7a>] sys_sync+0x1b/0x2d
> > [<c02f7a25>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb
> > [<ffffffff>] 0xffffffff
> Hmm, I guess you are observing the problem reported in
> https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14830
> There seem to be several issues in the per-bdi writeback code that
> cause sync on a busy filesystem to last almost forever. To that bug are
> attached two patches that fix two issues but apparently it's not all.
> I'm still looking into it...
So Jen's writeback tracing shows this for a normal cycle during a
large dd:
<...>-6030 [005] 604446.696454: writeback_sched: work=38c0, task=task
flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604446.696492: writeback_exec: work=38c0 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=-1
flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604446.696493: writeback_clear: work=ffff88011f1a38c0, refs=1
flush-253:16-6029 [003] 604446.784240: writeback_pages_written: 1024
There were 100 of these traces (102400 pages (400MB) which is exactly 10% of
RAM) before this:
<...>-6030 [000] 604462.346329: writeback_sched: work=6c0, task=task
flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604462.267098: writeback_exec: work=6c0 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=-1
flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604462.267101: writeback_clear: work=ffff88011e8006c0, refs=1
flush-253:16-6029 [001] 604465.406331: writeback_pages_written: 160771
which shows 160771 pages written in a single iteration (650MB). I suspect some
interaction between foreground and background writeout is occurring here.
The flusher thread appears to be getting stuck on congestion - the wchan
it is sitting on indicates it is blocking in get_request(). I'm going to
extend this tracing further down into the writeback code so that what is
happening is clearer...
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
[email protected]
On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 11:37:02AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 08, 2010 at 11:28:50AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > > SUPERPROXY ~ # cat /proc/1753/stack
> > > [<c019a93c>] bdi_sched_wait+0x8/0xc
> > > [<c019a807>] wait_on_bit+0x20/0x2c
> > > [<c019a9af>] sync_inodes_sb+0x6f/0x10a
> > > [<c019dd53>] __sync_filesystem+0x28/0x49
> > > [<c019ddf3>] sync_filesystems+0x7f/0xc0
> > > [<c019de7a>] sys_sync+0x1b/0x2d
> > > [<c02f7a25>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb
> > > [<ffffffff>] 0xffffffff
> > Hmm, I guess you are observing the problem reported in
> > https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14830
> > There seem to be several issues in the per-bdi writeback code that
> > cause sync on a busy filesystem to last almost forever. To that bug are
> > attached two patches that fix two issues but apparently it's not all.
> > I'm still looking into it...
>
> So Jen's writeback tracing shows this for a normal cycle during a
> large dd:
>
> <...>-6030 [005] 604446.696454: writeback_sched: work=38c0, task=task
> flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604446.696492: writeback_exec: work=38c0 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=-1
> flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604446.696493: writeback_clear: work=ffff88011f1a38c0, refs=1
> flush-253:16-6029 [003] 604446.784240: writeback_pages_written: 1024
>
> There were 100 of these traces (102400 pages (400MB) which is exactly 10% of
> RAM) before this:
>
> <...>-6030 [000] 604462.346329: writeback_sched: work=6c0, task=task
> flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604462.267098: writeback_exec: work=6c0 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=-1
> flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604462.267101: writeback_clear: work=ffff88011e8006c0, refs=1
> flush-253:16-6029 [001] 604465.406331: writeback_pages_written: 160771
>
> which shows 160771 pages written in a single iteration (650MB). I suspect some
> interaction between foreground and background writeout is occurring here.
>
> The flusher thread appears to be getting stuck on congestion - the wchan
> it is sitting on indicates it is blocking in get_request(). I'm going to
> extend this tracing further down into the writeback code so that what is
> happening is clearer...
Ok, I moved to a VM with less memory (1GB vs 4GB) and slower block
devices (100MB/s vs 500MB/s) and now it's pretty clear what is
happening. i'll go through the traces.
To start with, sync() queues up several tasks to the bdi flush daemon:
SYSCALL_DEFINE0(sync)
{
wakeup_flusher_threads(0);
sync_filesystems(0);
sync_filesystems(1);
if (unlikely(laptop_mode))
laptop_sync_completion();
return 0;
}
First is via wakeup_flusher_threads() - an async flush:
sync-2499 [000] 616072.710212: writeback_queue: 253:16: pages=13818, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
sync-2499 [000] 616072.710217: writeback_sched: work=13c0, task=task
^^^^
second is a per-sb async flush via sync_filesystems(0):
sync-2499 [000] 616072.717181: writeback_queue: 253:16: pages=15761, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=0
sync-2499 [000] 616072.717191: writeback_sched: work=3840, task=task
^^^^
And finally there is the sync flush via sync_filesystems(1):
sync-2499 [000] 616072.737836: writeback_queue: 253:16: pages=9223372036854775807, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
sync-2499 [000] 616072.737840: writeback_sched: work=3e58, task=task
^^^^
The first async flush does:
vvvv
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897747: writeback_exec: work=13c0 pages=13818, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897748: writeback_clear: work=ffff88003d8813c0, refs=1
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897753: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897768: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
Nothing - it does not write any pages towrt (nr_to_write) is
unchanged by the attempted flush.
The second async flush:
vvvv
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897769: writeback_exec: work=3840 pages=15761, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=0
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897770: writeback_clear: work=ffff88003fb53840, refs=1
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897771: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897783: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
Differs in setup only by range_cyclic=1 instead of zero, and it also
fails to write anything.
The third flush - the sync one - does:
vvvv
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897784: writeback_exec: work=3e58 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897785: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
some 75 seconds later having written only 1024 pages. In the mean
time, the traces show dd blocked in balance_dirty_pages():
dd-2498 [000] 616072.908675: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
dd-2498 [000] 616072.908679: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
dd-2498 [000] 616073.238785: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
dd-2498 [000] 616073.238788: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
And it appears to stay blocked there without doing any writeback at
all - there are no wbc_balance_dirty_pages_written traces at all.
That is, it is blocking until the number of dirty pages is dropping
below the dirty threshold, then continuing to write and dirty more
pages.
This continues for another 75 seconds, until the dd completes and
then the sync flush thread completes:
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763145: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=0 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=1 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763148: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763160: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763161: writeback_clear: work=ffff88002e783e58, refs=1
^^^^^
The flush thread does not appear to be cycling through 1024 pages at
a time as the wbc structure says it should - it appears to be doing
all the writeback. Indeed, it is almost always blocked here:
task PC stack pid father
flush-253:16 D 00000000ffffffff 0 2511 2 0x00000000
ffff880038409690 0000000000000046 ffff880038409610 00000000001d42c0
ffff880038409fd8 00000000001d42c0 ffff880038409fd8 ffff88003840c340
00000000001d42c0 00000000001d42c0 ffff880038409fd8 00000000001d42c0
Call Trace:
[<ffffffff81790197>] io_schedule+0x47/0x70
[<ffffffff8141b637>] get_request_wait+0xc7/0x190
[<ffffffff8109d880>] ? autoremove_wake_function+0x0/0x40
[<ffffffff81414817>] ? elv_merge+0x47/0x220
[<ffffffff8141bce3>] __make_request+0x93/0x480
[<ffffffff8141a359>] generic_make_request+0x1f9/0x510
[<ffffffff810b41bd>] ? trace_hardirqs_on+0xd/0x10
[<ffffffff8117e462>] ? bvec_alloc_bs+0x62/0x110
[<ffffffff8141a6ca>] submit_bio+0x5a/0xd0
[<ffffffff8134f874>] xfs_submit_ioend_bio+0x74/0xa0
[<ffffffff8134fbb1>] xfs_submit_ioend+0xb1/0x110
[<ffffffff81350e34>] xfs_page_state_convert+0x3a4/0x730
[<ffffffff810b416d>] ? trace_hardirqs_on_caller+0x14d/0x190
[<ffffffff8135137c>] xfs_vm_writepage+0x8c/0x160
[<ffffffff81112cfa>] __writepage+0x1a/0x50
[<ffffffff81113b17>] write_cache_pages+0x1f7/0x400
[<ffffffff81112ce0>] ? __writepage+0x0/0x50
[<ffffffff81113d47>] generic_writepages+0x27/0x30
[<ffffffff8134f28d>] xfs_vm_writepages+0x5d/0x80
[<ffffffff81113d74>] do_writepages+0x24/0x40
[<ffffffff811722f7>] writeback_single_inode+0xe7/0x3b0
[<ffffffff81172d65>] writeback_inodes_wb+0x2e5/0x550
[<ffffffff811247fb>] ? ftrace_raw_event_id_wbc_class+0x16b/0x190
[<ffffffff811730c2>] wb_writeback+0xf2/0x2d0
[<ffffffff811243aa>] ? ftrace_raw_event_writeback_exec+0xea/0xf0
[<ffffffff811734c8>] wb_do_writeback+0x108/0x240
[<ffffffff811733f0>] ? wb_do_writeback+0x30/0x240
[<ffffffff8117365b>] bdi_writeback_task+0x5b/0x180
[<ffffffff81125ac0>] ? bdi_start_fn+0x0/0x100
[<ffffffff81125b46>] bdi_start_fn+0x86/0x100
[<ffffffff81125ac0>] ? bdi_start_fn+0x0/0x100
[<ffffffff8109d396>] kthread+0x96/0xa0
[<ffffffff81036e24>] kernel_thread_helper+0x4/0x10
[<ffffffff817934d0>] ? restore_args+0x0/0x30
[<ffffffff8109d300>] ? kthread+0x0/0xa0
[<ffffffff81036e20>] ? kernel_thread_helper+0x0/0x10
Waiting on block device congestion.
Because I have this in wb_writeback():
756 trace_wbc_writeback_start(&wbc);
757 writeback_inodes_wb(wb, &wbc);
758 trace_wbc_writeback_written(&wbc);
I know that we are stuck in a single iteration of
writeback_inodes_wb(). This also implies that we are stuck in a
single do_writepages() call.
Indeed, looking at write_cache_pages():
838 long nr_to_write = wbc->nr_to_write;
...
920 ret = (*writepage)(page, wbc, data);
...
940 if (nr_to_write > 0) {
941 nr_to_write--;
942 if (nr_to_write == 0 &&
943 wbc->sync_mode == WB_SYNC_NONE) {
944 /*
945 * We stop writing back only if we are
946 * not doing integrity sync. In case of
947 * integrity sync we have to keep going
948 * because someone may be concurrently
949 * dirtying pages, and we might have
950 * synced a lot of newly appeared dirty
951 * pages, but have not synced all of the
952 * old dirty pages.
953 */
954 done = 1;
955 break;
956 }
957 }
...
973 if (!wbc->no_nrwrite_index_update) {
974 if (wbc->range_cyclic || (range_whole && nr_to_write > 0))
975 mapping->writeback_index = done_index;
976 wbc->nr_to_write = nr_to_write;
977 }
It even hides this fact from the higher layers by rewriting
wbc->nr_to_write with what it thinks it did, not what really
happened. So, where did this come from?
<git blame>
commit 89e12190 - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by dcf6a79d
commit dcf6a79d - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by 05fe478d
commit 05fe478d - data integrity write fix: ignore nr_to_write for
WB_SYNC_ALL writes.
"This change does indeed make the possibility of
long stalls la[r]ger, and that's not a good thing,
but lying about data integrity is even worse."
IOWs, the observed sync behaviour is as intended - if you keep
dirtying the file, sync will keep cleaning it because it defaults to
being safe. I'd say "not a bug" then. I agree it's not ideal, but
until Jan's inode sync sweep code is accepted I don't think there's
much that can be done about it.
However, what this is doing to XFS writeback is really, really nasty
- it's effectively causing single page allocation and IO submission
instead of doing it in much, much larger chunks.
Adding a wbc trace to xfs_vm_writepage(), I see:
flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.417931: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442765: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=0 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442899: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=-1 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442910: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=-5 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442918: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=-21 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442927: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=-85 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
Which shows why XFS is having problems. Basically, if a filesystem
writes more than one page in ->writepage and updates
wbc->nr_to_write to indicate this, write_cache_pages completely
ignores it. IOWs, write_cache_pages() wants to call ->writepage()
nr_to_write times, not write nr_to_write pages. And by sending a
negative number down to ->writepage, XFs is writing a single page
and then returning, completely defeating all the page clustering
optimisations XFS has in ->writepage....
I'll post some patches for the tracing and the XFS fixes soon, but i
don't have anything for sync except understanding, though...
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
[email protected]
This is food for thought. On XFS, the only difference between sync
and freeze is that freeze stops incoming writers:
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/scratch/test bs=1024k count=8000 &
[1] 2565
$ sleep 5; time (sudo xfs_freeze -f /mnt/scratch ; sudo xfs_freeze -u /mnt/scratch)
real 0m2.536s
user 0m0.000s
sys 0m0.020s
$ sleep 5; time (sudo xfs_freeze -f /mnt/scratch ; sudo xfs_freeze -u /mnt/scratch)
real 0m2.251s
user 0m0.004s
sys 0m0.012s
$ sleep 5; time (sudo xfs_freeze -f /mnt/scratch ; sudo xfs_freeze -u /mnt/scratch)
real 0m1.985s
user 0m0.004s
sys 0m0.024s
$ sleep 5; time sync
8000+0 records in
8000+0 records out
8388608000 bytes (8.4 GB) copied, 80.822 s, 104 MB/s
[1]+ Done dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/scratch/test
bs=1024k count=8000
real 0m47.237s
user 0m0.036s
sys 0m18.769s
$
Freezing the filesystem and immediately unfreezing is much, much
faster than running sync, yet it gives us exactly the same data
integrity guarantees without the endless blocking problems. Is it
time to make sure every filesystem implements freeze and thaw, and
start using them for sync instead of the current code?
Cheers,
Dave.
On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 05:04:58PM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 11:37:02AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > On Thu, Apr 08, 2010 at 11:28:50AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > > > SUPERPROXY ~ # cat /proc/1753/stack
> > > > [<c019a93c>] bdi_sched_wait+0x8/0xc
> > > > [<c019a807>] wait_on_bit+0x20/0x2c
> > > > [<c019a9af>] sync_inodes_sb+0x6f/0x10a
> > > > [<c019dd53>] __sync_filesystem+0x28/0x49
> > > > [<c019ddf3>] sync_filesystems+0x7f/0xc0
> > > > [<c019de7a>] sys_sync+0x1b/0x2d
> > > > [<c02f7a25>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb
> > > > [<ffffffff>] 0xffffffff
> > > Hmm, I guess you are observing the problem reported in
> > > https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14830
> > > There seem to be several issues in the per-bdi writeback code that
> > > cause sync on a busy filesystem to last almost forever. To that bug are
> > > attached two patches that fix two issues but apparently it's not all.
> > > I'm still looking into it...
> >
> > So Jen's writeback tracing shows this for a normal cycle during a
> > large dd:
> >
> > <...>-6030 [005] 604446.696454: writeback_sched: work=38c0, task=task
> > flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604446.696492: writeback_exec: work=38c0 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=-1
> > flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604446.696493: writeback_clear: work=ffff88011f1a38c0, refs=1
> > flush-253:16-6029 [003] 604446.784240: writeback_pages_written: 1024
> >
> > There were 100 of these traces (102400 pages (400MB) which is exactly 10% of
> > RAM) before this:
> >
> > <...>-6030 [000] 604462.346329: writeback_sched: work=6c0, task=task
> > flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604462.267098: writeback_exec: work=6c0 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=-1
> > flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604462.267101: writeback_clear: work=ffff88011e8006c0, refs=1
> > flush-253:16-6029 [001] 604465.406331: writeback_pages_written: 160771
> >
> > which shows 160771 pages written in a single iteration (650MB). I suspect some
> > interaction between foreground and background writeout is occurring here.
> >
> > The flusher thread appears to be getting stuck on congestion - the wchan
> > it is sitting on indicates it is blocking in get_request(). I'm going to
> > extend this tracing further down into the writeback code so that what is
> > happening is clearer...
>
> Ok, I moved to a VM with less memory (1GB vs 4GB) and slower block
> devices (100MB/s vs 500MB/s) and now it's pretty clear what is
> happening. i'll go through the traces.
>
> To start with, sync() queues up several tasks to the bdi flush daemon:
>
> SYSCALL_DEFINE0(sync)
> {
> wakeup_flusher_threads(0);
> sync_filesystems(0);
> sync_filesystems(1);
> if (unlikely(laptop_mode))
> laptop_sync_completion();
> return 0;
> }
>
>
> First is via wakeup_flusher_threads() - an async flush:
>
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.710212: writeback_queue: 253:16: pages=13818, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.710217: writeback_sched: work=13c0, task=task
> ^^^^
> second is a per-sb async flush via sync_filesystems(0):
>
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.717181: writeback_queue: 253:16: pages=15761, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=0
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.717191: writeback_sched: work=3840, task=task
> ^^^^
> And finally there is the sync flush via sync_filesystems(1):
>
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.737836: writeback_queue: 253:16: pages=9223372036854775807, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.737840: writeback_sched: work=3e58, task=task
> ^^^^
>
> The first async flush does:
> vvvv
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897747: writeback_exec: work=13c0 pages=13818, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897748: writeback_clear: work=ffff88003d8813c0, refs=1
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897753: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897768: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
>
> Nothing - it does not write any pages towrt (nr_to_write) is
> unchanged by the attempted flush.
>
> The second async flush:
> vvvv
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897769: writeback_exec: work=3840 pages=15761, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=0
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897770: writeback_clear: work=ffff88003fb53840, refs=1
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897771: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897783: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
>
> Differs in setup only by range_cyclic=1 instead of zero, and it also
> fails to write anything.
>
> The third flush - the sync one - does:
> vvvv
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897784: writeback_exec: work=3e58 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897785: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
>
> some 75 seconds later having written only 1024 pages. In the mean
> time, the traces show dd blocked in balance_dirty_pages():
>
> dd-2498 [000] 616072.908675: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> dd-2498 [000] 616072.908679: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> dd-2498 [000] 616073.238785: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> dd-2498 [000] 616073.238788: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
>
> And it appears to stay blocked there without doing any writeback at
> all - there are no wbc_balance_dirty_pages_written traces at all.
> That is, it is blocking until the number of dirty pages is dropping
> below the dirty threshold, then continuing to write and dirty more
> pages.
>
> This continues for another 75 seconds, until the dd completes and
> then the sync flush thread completes:
>
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763145: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=0 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=1 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763148: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763160: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763161: writeback_clear: work=ffff88002e783e58, refs=1
> ^^^^^
>
> The flush thread does not appear to be cycling through 1024 pages at
> a time as the wbc structure says it should - it appears to be doing
> all the writeback. Indeed, it is almost always blocked here:
>
> task PC stack pid father
> flush-253:16 D 00000000ffffffff 0 2511 2 0x00000000
> ffff880038409690 0000000000000046 ffff880038409610 00000000001d42c0
> ffff880038409fd8 00000000001d42c0 ffff880038409fd8 ffff88003840c340
> 00000000001d42c0 00000000001d42c0 ffff880038409fd8 00000000001d42c0
> Call Trace:
> [<ffffffff81790197>] io_schedule+0x47/0x70
> [<ffffffff8141b637>] get_request_wait+0xc7/0x190
> [<ffffffff8109d880>] ? autoremove_wake_function+0x0/0x40
> [<ffffffff81414817>] ? elv_merge+0x47/0x220
> [<ffffffff8141bce3>] __make_request+0x93/0x480
> [<ffffffff8141a359>] generic_make_request+0x1f9/0x510
> [<ffffffff810b41bd>] ? trace_hardirqs_on+0xd/0x10
> [<ffffffff8117e462>] ? bvec_alloc_bs+0x62/0x110
> [<ffffffff8141a6ca>] submit_bio+0x5a/0xd0
> [<ffffffff8134f874>] xfs_submit_ioend_bio+0x74/0xa0
> [<ffffffff8134fbb1>] xfs_submit_ioend+0xb1/0x110
> [<ffffffff81350e34>] xfs_page_state_convert+0x3a4/0x730
> [<ffffffff810b416d>] ? trace_hardirqs_on_caller+0x14d/0x190
> [<ffffffff8135137c>] xfs_vm_writepage+0x8c/0x160
> [<ffffffff81112cfa>] __writepage+0x1a/0x50
> [<ffffffff81113b17>] write_cache_pages+0x1f7/0x400
> [<ffffffff81112ce0>] ? __writepage+0x0/0x50
> [<ffffffff81113d47>] generic_writepages+0x27/0x30
> [<ffffffff8134f28d>] xfs_vm_writepages+0x5d/0x80
> [<ffffffff81113d74>] do_writepages+0x24/0x40
> [<ffffffff811722f7>] writeback_single_inode+0xe7/0x3b0
> [<ffffffff81172d65>] writeback_inodes_wb+0x2e5/0x550
> [<ffffffff811247fb>] ? ftrace_raw_event_id_wbc_class+0x16b/0x190
> [<ffffffff811730c2>] wb_writeback+0xf2/0x2d0
> [<ffffffff811243aa>] ? ftrace_raw_event_writeback_exec+0xea/0xf0
> [<ffffffff811734c8>] wb_do_writeback+0x108/0x240
> [<ffffffff811733f0>] ? wb_do_writeback+0x30/0x240
> [<ffffffff8117365b>] bdi_writeback_task+0x5b/0x180
> [<ffffffff81125ac0>] ? bdi_start_fn+0x0/0x100
> [<ffffffff81125b46>] bdi_start_fn+0x86/0x100
> [<ffffffff81125ac0>] ? bdi_start_fn+0x0/0x100
> [<ffffffff8109d396>] kthread+0x96/0xa0
> [<ffffffff81036e24>] kernel_thread_helper+0x4/0x10
> [<ffffffff817934d0>] ? restore_args+0x0/0x30
> [<ffffffff8109d300>] ? kthread+0x0/0xa0
> [<ffffffff81036e20>] ? kernel_thread_helper+0x0/0x10
>
> Waiting on block device congestion.
>
> Because I have this in wb_writeback():
>
> 756 trace_wbc_writeback_start(&wbc);
> 757 writeback_inodes_wb(wb, &wbc);
> 758 trace_wbc_writeback_written(&wbc);
>
> I know that we are stuck in a single iteration of
> writeback_inodes_wb(). This also implies that we are stuck in a
> single do_writepages() call.
>
> Indeed, looking at write_cache_pages():
>
> 838 long nr_to_write = wbc->nr_to_write;
> ...
> 920 ret = (*writepage)(page, wbc, data);
> ...
> 940 if (nr_to_write > 0) {
> 941 nr_to_write--;
> 942 if (nr_to_write == 0 &&
> 943 wbc->sync_mode == WB_SYNC_NONE) {
> 944 /*
> 945 * We stop writing back only if we are
> 946 * not doing integrity sync. In case of
> 947 * integrity sync we have to keep going
> 948 * because someone may be concurrently
> 949 * dirtying pages, and we might have
> 950 * synced a lot of newly appeared dirty
> 951 * pages, but have not synced all of the
> 952 * old dirty pages.
> 953 */
> 954 done = 1;
> 955 break;
> 956 }
> 957 }
> ...
> 973 if (!wbc->no_nrwrite_index_update) {
> 974 if (wbc->range_cyclic || (range_whole && nr_to_write > 0))
> 975 mapping->writeback_index = done_index;
> 976 wbc->nr_to_write = nr_to_write;
> 977 }
>
> It even hides this fact from the higher layers by rewriting
> wbc->nr_to_write with what it thinks it did, not what really
> happened. So, where did this come from?
>
> <git blame>
>
> commit 89e12190 - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by dcf6a79d
> commit dcf6a79d - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by 05fe478d
> commit 05fe478d - data integrity write fix: ignore nr_to_write for
> WB_SYNC_ALL writes.
> "This change does indeed make the possibility of
> long stalls la[r]ger, and that's not a good thing,
> but lying about data integrity is even worse."
>
> IOWs, the observed sync behaviour is as intended - if you keep
> dirtying the file, sync will keep cleaning it because it defaults to
> being safe. I'd say "not a bug" then. I agree it's not ideal, but
> until Jan's inode sync sweep code is accepted I don't think there's
> much that can be done about it.
>
> However, what this is doing to XFS writeback is really, really nasty
> - it's effectively causing single page allocation and IO submission
> instead of doing it in much, much larger chunks.
>
> Adding a wbc trace to xfs_vm_writepage(), I see:
>
> flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.417931: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442765: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=0 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442899: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=-1 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442910: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=-5 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442918: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=-21 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> flush-253:16-2586 [000] 620402.442927: wbc_writepage: dev 253:16 wbc=3d20 towrt=-85 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=1 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
>
> Which shows why XFS is having problems. Basically, if a filesystem
> writes more than one page in ->writepage and updates
> wbc->nr_to_write to indicate this, write_cache_pages completely
> ignores it. IOWs, write_cache_pages() wants to call ->writepage()
> nr_to_write times, not write nr_to_write pages. And by sending a
> negative number down to ->writepage, XFs is writing a single page
> and then returning, completely defeating all the page clustering
> optimisations XFS has in ->writepage....
>
> I'll post some patches for the tracing and the XFS fixes soon, but i
> don't have anything for sync except understanding, though...
>
> Cheers,
>
> Dave.
> --
> Dave Chinner
> [email protected]
> --
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to [email protected]
> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
>
--
Dave Chinner
[email protected]
On Mon 19-04-10 17:04:58, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 11:37:02AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > On Thu, Apr 08, 2010 at 11:28:50AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > > > SUPERPROXY ~ # cat /proc/1753/stack
> > > > [<c019a93c>] bdi_sched_wait+0x8/0xc
> > > > [<c019a807>] wait_on_bit+0x20/0x2c
> > > > [<c019a9af>] sync_inodes_sb+0x6f/0x10a
> > > > [<c019dd53>] __sync_filesystem+0x28/0x49
> > > > [<c019ddf3>] sync_filesystems+0x7f/0xc0
> > > > [<c019de7a>] sys_sync+0x1b/0x2d
> > > > [<c02f7a25>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb
> > > > [<ffffffff>] 0xffffffff
> > > Hmm, I guess you are observing the problem reported in
> > > https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14830
> > > There seem to be several issues in the per-bdi writeback code that
> > > cause sync on a busy filesystem to last almost forever. To that bug are
> > > attached two patches that fix two issues but apparently it's not all.
> > > I'm still looking into it...
> >
> > So Jen's writeback tracing shows this for a normal cycle during a
> > large dd:
> >
> > <...>-6030 [005] 604446.696454: writeback_sched: work=38c0, task=task
> > flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604446.696492: writeback_exec: work=38c0 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=-1
> > flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604446.696493: writeback_clear: work=ffff88011f1a38c0, refs=1
> > flush-253:16-6029 [003] 604446.784240: writeback_pages_written: 1024
> >
> > There were 100 of these traces (102400 pages (400MB) which is exactly 10% of
> > RAM) before this:
> >
> > <...>-6030 [000] 604462.346329: writeback_sched: work=6c0, task=task
> > flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604462.267098: writeback_exec: work=6c0 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=-1
> > flush-253:16-6029 [002] 604462.267101: writeback_clear: work=ffff88011e8006c0, refs=1
> > flush-253:16-6029 [001] 604465.406331: writeback_pages_written: 160771
> >
> > which shows 160771 pages written in a single iteration (650MB). I suspect some
> > interaction between foreground and background writeout is occurring here.
> >
> > The flusher thread appears to be getting stuck on congestion - the wchan
> > it is sitting on indicates it is blocking in get_request(). I'm going to
> > extend this tracing further down into the writeback code so that what is
> > happening is clearer...
>
> Ok, I moved to a VM with less memory (1GB vs 4GB) and slower block
> devices (100MB/s vs 500MB/s) and now it's pretty clear what is
> happening. i'll go through the traces.
>
> To start with, sync() queues up several tasks to the bdi flush daemon:
>
> SYSCALL_DEFINE0(sync)
> {
> wakeup_flusher_threads(0);
> sync_filesystems(0);
> sync_filesystems(1);
> if (unlikely(laptop_mode))
> laptop_sync_completion();
> return 0;
> }
>
>
> First is via wakeup_flusher_threads() - an async flush:
>
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.710212: writeback_queue: 253:16: pages=13818, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.710217: writeback_sched: work=13c0, task=task
> ^^^^
> second is a per-sb async flush via sync_filesystems(0):
>
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.717181: writeback_queue: 253:16: pages=15761, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=0
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.717191: writeback_sched: work=3840, task=task
> ^^^^
> And finally there is the sync flush via sync_filesystems(1):
>
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.737836: writeback_queue: 253:16: pages=9223372036854775807, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> sync-2499 [000] 616072.737840: writeback_sched: work=3e58, task=task
> ^^^^
>
> The first async flush does:
> vvvv
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897747: writeback_exec: work=13c0 pages=13818, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897748: writeback_clear: work=ffff88003d8813c0, refs=1
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897753: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897768: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
>
> Nothing - it does not write any pages towrt (nr_to_write) is
> unchanged by the attempted flush.
This looks a bit strange. Surly there are plenty of dirty pages. I guess
we never get to ->writepages for XFS. But then I wonder how does it
happen that we return without more_io set. Strange.
> The second async flush:
> vvvv
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897769: writeback_exec: work=3840 pages=15761, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=-1 for_background=0
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897770: writeback_clear: work=ffff88003fb53840, refs=1
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897771: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897783: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
>
> Differs in setup only by range_cyclic=1 instead of zero, and it also
> fails to write anything.
>
> The third flush - the sync one - does:
> vvvv
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897784: writeback_exec: work=3e58 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897785: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
>
> some 75 seconds later having written only 1024 pages. In the mean
> time, the traces show dd blocked in balance_dirty_pages():
>
> dd-2498 [000] 616072.908675: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> dd-2498 [000] 616072.908679: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> dd-2498 [000] 616073.238785: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> dd-2498 [000] 616073.238788: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> And it appears to stay blocked there without doing any writeback at
> all - there are no wbc_balance_dirty_pages_written traces at all.
> That is, it is blocking until the number of dirty pages is dropping
> below the dirty threshold, then continuing to write and dirty more
> pages.
I think this happens because sync writeback is running so I_SYNC is set
and thus we cannot do any writeout for the inode from balance_dirty_pages.
> This continues for another 75 seconds, until the dd completes and
> then the sync flush thread completes:
>
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763145: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=0 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=1 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763148: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763160: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616145.763161: writeback_clear: work=ffff88002e783e58, refs=1
> ^^^^^
...
> <git blame>
>
> commit 89e12190 - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by dcf6a79d
> commit dcf6a79d - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by 05fe478d
> commit 05fe478d - data integrity write fix: ignore nr_to_write for
> WB_SYNC_ALL writes.
> "This change does indeed make the possibility of
> long stalls la[r]ger, and that's not a good thing,
> but lying about data integrity is even worse."
>
> IOWs, the observed sync behaviour is as intended - if you keep
> dirtying the file, sync will keep cleaning it because it defaults to
> being safe. I'd say "not a bug" then. I agree it's not ideal, but
> until Jan's inode sync sweep code is accepted I don't think there's
> much that can be done about it.
Yes, my writeback sweeping patch was aimed exactly to reliably address
this issue. Anyway, if we could get the async stuff working properly then I
think livelocks should happen much less often... Need to really find some
time for this.
Honza
--
Jan Kara <[email protected]>
SUSE Labs, CR
On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 02:33:09AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> On Mon 19-04-10 17:04:58, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > The first async flush does:
> > vvvv
> > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897747: writeback_exec: work=13c0 pages=13818, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897748: writeback_clear: work=ffff88003d8813c0, refs=1
> > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897753: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897768: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> >
> > Nothing - it does not write any pages towrt (nr_to_write) is
> > unchanged by the attempted flush.
> This looks a bit strange. Surly there are plenty of dirty pages. I guess
> we never get to ->writepages for XFS. But then I wonder how does it
> happen that we return without more_io set. Strange.
more_io not being set implies that we aren't calling requeue_io().
So that means it's not caused by I_SYNC being set. If we get down to
write_cache_pages, it implies that there are no dirty pages
remaining we can write back.
Given a background flush just completed before this queued async
flush was executed (didn't seem relevant, so I didn't include
it), it is entirely possible that there were no dirty pages to
write in the followup async flushes.
> > The third flush - the sync one - does:
> > vvvv
> > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897784: writeback_exec: work=3e58 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897785: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> >
> > some 75 seconds later having written only 1024 pages. In the mean
> > time, the traces show dd blocked in balance_dirty_pages():
> >
> > dd-2498 [000] 616072.908675: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> > dd-2498 [000] 616072.908679: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> > dd-2498 [000] 616073.238785: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> > dd-2498 [000] 616073.238788: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> > And it appears to stay blocked there without doing any writeback at
> > all - there are no wbc_balance_dirty_pages_written traces at all.
> > That is, it is blocking until the number of dirty pages is dropping
> > below the dirty threshold, then continuing to write and dirty more
> > pages.
> I think this happens because sync writeback is running so I_SYNC is set
> and thus we cannot do any writeout for the inode from balance_dirty_pages.
It's not even calling into writeback so the I_SYNC flag is way out of
scope ;)
> > <git blame>
> >
> > commit 89e12190 - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by dcf6a79d
> > commit dcf6a79d - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by 05fe478d
> > commit 05fe478d - data integrity write fix: ignore nr_to_write for
> > WB_SYNC_ALL writes.
> > "This change does indeed make the possibility of
> > long stalls la[r]ger, and that's not a good thing,
> > but lying about data integrity is even worse."
> >
> > IOWs, the observed sync behaviour is as intended - if you keep
> > dirtying the file, sync will keep cleaning it because it defaults to
> > being safe. I'd say "not a bug" then. I agree it's not ideal, but
> > until Jan's inode sync sweep code is accepted I don't think there's
> > much that can be done about it.
> Yes, my writeback sweeping patch was aimed exactly to reliably address
> this issue. Anyway, if we could get the async stuff working properly then I
> think livelocks should happen much less often... Need to really find some
> time for this.
I think the async writeback is working correctly. It's just that if
we queue async writeback, and it runs directly after a previous
async writeback command was executed, it's possible it has nothing
to do. The problem is that the sync writeback will wait on pages
under writeback as it finds them, so it's likely to be running while
more pages get dirtied and that's when the the tail-chase in
write_cache_pages() starts.
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
[email protected]
On Wed 21-04-10 11:54:28, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 02:33:09AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > On Mon 19-04-10 17:04:58, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > > The first async flush does:
> > > vvvv
> > > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897747: writeback_exec: work=13c0 pages=13818, sb=0, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> > > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897748: writeback_clear: work=ffff88003d8813c0, refs=1
> > > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897753: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> > > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897768: wbc_writeback_written: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> > >
> > > Nothing - it does not write any pages towrt (nr_to_write) is
> > > unchanged by the attempted flush.
> > This looks a bit strange. Surly there are plenty of dirty pages. I guess
> > we never get to ->writepages for XFS. But then I wonder how does it
> > happen that we return without more_io set. Strange.
>
> more_io not being set implies that we aren't calling requeue_io().
> So that means it's not caused by I_SYNC being set. If we get down to
> write_cache_pages, it implies that there are no dirty pages
> remaining we can write back.
>
> Given a background flush just completed before this queued async
> flush was executed (didn't seem relevant, so I didn't include
> it), it is entirely possible that there were no dirty pages to
> write in the followup async flushes.
Ah, OK.
> > > The third flush - the sync one - does:
> > > vvvv
> > > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897784: writeback_exec: work=3e58 pages=9223372036854775807, sb=1, kupdate=0, range_cyclic=0 for_background=0
> > > flush-253:16-2497 [000] 616072.897785: wbc_writeback_start: dev 253:16 wbc=9d20 towrt=1024 skip=0 sb=1 mode=1 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=0 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x7fffffffffffffff
> > >
> > > some 75 seconds later having written only 1024 pages. In the mean
> > > time, the traces show dd blocked in balance_dirty_pages():
> > >
> > > dd-2498 [000] 616072.908675: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> > > dd-2498 [000] 616072.908679: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> > > dd-2498 [000] 616073.238785: wbc_balance_dirty_start: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> > > dd-2498 [000] 616073.238788: wbc_balance_dirty_wait: dev 253:16 wbc=fb68 towrt=1536 skip=0 sb=0 mode=0 kupd=0 bgrd=0 reclm=0 cyclic=1 more=0 older=0x0 start=0x0 end=0x0
> > > And it appears to stay blocked there without doing any writeback at
> > > all - there are no wbc_balance_dirty_pages_written traces at all.
> > > That is, it is blocking until the number of dirty pages is dropping
> > > below the dirty threshold, then continuing to write and dirty more
> > > pages.
> > I think this happens because sync writeback is running so I_SYNC is set
> > and thus we cannot do any writeout for the inode from balance_dirty_pages.
>
> It's not even calling into writeback so the I_SYNC flag is way out of
> scope ;)
Are you sure? The tracepoints are in wb_writeback() but
writeback_inodes_wbc() calls directly into writeback_inodes_wb() so you
won't see any of the tracepoints to trigger. So how do you know we didn't
get to writeback_single_inode?
> > > <git blame>
> > >
> > > commit 89e12190 - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by dcf6a79d
> > > commit dcf6a79d - fix bug in nr_to_write introduced by 05fe478d
> > > commit 05fe478d - data integrity write fix: ignore nr_to_write for
> > > WB_SYNC_ALL writes.
> > > "This change does indeed make the possibility of
> > > long stalls la[r]ger, and that's not a good thing,
> > > but lying about data integrity is even worse."
> > >
> > > IOWs, the observed sync behaviour is as intended - if you keep
> > > dirtying the file, sync will keep cleaning it because it defaults to
> > > being safe. I'd say "not a bug" then. I agree it's not ideal, but
> > > until Jan's inode sync sweep code is accepted I don't think there's
> > > much that can be done about it.
> > Yes, my writeback sweeping patch was aimed exactly to reliably address
> > this issue. Anyway, if we could get the async stuff working properly then I
> > think livelocks should happen much less often... Need to really find some
> > time for this.
>
> I think the async writeback is working correctly. It's just that if
> we queue async writeback, and it runs directly after a previous
> async writeback command was executed, it's possible it has nothing
> to do. The problem is that the sync writeback will wait on pages
> under writeback as it finds them, so it's likely to be running while
> more pages get dirtied and that's when the the tail-chase in
> write_cache_pages() starts.
OK, probably you are right...
Honza
--
Jan Kara <[email protected]>
SUSE Labs, CR
On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 03:27:18PM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> On Wed 21-04-10 11:54:28, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 02:33:09AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > > On Mon 19-04-10 17:04:58, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > > > The third flush - the sync one - does:
.....
> > > > some 75 seconds later having written only 1024 pages. In the mean
> > > > time, the traces show dd blocked in balance_dirty_pages():
.....
> > > > And it appears to stay blocked there without doing any writeback at
> > > > all - there are no wbc_balance_dirty_pages_written traces at all.
> > > > That is, it is blocking until the number of dirty pages is dropping
> > > > below the dirty threshold, then continuing to write and dirty more
> > > > pages.
> > > I think this happens because sync writeback is running so I_SYNC is set
> > > and thus we cannot do any writeout for the inode from balance_dirty_pages.
> >
> > It's not even calling into writeback so the I_SYNC flag is way out of
> > scope ;)
> Are you sure? The tracepoints are in wb_writeback() but
> writeback_inodes_wbc() calls directly into writeback_inodes_wb() so you
> won't see any of the tracepoints to trigger. So how do you know we didn't
> get to writeback_single_inode?
The balance_dirty_pages() tracing code added this hunk:
@@ -536,11 +537,13 @@ static void balance_dirty_pages(struct address_space *mapping,
* threshold otherwise wait until the disk writes catch
* up.
*/
+ trace_wbc_balance_dirty_start(&wbc);
if (bdi_nr_reclaimable > bdi_thresh) {
writeback_inodes_wbc(&wbc);
pages_written += write_chunk - wbc.nr_to_write;
get_dirty_limits(&background_thresh, &dirty_thresh,
&bdi_thresh, bdi);
+ trace_wbc_balance_dirty_written(&wbc);
}
/*
So if we tried to do writeback from here, the
wbc_balance_dirty_written trace would have been emitted, and that is
not showing up very often in any of the traces. e.g:
$ grep balance t.t |grep start |wc -l
4356
$ grep balance t.t |grep wait |wc -l
2171
$ grep balance t.t |grep written |wc -l
7
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
[email protected]
On Thu 22-04-10 10:06:52, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 03:27:18PM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > On Wed 21-04-10 11:54:28, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > > On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 02:33:09AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > > > On Mon 19-04-10 17:04:58, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > > > > The third flush - the sync one - does:
> .....
> > > > > some 75 seconds later having written only 1024 pages. In the mean
> > > > > time, the traces show dd blocked in balance_dirty_pages():
> .....
> > > > > And it appears to stay blocked there without doing any writeback at
> > > > > all - there are no wbc_balance_dirty_pages_written traces at all.
> > > > > That is, it is blocking until the number of dirty pages is dropping
> > > > > below the dirty threshold, then continuing to write and dirty more
> > > > > pages.
> > > > I think this happens because sync writeback is running so I_SYNC is set
> > > > and thus we cannot do any writeout for the inode from balance_dirty_pages.
> > >
> > > It's not even calling into writeback so the I_SYNC flag is way out of
> > > scope ;)
> > Are you sure? The tracepoints are in wb_writeback() but
> > writeback_inodes_wbc() calls directly into writeback_inodes_wb() so you
> > won't see any of the tracepoints to trigger. So how do you know we didn't
> > get to writeback_single_inode?
>
> The balance_dirty_pages() tracing code added this hunk:
>
> @@ -536,11 +537,13 @@ static void balance_dirty_pages(struct address_space *mapping,
> * threshold otherwise wait until the disk writes catch
> * up.
> */
> + trace_wbc_balance_dirty_start(&wbc);
> if (bdi_nr_reclaimable > bdi_thresh) {
> writeback_inodes_wbc(&wbc);
> pages_written += write_chunk - wbc.nr_to_write;
> get_dirty_limits(&background_thresh, &dirty_thresh,
> &bdi_thresh, bdi);
> + trace_wbc_balance_dirty_written(&wbc);
> }
>
> /*
>
> So if we tried to do writeback from here, the
> wbc_balance_dirty_written trace would have been emitted, and that is
> not showing up very often in any of the traces. e.g:
>
> $ grep balance t.t |grep start |wc -l
> 4356
> $ grep balance t.t |grep wait |wc -l
> 2171
> $ grep balance t.t |grep written |wc -l
> 7
Ah, OK. I've missed the 'written' trace. Thanks for explanation. So it
means that enough pages are under writeback and we just wait in
balance_dirty_pages for writes to finish. That works as expected. Fine.
Honza
--
Jan Kara <[email protected]>
SUSE Labs, CR