2022-05-21 20:47:49

by Dai Ngo

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: 5.4.188 and later: massive performance regression with nfsd


On 5/20/22 9:40 AM, Trond Myklebust wrote:
> On Fri, 2022-05-20 at 15:36 +0000, Chuck Lever III wrote:
>>
>>> On May 11, 2022, at 10:36 AM, Chuck Lever III
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> On May 11, 2022, at 10:23 AM, Greg KH
>>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On Wed, May 11, 2022 at 02:16:19PM +0000, Chuck Lever III wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> On May 11, 2022, at 8:38 AM, Greg KH
>>>>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Wed, May 11, 2022 at 12:03:13PM +0200, Wolfgang Walter
>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> starting with 5.4.188 wie see a massive performance
>>>>>>> regression on our
>>>>>>> nfs-server. It basically is serving requests very very
>>>>>>> slowly with cpu
>>>>>>> utilization of 100% (with 5.4.187 and earlier it is 10%) so
>>>>>>> that it is
>>>>>>> unusable as a fileserver.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The culprit are commits (or one of it):
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> c32f1041382a88b17da5736886da4a492353a1bb "nfsd: cleanup
>>>>>>> nfsd_file_lru_dispose()"
>>>>>>> 628adfa21815f74c04724abc85847f24b5dd1645 "nfsd:
>>>>>>> Containerise filecache
>>>>>>> laundrette"
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> (upstream 36ebbdb96b694dd9c6b25ad98f2bbd263d022b63 and
>>>>>>> 9542e6a643fc69d528dfb3303f145719c61d3050)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> If I revert them in v5.4.192 the kernel works as before and
>>>>>>> performance is
>>>>>>> ok again.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I did not try to revert them one by one as any disruption
>>>>>>> of our nfs-server
>>>>>>> is a severe problem for us and I'm not sure if they are
>>>>>>> related.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> 5.10 and 5.15 both always performed very badly on our nfs-
>>>>>>> server in a
>>>>>>> similar way so we were stuck with 5.4.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I now think this is because of
>>>>>>> 36ebbdb96b694dd9c6b25ad98f2bbd263d022b63
>>>>>>> and/or 9542e6a643fc69d528dfb3303f145719c61d3050 though I
>>>>>>> didn't tried to
>>>>>>> revert them in 5.15 yet.
>>>>>> Odds are 5.18-rc6 is also a problem?
>>>>> We believe that
>>>>>
>>>>> 6b8a94332ee4 ("nfsd: Fix a write performance regression")
>>>>>
>>>>> addresses the performance regression. It was merged into 5.18-
>>>>> rc.
>>>> And into 5.17.4 if someone wants to try that release.
>>> I don't have a lot of time to backport this one myself, so
>>> I welcome anyone who wants to apply that commit to their
>>> favorite LTS kernel and test it for us.
>>>
>>>
>>>>>> If so, I'll just wait for the fix to get into Linus's tree as
>>>>>> this does
>>>>>> not seem to be a stable-tree-only issue.
>>>>> Unfortunately I've received a recent report that the fix
>>>>> introduces
>>>>> a "sleep while spinlock is held" for NFSv4.0 in rare cases.
>>>> Ick, not good, any potential fixes for that?
>>> Not yet. I was at LSF last week, so I've just started digging
>>> into this one. I've confirmed that the report is a real bug,
>>> but we still don't know how hard it is to hit it with real
>>> workloads.
>> We believe the following, which should be part of the first
>> NFSD pull request for 5.19, will properly address the splat.
>>
>> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/cel/linux.git/commit/?h=for-next&id=556082f5e5d7ecfd0ee45c3641e2b364bff9ee44
>>
>>
> Uh... What happens if you have 2 simultaneous calls to
> nfsd4_release_lockowner() for the same file? i.e. 2 separate processes
> owned by the same user, both locking the same file.
>
> Can't that cause the 'putlist' to get corrupted when both callers add
> the same nf->nf_putfile to two separate lists?

Thanks Trond for catching this, I'll submit the v2 patch.

-Dai

>
>> --
>> Chuck Lever
>>
>>
>>