Re: Swappiness vs. mmap() and interactive response

From: KOSAKI Motohiro
Date: Tue Apr 28 2009 - 01:36:55 EST


(cc to linux-mm and Rik)


> Hi,
>
> So, I just set up Ubuntu Jaunty (using Linux 2.6.28) on a quad core phenom box,
> and then I did the following (with XFS over LVM):
>
> mv /500gig/of/data/on/disk/one /disk/two
>
> This quickly caused the system to. grind.. to... a.... complete..... halt.
> Basically every UI operation, including the mouse in Xorg, started experiencing
> multiple second lag and delays. This made the system essentially unusable --
> for example, just flipping to the window where the "mv" command was running
> took 10 seconds on more than one occasion. Basically a "click and get coffee"
> interface.

I have some question and request.

1. please post your /proc/meminfo
2. Do above copy make tons swap-out? IOW your disk read much faster than write?
3. cache limitation of memcgroup solve this problem?
4. Which disk have your /bin and /usr/bin?



>
> There was no particular kernel CPU load -- the SATA DMA seemed fine.
>
> If I actively used the GUI, then the pieces I was using would work better, but
> they'd start experiencing astonishing latency again if I just let the UI sit
> for a little while. From this, I diagnosed that the problem was probably
> related to the VM paging out my GUI.
>
> Next, I set the following:
>
> echo 0 > /proc/sys/vm/swappiness
>
> ... hoping it would prevent paging out of the UI in favor of file data that's
> only used once. It did appear to help to a small degree, but not much. The
> system is still effectively unusable while a file copy is going on.
>
> From this, I diagnosed that most likely, the kernel was paging out all my
> application file mmap() data (such as my executables and shared libraries) in
> favor of total garbage VM load from the file copy.
>
> I don't know how to verify that this is true definitively. Are there some
> magic numbers in /proc I can look at? However, I did run latencytop, and it
> showed massive 2000+ msec latency in the page fault handler, as well as in
> various operations such as XFS read.
>
> Could this be something else? There were some long delays in latencytop from
> various apps doing fsync as well, but it seems unlikely that this would destroy
> latency in Xorg, and again, latency improved whenever I touched an app, for
> that app.
>
> Is there any way to fix this, short of rewriting the VM myself? For example,
> is there some way I could convince this VM that pages with active mappings are
> valuable?
>
> Thanks.



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