Re: [RFC][PATCH] mm: stop balance_dirty_pages doing too much work

From: Peter Zijlstra
Date: Thu Jun 25 2009 - 04:00:39 EST


On Wed, 2009-06-24 at 15:27 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Wed, 24 Jun 2009 11:38:24 +0100
> Richard Kennedy <richard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > When writing to 2 (or more) devices at the same time, stop
> > balance_dirty_pages moving dirty pages to writeback when it has reached
> > the bdi threshold. This prevents balance_dirty_pages overshooting its
> > limits and moving all dirty pages to writeback.
> >
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Richard Kennedy <richard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > ---

Acked-by: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxx>


[ moved explanation below ]

> >
> > diff --git a/mm/page-writeback.c b/mm/page-writeback.c
> > index 7b0dcea..7687879 100644
> > --- a/mm/page-writeback.c
> > +++ b/mm/page-writeback.c
> > @@ -541,8 +541,11 @@ static void balance_dirty_pages(struct address_space *mapping)
> > * filesystems (i.e. NFS) in which data may have been
> > * written to the server's write cache, but has not yet
> > * been flushed to permanent storage.
> > + * Only move pages to writeback if this bdi is over its
> > + * threshold otherwise wait until the disk writes catch
> > + * up.
> > */
> > - if (bdi_nr_reclaimable) {
> > + if (bdi_nr_reclaimable > bdi_thresh) {
> > writeback_inodes(&wbc);
> > pages_written += write_chunk - wbc.nr_to_write;
> > get_dirty_limits(&background_thresh, &dirty_thresh,
>
> yup, we need to think about the effect with zillions of disks. Peter,
> could you please take a look?

Looks to have been in that form forever (immediate git history).

When reading the code I read it like:

if (bdi_nr_reclaimable + bdi_nr_writeback <= bdi_thresh)
break;

if (nr_reclaimable + nr_writeback <
(background_thresh + dirty_thresh) / 2)
break;

if (bdi_nr_reclaimable) {
writeback_inodes(&wbc);

Which to me reads:

- if there's not enough to do, drop out
- see if background write-out can catch up, drop out
- is there anything to do, yay! work.

/me goes read the changelog, maybe there's a clue in there :-)

> > balance_dirty_pages can overreact and move all of the dirty pages to
> > writeback unnecessarily.
> >
> > balance_dirty_pages makes its decision to throttle based on the number
> > of dirty plus writeback pages that are over the calculated limit,so it
> > will continue to move pages even when there are plenty of pages in
> > writeback and less than the threshold still dirty.
> >
> > This allows it to overshoot its limits and move all the dirty pages to
> > writeback while waiting for the drives to catch up and empty the
> > writeback list.

Ahhh, indeed, how silly of me not to notice that before!

> > This is the simplest fix I could find, but I'm not entirely sure that it
> > alone will be enough for all cases. But it certainly is an improvement
> > on my desktop machine writing to 2 disks.

Seems good to me.

> > Do we need something more for machines with large arrays where
> > bdi_threshold * number_of_drives is greater than the dirty_ratio ?

[ I assumed s/dirty_ratio/dirty_thresh/, since dirty_ratio is a ratio
and bdi_threshold is an actual value, therefore the inequality above
doesn't make sense ]

That cannot actually happen (aside from small numerical glitches).

bdi_threshold = P_i * dirty_thresh, where \Sum P_i = 1

The proportion is relative to the recent writeout speed of the device.


On Wed, 2009-06-24 at 15:27 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> Also... get_dirty_limits() is rather hard to grok. The callers of
> get_dirty_limits() treat its three return values as "thresholds", but
> they're not named as thresholds within get_dirty_limits() itself, which
> is a bit confusing. And the meaning of each of those return values is
> pretty obscure from the code - could we document them please?

Does something like this help?

diff --git a/mm/page-writeback.c b/mm/page-writeback.c
index 7b0dcea..dc2cee1 100644
--- a/mm/page-writeback.c
+++ b/mm/page-writeback.c
@@ -426,6 +426,13 @@ unsigned long determine_dirtyable_memory(void)
return x + 1; /* Ensure that we never return 0 */
}

+/*
+ * get_dirty_limits() - compute the various dirty limits
+ *
+ * @pbackground - dirty limit at which we want to start background write-out
+ * @pdirty - total dirty limit, we should not have more dirty than this
+ * @pdbi_dirty - the share of @pdirty available to @bdi
+ */
void
get_dirty_limits(unsigned long *pbackground, unsigned long *pdirty,
unsigned long *pbdi_dirty, struct backing_dev_info *bdi)


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