Re: doing lots of disk writes causes oom killer to kill processes
From: Michal Suchanek
Date: Tue Mar 12 2013 - 05:04:19 EST
On 12 March 2013 03:15, Hillf Danton <dhillf@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>On 11 March 2013 13:15, Michal Suchanek <hramrach@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>On 8 February 2013 17:31, Michal Suchanek <hramrach@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I am dealing with VM disk images and performing something like wiping
>>> free space to prepare image for compressing and storing on server or
>>> copying it to external USB disk causes
>>>
>>> 1) system lockup in order of a few tens of seconds when all CPU cores
>>> are 100% used by system and the machine is basicaly unusable
>>>
>>> 2) oom killer killing processes
>>>
>>> This all on system with 8G ram so there should be plenty space to work with.
>>>
>>> This happens with kernels 3.6.4 or 3.7.1
>>>
>>> With earlier kernel versions (some 3.0 or 3.2 kernels) this was not a
>>> problem even with less ram.
>>>
>>> I have vm.swappiness = 0 set for a long time already.
>>>
>>>
>>I did some testing with 3.7.1 and with swappiness as much as 75 the
>>kernel still causes all cores to loop somewhere in system when writing
>>lots of data to disk.
>>
>>With swappiness as much as 90 processes still get killed on large disk writes.
>>
>>Given that the max is 100 the interval in which mm works at all is
>>going to be very narrow, less than 10% of the paramater range. This is
>>a severe regression as is the cpu time consumed by the kernel.
>>
>>The io scheduler is the default cfq.
>>
>>If you have any idea what to try other than downgrading to an earlier
>>unaffected kernel I would like to hear.
>>
> Can you try commit 3cf23841b4b7(mm/vmscan.c: avoid possible
> deadlock caused by too_many_isolated())?
>
> Or try 3.8 and/or 3.9, additionally?
Hello,
in the meantime I tried setting io scheduler to deadline because I
remember using that one in my self-built kernels due to cfq breaking
some obscure block driver.
With the deadline io scheduler I can set swappiness back to 0 and the
system works normally even for moderate amount of IO - restoring disk
images from network. This would cause lockups and oom killer running
loose with the cfq scheduler.
So I guess I found what breaks the system and it is not so much the
kernel version. It's using pre-built kernels with the default
scheduler.
Thanks
Michal
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