Re: [PATCH 5/6] mm: page_alloc: Reduce cost of dirty zone balancing

From: Mel Gorman
Date: Thu Jun 26 2014 - 10:56:42 EST


On Thu, Jun 26, 2014 at 10:37:38AM -0400, Johannes Weiner wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 26, 2014 at 09:43:14AM +0100, Mel Gorman wrote:
> > On Wed, Jun 25, 2014 at 04:35:28PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > > On Wed, 25 Jun 2014 08:58:48 +0100 Mel Gorman <mgorman@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > > > @@ -325,7 +321,14 @@ static unsigned long zone_dirty_limit(struct zone *zone)
> > > > */
> > > > bool zone_dirty_ok(struct zone *zone)
> > > > {
> > > > - unsigned long limit = zone_dirty_limit(zone);
> > > > + unsigned long limit = zone->dirty_limit_cached;
> > > > + struct task_struct *tsk = current;
> > > > +
> > > > + if (tsk->flags & PF_LESS_THROTTLE || rt_task(tsk)) {
> > > > + limit = zone_dirty_limit(zone);
> > > > + zone->dirty_limit_cached = limit;
> > > > + limit += limit / 4;
> > > > + }
> > >
> > > Could we get a comment in here explaining what we're doing and why
> > > PF_LESS_THROTTLE and rt_task control whether we do it?
> > >
> >
> > /*
> > * The dirty limits are lifted by 1/4 for PF_LESS_THROTTLE (ie. nfsd)
> > * and real-time tasks to prioritise their allocations.
> > * PF_LESS_THROTTLE tasks may be cleaning memory and rt tasks may be
> > * blocking tasks that can clean pages.
> > */
> >
> > That's fairly weak though. It would also seem reasonable to just delete
> > this check and allow PF_LESS_THROTTLE and rt_tasks to fall into the slow
> > path if dirty pages are already fairly distributed between zones.
> > Johannes, any objection to that limit raising logic being deleted?
>
> I copied that over from global_dirty_limits() such that the big
> picture and the per-zone picture have the same view - otherwise these
> tasks fall back to first fit zone allocations before global limits
> start throttling dirtiers and waking up the flushers. This increases
> the probability of reclaim running into dirty pages.
>
> Would you remove it from global_dirty_limits() as well?
>
> On that note, I don't really understand why global_dirty_limits()
> raises the *background* limit for less-throttle/rt tasks, shouldn't it
> only raise the dirty limit? Sure, the throttle point is somewhere
> between the two limits, but we don't really want to defer waking up
> the flushers for them.

All of which is fair enough and is something that should be examined on
a rainy day (shouldn't take too long in Ireland). I'm not going to touch
it within this series though. It's outside the scope of what I'm trying
to do here -- restore performance of tiobench and bonnie++ to as close to
3.0 levels as possible. The series is tripping up enough on the fair zone
and CFQ aspects as it is without increasing the scope :(

--
Mel Gorman
SUSE Labs
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