Re: [PATCH/RFC] workqueue: allow rescuer thread to do more work.

From: Lai Jiangshan
Date: Thu Nov 06 2014 - 22:00:34 EST




On 11/07/2014 12:58 AM, Dongsu Park wrote:
> Hi Tejun & Neil,
>
> On 04.11.2014 09:22, Tejun Heo wrote:
>> On Thu, Oct 30, 2014 at 10:19:32AM +1100, NeilBrown wrote:
>>>> Given that workder depletion is pool-wide
>>>> event, maybe it'd make sense to trigger rescuers immediately while
>>>> workers are in short supply? e.g. while there's a manager stuck in
>>>> maybe_create_worker() with the mayday timer already triggered?
>>>
>>> So what if I change "need_more_worker" to "need_to_create_worker" ?
>>> Then it will stop as soon as there in an idle worker thread.
>>> That is the condition that keeps maybe_create_worker() looping.
>>> ??
>>
>> Yeah, that'd be a better condition and can work out. Can you please
>> write up a patch to do that and do some synthetic tests excercising
>> the code path? Also please cc Lai Jiangshan <laijs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>> when posting the patch.
>
> This issue looks exactly like what I've encountered occasionally in our test
> setup. (with a custom kernel based on 3.12, MD/raid1, dm-multipath, etc.)
> When a system suffers from high memory pressure, and at the same time
> underlying devices of RAID arrays are repeatedly removed and re-added,
> then sometimes the whole system gets locked up on a worker pool's lock.
> So I had to fix our custom MD code to allocate a separate ordered workqueue
> with WQ_MEM_RECLAIM, apart from md_wq or md_misc_wq.
> Then the lockup seemed to have disappeared.
>
> Now that I read the Neil's patch, which looks like an ultimate solution
> to the problem I have seen. I'm really looking forward to seeing this
> change in mainline.
>
> How about the attached patch? Based on the Neil's patch, I replaced
> need_more_worker() with need_to_create_worker() as Tejun suggested.
>
> Test is running with this patch, which seems to be working for now.
> But I'm going to observe the test result carefully for a few more days.
>
> Regards,
> Dongsu
>
> ----
>>From de9aadd6fb742ea8acce4245a27946d3f233ab7f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> From: Dongsu Park <dongsu.park@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2014 17:28:07 +0100
> Subject: [RFC PATCH] workqueue: allow rescuer thread to do more work
>
> Original commit message from NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxx>:
> ====
> When there is serious memory pressure, all workers in a pool could be
> blocked, and a new thread cannot be created because it requires memory
> allocation.
>
> In this situation a WQ_MEM_RECLAIM workqueue will wake up the rescuer
> thread to do some work.
>
> The rescuer will only handle requests that are already on ->worklist.
> If max_requests is 1, that means it will handle a single request.
>
> The rescuer will be woken again in 100ms to handle another max_requests
> requests.


I also observed this problem by review when I was developing
the per-pwq-worklist patchset which has a side-affect that it also naturally
fix the problem.

However, it is nothing about correctness and I made promise to Frederic Weisbecker
for working on unbound pool for power-saving, then the per-pwq-worklist patchset
is put off. So I have to ack it.

>
> I've seen a machine (running a 3.0 based "enterprise" kernel) with
> thousands of requests queued for xfslogd, which has a max_requests of 1,
> and is needed for retiring all 'xfs' write requests. When one of the
> worker pools gets into this state, it progresses extremely slowly and
> possibly never recovers (only waited an hour or two).
>
> So if, after handling everything on worklist, there is again something
> on worklist (counted in nr_active), and if the queue is still congested,
> keep processing instead of waiting for the next wake-up.
> ====
>
> Dongsu Park: replaced need_more_worker() with need_to_create_worker(),
> as suggested by Tejun.
>
> Signed-off-by: Dongsu Park <dongsu.park@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Link: https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/10/29/55
> Cc: Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Cc: Lai Jiangshan <laijs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Original-by: NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxx>
> Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxx>
> ---
> kernel/workqueue.c | 23 +++++++++++++----------
> 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/kernel/workqueue.c b/kernel/workqueue.c
> index 09b685d..4d20225 100644
> --- a/kernel/workqueue.c
> +++ b/kernel/workqueue.c
> @@ -2244,16 +2244,19 @@ repeat:
> spin_lock_irq(&pool->lock);
> rescuer->pool = pool;
>
> - /*
> - * Slurp in all works issued via this workqueue and
> - * process'em.
> - */
> - WARN_ON_ONCE(!list_empty(&rescuer->scheduled));
> - list_for_each_entry_safe(work, n, &pool->worklist, entry)
> - if (get_work_pwq(work) == pwq)
> - move_linked_works(work, scheduled, &n);
> -
> - process_scheduled_works(rescuer);
> + do {
> + /*
> + * Slurp in all works issued via this workqueue and
> + * process'em.
> + */
> + WARN_ON_ONCE(!list_empty(&rescuer->scheduled));
> + list_for_each_entry_safe(work, n, &pool->worklist,
> + entry)
> + if (get_work_pwq(work) == pwq)
> + move_linked_works(work, scheduled, &n);
> +
> + process_scheduled_works(rescuer);
> + } while (need_to_create_worker(pool) && pwq->nr_active);
>
> /*
> * Put the reference grabbed by send_mayday(). @pool won't

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