Re: [PATCH] memcg, vmscan: Do not wait for writeback if killed

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Wed Dec 02 2015 - 17:25:11 EST


On Wed, 2 Dec 2015 15:26:18 +0100 Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> From: Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxx>
>
> Legacy memcg reclaim waits for pages under writeback to prevent from a
> premature oom killer invocation because there was no memcg dirty limit
> throttling implemented back then.
>
> This heuristic might complicate situation when the writeback cannot make
> forward progress because of the global OOM situation. E.g. filesystem
> backed by the loop device relies on the underlying filesystem hosting
> the image to make forward progress which cannot be guaranteed and so
> we might end up triggering OOM killer to resolve the situation. If the
> oom victim happens to be the task stuck in wait_on_page_writeback in the
> memcg reclaim then we are basically deadlocked.
>
> Introduce wait_on_page_writeback_killable and use it in this path to
> prevent from the issue. shrink_page_list will back off if the wait
> was interrupted.
>
> ...
>
> --- a/mm/vmscan.c
> +++ b/mm/vmscan.c
> @@ -1021,10 +1021,19 @@ static unsigned long shrink_page_list(struct list_head *page_list,
>
> /* Case 3 above */
> } else {
> + int ret;
> +
> unlock_page(page);
> - wait_on_page_writeback(page);
> + ret = wait_on_page_writeback_killable(page);
> /* then go back and try same page again */
> list_add_tail(&page->lru, page_list);
> +
> + /*
> + * We've got killed while waiting here so
> + * expedite our way out from the reclaim
> + */
> + if (ret)
> + break;
> continue;
> }
> }

This function is 350 lines long and it takes a bit of effort to work
out what that `break' is breaking from and where it goes next. I think
you want a "goto keep_killed" here for consistency and sanity.

Also, there's high risk here of a pending signal causing the code to
fall into some busy loop where it repeatedly tries to do something but
then bales out without doing it. It's unobvious how this change avoids
such things. (Maybe it *does* avoid such things, but it should be
obvious!).

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