Re: [PATCHSET v5] Make background writeback great again for the first time

From: Jens Axboe
Date: Thu Apr 28 2016 - 14:36:58 EST


On 04/27/2016 10:06 PM, xiakaixu wrote:
diff --git a/lib/wbt.c b/lib/wbt.c
index 650da911f24f..322f5e04e994 100644
--- a/lib/wbt.c
+++ b/lib/wbt.c
@@ -98,18 +98,23 @@ void __wbt_done(struct rq_wb *rwb)
else
limit = rwb->wb_normal;
Hi Jens,

This statement 'limit = rwb->wb_normal' is executed twice, maybe once is
enough. It is not a big deal anyway :)

I'll clean that up, thanks for noticing. No functional difference.

Another question about this if branch:

if (rwb->wc && !atomic_read(&rwb->bdi->wb.dirty_sleeping))
limit = 0;

I can't follow the logic of this if branch. why set limit equal to 0
when the device supports write back caches and there are tasks being
limited in balance_dirty_pages(). Could you pelase give more info
about this ? Thanks!

Sure. So for write back caching, we have to try a bit harder to ensure that the device doesn't build up long internal queues with a lot of dirty data in the cache. So for the case where we have write back caching AND we don't have anyone waiting for the IO, allow the queue depth to drain to zero before building it back up again.

Does that make sense?


+ inflight = atomic_dec_return(&rwb->inflight);
+
/*
- * Don't wake anyone up if we are above the normal limit. If
- * throttling got disabled (limit == 0) with waiters, ensure
- * that we wake them up.
+ * wbt got disabled with IO in flight. Wake up any potential
+ * waiters, we don't have to do more than that.
*/
- inflight = atomic_dec_return(&rwb->inflight);
- if (limit && inflight >= limit) {
- if (!rwb->wb_max)
- wake_up_all(&rwb->wait);
+ if (!rwb_enabled(rwb)) {
+ wake_up_all(&rwb->wait);
return;
}

Maybe it is better that executing this if branch earlier. So we can wake up
potential waiters in time when wbt got disabled.

The !rwb_enabled() case will only happen if someone disabled wbt while we had tracked IO in flight. We have to it below the atomic_dec_return(), so we could reorder that to be at the front. Ideally we just want it out-of-line instead, as it's the unexpected slower path.

--
Jens Axboe