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From: KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@jp.fujitsu.com>
To: Mel Gorman <mel@csn.ul.ie>
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org,
	linux-mm@kvack.org, Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>,
	Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>,
	Nick Piggin <npiggin@suse.de>, Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
Subject: Re: [RFC PATCH 0/6] Do not call ->writepage[s] from direct reclaim and use a_ops->writepages() where possible
Date: Wed, 9 Jun 2010 11:52:11 +0900	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20100609115211.435a45f7.kamezawa.hiroyu@jp.fujitsu.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1275987745-21708-1-git-send-email-mel@csn.ul.ie>

On Tue,  8 Jun 2010 10:02:19 +0100
Mel Gorman <mel@csn.ul.ie> wrote:

> I finally got a chance last week to visit the topic of direct reclaim
> avoiding the writing out pages. As it came up during discussions the last
> time, I also had a stab at making the VM writing ranges of pages instead
> of individual pages. I am not proposing for merging yet until I want to see
> what people think of this general direction and if we can agree on if this
> is the right one or not.
> 
> To summarise, there are two big problems with page reclaim right now. The
> first is that page reclaim uses a_op->writepage to write a back back
> under the page lock which is inefficient from an IO perspective due to
> seeky patterns.  The second is that direct reclaim calling the filesystem
> splices two potentially deep call paths together and potentially overflows
> the stack on complex storage or filesystems. This series is an early draft
> at tackling both of these problems and is in three stages.
> 
> The first 4 patches are a forward-port of trace points that are partly
> based on trace points defined by Larry Woodman but never merged. They trace
> parts of kswapd, direct reclaim, LRU page isolation and page writeback. The
> tracepoints can be used to evaluate what is happening within reclaim and
> whether things are getting better or worse. They do not have to be part of
> the final series but might be useful during discussion.
> 
> Patch 5 writes out contiguous ranges of pages where possible using
> a_ops->writepages. When writing a range, the inode is pinned and the page
> lock released before submitting to writepages(). This potentially generates
> a better IO pattern and it should avoid a lock inversion problem within the
> filesystem that wants the same page lock held by the VM. The downside with
> writing ranges is that the VM may not be generating more IO than necessary.
> 
> Patch 6 prevents direct reclaim writing out pages at all and instead dirty
> pages are put back on the LRU. For lumpy reclaim, the caller will briefly
> wait on dirty pages to be written out before trying to reclaim the dirty
> pages a second time.
> 
> The last patch increases the responsibility of kswapd somewhat because
> it's now cleaning pages on behalf of direct reclaimers but kswapd seemed
> a better fit than background flushers to clean pages as it knows where the
> pages needing cleaning are. As it's async IO, it should not cause kswapd to
> stall (at least until the queue is congested) but the order that pages are
> reclaimed on the LRU is altered. Dirty pages that would have been reclaimed
> by direct reclaimers are getting another lap on the LRU. The dirty pages
> could have been put on a dedicated list but this increased counter overhead
> and the number of lists and it is unclear if it is necessary.
> 
> The series has survived performance and stress testing, particularly around
> high-order allocations on X86, X86-64 and PPC64. The results of the tests
> showed that while lumpy reclaim has a slightly lower success rate when
> allocating huge pages but it was still very acceptable rates, reclaim was
> a lot less disruptive and allocation latency was lower.
> 
> Comments?
> 

My concern is how memcg should work. IOW, what changes will be necessary for
memcg to work with the new vmscan logic as no-direct-writeback.

Maybe an ideal solution will be
 - support buffered I/O tracking in I/O cgroup.
 - flusher threads should work with I/O cgroup.
 - memcg itself should support dirty ratio. and add a trigger to kick flusher
   threads for dirty pages in a memcg.
But I know it's a long way.

How the new logic works with memcg ? Because memcg doesn't trigger kswapd,
memcg has to wait for a flusher thread make pages clean ?
Or memcg should have kswapd-for-memcg ?

Is it okay to call writeback directly when !scanning_global_lru() ?
memcg's reclaim routine is only called from specific positions, so, I guess
no stack problem. But we just have I/O pattern problem.

Thanks,
-Kame







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  parent reply	other threads:[~2010-06-09  2:56 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 67+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2010-06-08  9:02 Mel Gorman
2010-06-08  9:02 ` [PATCH 1/6] tracing, vmscan: Add trace events for kswapd wakeup, sleeping and direct reclaim Mel Gorman
2010-06-08  9:02 ` [PATCH 2/6] tracing, vmscan: Add trace events for LRU page isolation Mel Gorman
2010-06-08  9:02 ` [PATCH 3/6] tracing, vmscan: Add trace event when a page is written Mel Gorman
2010-06-08  9:02 ` [PATCH 4/6] tracing, vmscan: Add a postprocessing script for reclaim-related ftrace events Mel Gorman
2010-06-08  9:02 ` [PATCH 5/6] vmscan: Write out ranges of pages contiguous to the inode where possible Mel Gorman
2010-06-11  6:10   ` Andrew Morton
2010-06-11 12:49     ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-11 19:07       ` Andrew Morton
2010-06-11 20:44         ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-11 21:33           ` Andrew Morton
2010-06-12  0:17             ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-11 16:27     ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-08  9:02 ` [PATCH 6/6] vmscan: Do not writeback pages in direct reclaim Mel Gorman
2010-06-11  6:17   ` Andrew Morton
2010-06-11 12:54     ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-11 16:25     ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-11 17:43       ` Andrew Morton
2010-06-11 17:49         ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-11 18:13           ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-08  9:08 ` [RFC PATCH 0/6] Do not call ->writepage[s] from direct reclaim and use a_ops->writepages() where possible Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-08  9:28   ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-11 16:29     ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-11 18:15       ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-11 19:12       ` Chris Mason
2010-06-09  2:52 ` KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki [this message]
2010-06-09  9:52   ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-10  0:38     ` KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki
2010-06-10  1:10       ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-10  1:29         ` KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki
2010-06-11  5:57 ` Andrew Morton
2010-06-11 12:33   ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-11 16:30     ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-11 18:17       ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-15 14:00 ` Andrea Arcangeli
2010-06-15 14:11   ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 14:22     ` Andrea Arcangeli
2010-06-15 14:43       ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 15:08         ` Andrea Arcangeli
2010-06-15 15:25           ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 15:45             ` Andrea Arcangeli
2010-06-15 16:26               ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 16:31                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
2010-06-15 16:49                 ` Rik van Riel
2010-06-15 16:54                   ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 19:13                     ` Rik van Riel
2010-06-15 19:17                       ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 19:44                         ` Chris Mason
2010-06-16  7:57                       ` Nick Piggin
2010-06-16 16:59                         ` Rik van Riel
2010-06-16 17:04                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
2010-06-15 16:54                   ` Nick Piggin
2010-06-15 15:38           ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-15 16:14             ` Andrea Arcangeli
2010-06-15 16:22               ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 16:30               ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-15 16:34                 ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-15 16:54                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
2010-06-15 16:35                 ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 16:37                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
2010-06-15 17:43                   ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 16:45               ` Christoph Hellwig
2010-06-15 14:51   ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-15 14:55     ` Rik van Riel
2010-06-15 15:08     ` Nick Piggin
2010-06-15 15:10       ` Mel Gorman
2010-06-15 16:28     ` Andrea Arcangeli

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