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author | Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> | 2014-07-15 01:08:24 +0400 |
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committer | Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com> | 2014-07-15 01:08:24 +0400 |
commit | cf11da9c5d374962913ca5ba0ce0886b58286224 (patch) | |
tree | 88480a47229aa9a3244beca6cae49e0ae00df37b /fs/xfs/xfs_bmap_util.h | |
parent | aa182e64f16fc29a4984c2d79191b161888bbd9b (diff) | |
download | linux-cf11da9c5d374962913ca5ba0ce0886b58286224.tar.xz |
xfs: refine the allocation stack switch
The allocation stack switch at xfs_bmapi_allocate() has served it's
purpose, but is no longer a sufficient solution to the stack usage
problem we have in the XFS allocation path.
Whilst the kernel stack size is now 16k, that is not a valid reason
for undoing all our "keep stack usage down" modifications. What it
does allow us to do is have the freedom to refine and perfect the
modifications knowing that if we get it wrong it won't blow up in
our faces - we have a safety net now.
This is important because we still have the issue of older kernels
having smaller stacks and that they are still supported and are
demonstrating a wide range of different stack overflows. Red Hat
has several open bugs for allocation based stack overflows from
directory modifications and direct IO block allocation and these
problems still need to be solved. If we can solve them upstream,
then distro's won't need to bake their own unique solutions.
To that end, I've observed that every allocation based stack
overflow report has had a specific characteristic - it has happened
during or directly after a bmap btree block split. That event
requires a new block to be allocated to the tree, and so we
effectively stack one allocation stack on top of another, and that's
when we get into trouble.
A further observation is that bmap btree block splits are much rarer
than writeback allocation - over a range of different workloads I've
observed the ratio of bmap btree inserts to splits ranges from 100:1
(xfstests run) to 10000:1 (local VM image server with sparse files
that range in the hundreds of thousands to millions of extents).
Either way, bmap btree split events are much, much rarer than
allocation events.
Finally, we have to move the kswapd state to the allocation workqueue
work when allocation is done on behalf of kswapd. This is proving to
cause significant perturbation in performance under memory pressure
and appears to be generating allocation deadlock warnings under some
workloads, so avoiding the use of a workqueue for the majority of
kswapd writeback allocation will minimise the impact of such
behaviour.
Hence it makes sense to move the stack switch to xfs_btree_split()
and only do it for bmap btree splits. Stack switches during
allocation will be much rarer, so there won't be significant
performacne overhead caused by switching stacks. The worse case
stack from all allocation paths will be split, not just writeback.
And the majority of memory allocations will be done in the correct
context (e.g. kswapd) without causing additional latency, and so we
simplify the memory reclaim interactions between processes,
workqueues and kswapd.
The worst stack I've been able to generate with this patch in place
is 5600 bytes deep. It's very revealing because we exit XFS at:
37) 1768 64 kmem_cache_alloc+0x13b/0x170
about 1800 bytes of stack consumed, and the remaining 3800 bytes
(and 36 functions) is memory reclaim, swap and the IO stack. And
this occurs in the inode allocation from an open(O_CREAT) syscall,
not writeback.
The amount of stack being used is much less than I've previously be
able to generate - fs_mark testing has been able to generate stack
usage of around 7k without too much trouble; with this patch it's
only just getting to 5.5k. This is primarily because the metadata
allocation paths (e.g. directory blocks) are no longer causing
double splits on the same stack, and hence now stack tracing is
showing swapping being the worst stack consumer rather than XFS.
Performance of fs_mark inode create workloads is unchanged.
Performance of fs_mark async fsync workloads is consistently good
with context switches reduced by around 150,000/s (30%).
Performance of dbench, streaming IO and postmark is unchanged.
Allocation deadlock warnings have not been seen on the workloads
that generated them since adding this patch.
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/xfs/xfs_bmap_util.h')
-rw-r--r-- | fs/xfs/xfs_bmap_util.h | 13 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/fs/xfs/xfs_bmap_util.h b/fs/xfs/xfs_bmap_util.h index 935ed2b24edf..2fdb72d2c908 100644 --- a/fs/xfs/xfs_bmap_util.h +++ b/fs/xfs/xfs_bmap_util.h @@ -50,12 +50,11 @@ struct xfs_bmalloca { xfs_extlen_t total; /* total blocks needed for xaction */ xfs_extlen_t minlen; /* minimum allocation size (blocks) */ xfs_extlen_t minleft; /* amount must be left after alloc */ - char eof; /* set if allocating past last extent */ - char wasdel; /* replacing a delayed allocation */ - char userdata;/* set if is user data */ - char aeof; /* allocated space at eof */ - char conv; /* overwriting unwritten extents */ - char stack_switch; + bool eof; /* set if allocating past last extent */ + bool wasdel; /* replacing a delayed allocation */ + bool userdata;/* set if is user data */ + bool aeof; /* allocated space at eof */ + bool conv; /* overwriting unwritten extents */ int flags; struct completion *done; struct work_struct work; @@ -65,8 +64,6 @@ struct xfs_bmalloca { int xfs_bmap_finish(struct xfs_trans **tp, struct xfs_bmap_free *flist, int *committed); int xfs_bmap_rtalloc(struct xfs_bmalloca *ap); -int xfs_bmapi_allocate(struct xfs_bmalloca *args); -int __xfs_bmapi_allocate(struct xfs_bmalloca *args); int xfs_bmap_eof(struct xfs_inode *ip, xfs_fileoff_t endoff, int whichfork, int *eof); int xfs_bmap_count_blocks(struct xfs_trans *tp, struct xfs_inode *ip, |