Re: regression in page writeback

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Tue Sep 22 2009 - 21:29:09 EST


On Wed, 23 Sep 2009 09:17:58 +0800 Wu Fengguang <fengguang.wu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Wed, Sep 23, 2009 at 08:54:52AM +0800, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > On Wed, 23 Sep 2009 08:22:20 +0800 Wu Fengguang <fengguang.wu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > > Jens' per-bdi writeback has another improvement. In 2.6.31, when
> > > superblocks A and B both have 100000 dirty pages, it will first
> > > exhaust A's 100000 dirty pages before going on to sync B's.
> >
> > That would only be true if someone broke 2.6.31. Did they?
> >
> > SYSCALL_DEFINE0(sync)
> > {
> > wakeup_pdflush(0);
> > sync_filesystems(0);
> > sync_filesystems(1);
> > if (unlikely(laptop_mode))
> > laptop_sync_completion();
> > return 0;
> > }
> >
> > the sync_filesystems(0) is supposed to non-blockingly start IO against
> > all devices. It used to do that correctly. But people mucked with it
> > so perhaps it no longer does.
>
> I'm referring to writeback_inodes(). Each invocation of which (to sync
> 4MB) will do the same iteration over superblocks A => B => C ... So if
> A has dirty pages, it will always be served first.
>
> So if wbc->bdi == NULL (which is true for kupdate/background sync), it
> will have to first exhaust A before going on to B and C.

But that works OK. We fill the first device's queue, then it gets
congested and sync_sb_inodes() does nothing and we advance to the next
queue.

If a device has more than a queue's worth of dirty data then we'll
probably leave some of that dirty memory un-queued, so there's some
lack of concurrency in that situation.


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