Re: [PATCH] swap: Try to scan more free slots even when fragmented

From: Tim Chen
Date: Mon Apr 27 2020 - 17:18:22 EST




On 4/26/20 8:00 PM, Huang Ying wrote:
> Now, the scalability of swap code will drop much when the swap device
> becomes fragmented, because the swap slots allocation batching stops
> working. To solve the problem, in this patch, we will try to scan a
> little more swap slots with restricted effort to batch the swap slots
> allocation even if the swap device is fragmented. Test shows that the
> benchmark score can increase up to 37.1% with the patch. Details are
> as follows.
>
> The swap code has a per-cpu cache of swap slots. These batch swap
> space allocations to improve swap subsystem scaling. In the following
> code path,
>
> add_to_swap()
> get_swap_page()
> refill_swap_slots_cache()
> get_swap_pages()
> scan_swap_map_slots()
>
> scan_swap_map_slots() and get_swap_pages() can return multiple swap
> slots for each call. These slots will be cached in the per-CPU swap
> slots cache, so that several following swap slot requests will be
> fulfilled there to avoid the lock contention in the lower level swap
> space allocation/freeing code path.
>
> But this only works when there are free swap clusters. If a swap
> device becomes so fragmented that there's no free swap clusters,
> scan_swap_map_slots() and get_swap_pages() will return only one swap
> slot for each call in the above code path. Effectively, this falls
> back to the situation before the swap slots cache was introduced, the
> heavy lock contention on the swap related locks kills the scalability.
>
> Why does it work in this way? Because the swap device could be large,
> and the free swap slot scanning could be quite time consuming, to
> avoid taking too much time to scanning free swap slots, the
> conservative method was used.
>
> In fact, this can be improved via scanning a little more free slots
> with strictly restricted effort. Which is implemented in this patch.
> In scan_swap_map_slots(), after the first free swap slot is gotten, we
> will try to scan a little more, but only if we haven't scanned too
> many slots (< LATENCY_LIMIT). That is, the added scanning latency is
> strictly restricted.
>
> To test the patch, we have run 16-process pmbench memory benchmark on
> a 2-socket server machine with 48 cores. Multiple ram disks are
> configured as the swap devices. The pmbench working-set size is much
> larger than the available memory so that swapping is triggered. The
> memory read/write ratio is 80/20 and the accessing pattern is random,
> so the swap space becomes highly fragmented during the test. In the
> original implementation, the lock contention on swap related locks is
> very heavy. The perf profiling data of the lock contention code path
> is as following,
>
> _raw_spin_lock.get_swap_pages.get_swap_page.add_to_swap: 21.03
> _raw_spin_lock_irq.shrink_inactive_list.shrink_lruvec.shrink_node: 1.92
> _raw_spin_lock_irq.shrink_active_list.shrink_lruvec.shrink_node: 1.72
> _raw_spin_lock.free_pcppages_bulk.drain_pages_zone.drain_pages: 0.69
>
> While after applying this patch, it becomes,
>
> _raw_spin_lock_irq.shrink_inactive_list.shrink_lruvec.shrink_node: 4.89
> _raw_spin_lock_irq.shrink_active_list.shrink_lruvec.shrink_node: 3.85
> _raw_spin_lock.free_pcppages_bulk.drain_pages_zone.drain_pages: 1.1
> _raw_spin_lock_irqsave.pagevec_lru_move_fn.__lru_cache_add.do_swap_page: 0.88
>
> That is, the lock contention on the swap locks is eliminated.
>
> And the pmbench score increases 37.1%. The swapin throughput
> increases 45.7% from 2.02 GB/s to 2.94 GB/s. While the swapout
> throughput increases 45.3% from 2.04 GB/s to 2.97 GB/s.
>

Thanks. Acked-by: Tim Chen <tim.c.chen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

Tim

> Signed-off-by: "Huang, Ying" <ying.huang@xxxxxxxxx>
> Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@xxxxxxxxx>
> Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxx>
> Cc: Minchan Kim <minchan@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Cc: Tim Chen <tim.c.chen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Cc: Hugh Dickins <hughd@xxxxxxxxxx>