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authorTejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>2020-09-17 20:44:52 -0400
committerJens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>2020-09-25 08:35:02 -0600
commitab8df828b5f6eab6377fa0c349c92a3678498256 (patch)
tree2dba4bd6beb419a12e94a21328c7e9bac6203e21 /block
parent6abc49468eeaad2dd481779906aaa29605139087 (diff)
downloadlinux-ab8df828b5f6eab6377fa0c349c92a3678498256.tar.bz2
iocost: factor out ioc_forgive_debts()
Debt reduction logic is going to be improved and expanded. Factor it out into ioc_forgive_debts() and generalize the comment a bit. No functional change. Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
Diffstat (limited to 'block')
-rw-r--r--block/blk-iocost.c66
1 files changed, 35 insertions, 31 deletions
diff --git a/block/blk-iocost.c b/block/blk-iocost.c
index ef9476fca1d8..bbf30bb06c07 100644
--- a/block/blk-iocost.c
+++ b/block/blk-iocost.c
@@ -1979,6 +1979,40 @@ static void transfer_surpluses(struct list_head *surpluses, struct ioc_now *now)
list_del_init(&iocg->walk_list);
}
+/*
+ * A low weight iocg can amass a large amount of debt, for example, when
+ * anonymous memory gets reclaimed aggressively. If the system has a lot of
+ * memory paired with a slow IO device, the debt can span multiple seconds or
+ * more. If there are no other subsequent IO issuers, the in-debt iocg may end
+ * up blocked paying its debt while the IO device is idle.
+ *
+ * The following protects against such cases. If the device has been
+ * sufficiently idle for a while, the debts are halved.
+ */
+static void ioc_forgive_debts(struct ioc *ioc, u64 usage_us_sum, int nr_debtors,
+ int nr_shortages, struct ioc_now *now)
+{
+ if (nr_shortages ||
+ div64_u64(100 * usage_us_sum, now->now - ioc->period_at) >=
+ DEBT_BUSY_USAGE_PCT)
+ ioc->debt_busy_at = now->now;
+
+ if (nr_debtors &&
+ now->now - ioc->debt_busy_at >= DEBT_REDUCTION_IDLE_DUR) {
+ struct ioc_gq *iocg;
+
+ list_for_each_entry(iocg, &ioc->active_iocgs, active_list) {
+ if (iocg->abs_vdebt) {
+ spin_lock(&iocg->waitq.lock);
+ iocg->abs_vdebt /= 2;
+ iocg_kick_waitq(iocg, true, now);
+ spin_unlock(&iocg->waitq.lock);
+ }
+ }
+ ioc->debt_busy_at = now->now;
+ }
+}
+
static void ioc_timer_fn(struct timer_list *timer)
{
struct ioc *ioc = container_of(timer, struct ioc, timer);
@@ -2171,37 +2205,7 @@ static void ioc_timer_fn(struct timer_list *timer)
list_for_each_entry_safe(iocg, tiocg, &surpluses, surplus_list)
list_del_init(&iocg->surplus_list);
- /*
- * A low weight iocg can amass a large amount of debt, for example, when
- * anonymous memory gets reclaimed aggressively. If the system has a lot
- * of memory paired with a slow IO device, the debt can span multiple
- * seconds or more. If there are no other subsequent IO issuers, the
- * in-debt iocg may end up blocked paying its debt while the IO device
- * is idle.
- *
- * The following protects against such pathological cases. If the device
- * has been sufficiently idle for a substantial amount of time, the
- * debts are halved. The criteria are on the conservative side as we
- * want to resolve the rare extreme cases without impacting regular
- * operation by forgiving debts too readily.
- */
- if (nr_shortages ||
- div64_u64(100 * usage_us_sum, now.now - ioc->period_at) >=
- DEBT_BUSY_USAGE_PCT)
- ioc->debt_busy_at = now.now;
-
- if (nr_debtors &&
- now.now - ioc->debt_busy_at >= DEBT_REDUCTION_IDLE_DUR) {
- list_for_each_entry(iocg, &ioc->active_iocgs, active_list) {
- if (iocg->abs_vdebt) {
- spin_lock(&iocg->waitq.lock);
- iocg->abs_vdebt /= 2;
- iocg_kick_waitq(iocg, true, &now);
- spin_unlock(&iocg->waitq.lock);
- }
- }
- ioc->debt_busy_at = now.now;
- }
+ ioc_forgive_debts(ioc, usage_us_sum, nr_debtors, nr_shortages, &now);
/*
* If q is getting clogged or we're missing too much, we're issuing