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authorDave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>2020-03-24 20:10:27 -0700
committerDarrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>2020-03-27 08:32:54 -0700
commit0e7ab7efe77451cba4cbecb6c9f5ef83cf32b36b (patch)
tree348bd3ee444acf68dcac446a3ccd0489d98dfee1 /fs/xfs/xfs_log_priv.h
parent108a42358a05312b2128533c6462a3fdeb410bdf (diff)
downloadlinux-0e7ab7efe77451cba4cbecb6c9f5ef83cf32b36b.tar.bz2
xfs: Throttle commits on delayed background CIL push
In certain situations the background CIL push can be indefinitely delayed. While we have workarounds from the obvious cases now, it doesn't solve the underlying issue. This issue is that there is no upper limit on the CIL where we will either force or wait for a background push to start, hence allowing the CIL to grow without bound until it consumes all log space. To fix this, add a new wait queue to the CIL which allows background pushes to wait for the CIL context to be switched out. This happens when the push starts, so it will allow us to block incoming transaction commit completion until the push has started. This will only affect processes that are running modifications, and only when the CIL threshold has been significantly overrun. This has no apparent impact on performance, and doesn't even trigger until over 45 million inodes had been created in a 16-way fsmark test on a 2GB log. That was limiting at 64MB of log space used, so the active CIL size is only about 3% of the total log in that case. The concurrent removal of those files did not trigger the background sleep at all. Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Allison Collins <allison.henderson@oracle.com> Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/xfs/xfs_log_priv.h')
-rw-r--r--fs/xfs/xfs_log_priv.h24
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/fs/xfs/xfs_log_priv.h b/fs/xfs/xfs_log_priv.h
index 938edd19a8a6..ec22c7a3867f 100644
--- a/fs/xfs/xfs_log_priv.h
+++ b/fs/xfs/xfs_log_priv.h
@@ -240,6 +240,7 @@ struct xfs_cil_ctx {
struct xfs_log_vec *lv_chain; /* logvecs being pushed */
struct list_head iclog_entry;
struct list_head committing; /* ctx committing list */
+ wait_queue_head_t push_wait; /* background push throttle */
struct work_struct discard_endio_work;
};
@@ -337,10 +338,33 @@ struct xfs_cil {
* buffer window (32MB) as measurements have shown this to be roughly the
* point of diminishing performance increases under highly concurrent
* modification workloads.
+ *
+ * To prevent the CIL from overflowing upper commit size bounds, we introduce a
+ * new threshold at which we block committing transactions until the background
+ * CIL commit commences and switches to a new context. While this is not a hard
+ * limit, it forces the process committing a transaction to the CIL to block and
+ * yeild the CPU, giving the CIL push work a chance to be scheduled and start
+ * work. This prevents a process running lots of transactions from overfilling
+ * the CIL because it is not yielding the CPU. We set the blocking limit at
+ * twice the background push space threshold so we keep in line with the AIL
+ * push thresholds.
+ *
+ * Note: this is not a -hard- limit as blocking is applied after the transaction
+ * is inserted into the CIL and the push has been triggered. It is largely a
+ * throttling mechanism that allows the CIL push to be scheduled and run. A hard
+ * limit will be difficult to implement without introducing global serialisation
+ * in the CIL commit fast path, and it's not at all clear that we actually need
+ * such hard limits given the ~7 years we've run without a hard limit before
+ * finding the first situation where a checkpoint size overflow actually
+ * occurred. Hence the simple throttle, and an ASSERT check to tell us that
+ * we've overrun the max size.
*/
#define XLOG_CIL_SPACE_LIMIT(log) \
min_t(int, (log)->l_logsize >> 3, BBTOB(XLOG_TOTAL_REC_SHIFT(log)) << 4)
+#define XLOG_CIL_BLOCKING_SPACE_LIMIT(log) \
+ (XLOG_CIL_SPACE_LIMIT(log) * 2)
+
/*
* ticket grant locks, queues and accounting have their own cachlines
* as these are quite hot and can be operated on concurrently.