On Fri, Oct 04, 2019 at 03:11:04PM -0700, Roman Gushchin wrote: > This is a RFC patch, which is not intended to be merged as is, > but hopefully will start a discussion which can result in a good > solution for the described problem. > > -- > > We've noticed that the number of dying cgroups on our production hosts > tends to grow with the uptime. This time it's caused by the writeback > code. > > An inode which is getting dirty for the first time is associated > with the wb structure (look at __inode_attach_wb()). It can later > be switched to another wb under some conditions (e.g. some other > cgroup is writing a lot of data to the same inode), but generally > stays associated up to the end of life of the inode structure. > > The problem is that the wb structure holds a reference to the original > memory cgroup. So if the inode was dirty once, it has a good chance > to pin down the original memory cgroup. > > An example from the real life: some service runs periodically and > updates rpm packages. Each time in a new memory cgroup. Installed > .so files are heavily used by other cgroups, so corresponding inodes > tend to stay alive for a long. So do pinned memory cgroups. > In production I've seen many hosts with 1-2 thousands of dying > cgroups. > > This is not the first problem with the dying memory cgroups. As > always, the problem is with their relative size: memory cgroups > are large objects, easily 100x-1000x larger that inodes. So keeping > a couple of thousands of dying cgroups in memory without a good reason > (what we easily do with inodes) is quite costly (and is measured > in tens and hundreds of Mb). > > One possible approach to this problem is to switch inodes associated > with dying wbs to the root wb. Switching is a best effort operation > which can fail silently, so unfortunately we can't run once over a > list of associated inodes (even if we'd have such a list). So we > really have to scan all inodes. > > In the proposed patch I schedule a work on each memory cgroup > deletion, which is probably too often. Alternatively, we can do it > periodically under some conditions (e.g. the number of dying memory > cgroups is larger than X). So it's basically a gc run. > > I wonder if there are any better ideas? > > Signed-off-by: Roman Gushchin <guro@xxxxxx> > --- > fs/fs-writeback.c | 29 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > mm/memcontrol.c | 5 +++++ > 2 files changed, 34 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/fs/fs-writeback.c b/fs/fs-writeback.c > index 542b02d170f8..4bbc9a200b2c 100644 > --- a/fs/fs-writeback.c > +++ b/fs/fs-writeback.c > @@ -545,6 +545,35 @@ static void inode_switch_wbs(struct inode *inode, int new_wb_id) > up_read(&bdi->wb_switch_rwsem); > } > > +static void reparent_dirty_inodes_one_sb(struct super_block *sb, void *arg) > +{ > + struct inode *inode, *next; > + > + spin_lock(&sb->s_inode_list_lock); > + list_for_each_entry_safe(inode, next, &sb->s_inodes, i_sb_list) { > + spin_lock(&inode->i_lock); > + if (inode->i_state & (I_NEW | I_FREEING | I_WILL_FREE)) { > + spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock); > + continue; > + } > + > + if (inode->i_wb && wb_dying(inode->i_wb)) { > + spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock); > + inode_switch_wbs(inode, root_mem_cgroup->css.id); > + continue; > + } > + > + spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock); > + } > + spin_unlock(&sb->s_inode_list_lock); No idea what the best solution is, but I think this is fundamentally unworkable. It's not uncommon to have a hundred million cached inodes these days, often on a single filesystem. Anything that requires a brute-force system wide inode scan, especially without conditional reschedule points, is largely a non-starter. Also, inode_switch_wbs() is not guaranteed to move the inode to the destination wb. There can only be WB_FRN_MAX_IN_FLIGHT (1024) switches in flight at once and switches are run via RCU callbacks, so I suspect that using inode_switch_wbs() for bulk re-assignment is going to be a lot more complex than just finding inodes to call inode_switch_wbs() on.... Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx