Re: [PATCH RFC v3 3/3] iomap: bound ioend size to 4096 pages

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 2021/05/25 13:20, Darrick J. Wong wrote:
> On Mon, May 24, 2021 at 08:02:18AM -0400, Brian Foster wrote:
>> On Thu, May 20, 2021 at 04:27:37PM -0700, Darrick J. Wong wrote:
>>> On Mon, May 17, 2021 at 01:17:22PM -0400, Brian Foster wrote:
>>>> The iomap writeback infrastructure is currently able to construct
>>>> extremely large bio chains (tens of GBs) associated with a single
>>>> ioend. This consolidation provides no significant value as bio
>>>> chains increase beyond a reasonable minimum size. On the other hand,
>>>> this does hold significant numbers of pages in the writeback
>>>> state across an unnecessarily large number of bios because the ioend
>>>> is not processed for completion until the final bio in the chain
>>>> completes. Cap an individual ioend to a reasonable size of 4096
>>>> pages (16MB with 4k pages) to avoid this condition.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@xxxxxxxxxx>
>>>> ---
>>>>  fs/iomap/buffered-io.c |  6 ++++--
>>>>  include/linux/iomap.h  | 26 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>>>  2 files changed, 30 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c b/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c
>>>> index 642422775e4e..f2890ee434d0 100644
>>>> --- a/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c
>>>> +++ b/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c
>>>> @@ -1269,7 +1269,7 @@ iomap_chain_bio(struct bio *prev)
>>>>  
>>>>  static bool
>>>>  iomap_can_add_to_ioend(struct iomap_writepage_ctx *wpc, loff_t offset,
>>>> -		sector_t sector)
>>>> +		unsigned len, sector_t sector)
>>>>  {
>>>>  	if ((wpc->iomap.flags & IOMAP_F_SHARED) !=
>>>>  	    (wpc->ioend->io_flags & IOMAP_F_SHARED))
>>>> @@ -1280,6 +1280,8 @@ iomap_can_add_to_ioend(struct iomap_writepage_ctx *wpc, loff_t offset,
>>>>  		return false;
>>>>  	if (sector != bio_end_sector(wpc->ioend->io_bio))
>>>>  		return false;
>>>> +	if (wpc->ioend->io_size + len > IOEND_MAX_IOSIZE)
>>>> +		return false;
>>>>  	return true;
>>>>  }
>>>>  
>>>> @@ -1297,7 +1299,7 @@ iomap_add_to_ioend(struct inode *inode, loff_t offset, struct page *page,
>>>>  	unsigned poff = offset & (PAGE_SIZE - 1);
>>>>  	bool merged, same_page = false;
>>>>  
>>>> -	if (!wpc->ioend || !iomap_can_add_to_ioend(wpc, offset, sector)) {
>>>> +	if (!wpc->ioend || !iomap_can_add_to_ioend(wpc, offset, len, sector)) {
>>>>  		if (wpc->ioend)
>>>>  			list_add(&wpc->ioend->io_list, iolist);
>>>>  		wpc->ioend = iomap_alloc_ioend(inode, wpc, offset, sector, wbc);
>>>> diff --git a/include/linux/iomap.h b/include/linux/iomap.h
>>>> index 07f3f4e69084..89b15cc236d5 100644
>>>> --- a/include/linux/iomap.h
>>>> +++ b/include/linux/iomap.h
>>>> @@ -203,6 +203,32 @@ struct iomap_ioend {
>>>>  	struct bio		io_inline_bio;	/* MUST BE LAST! */
>>>>  };
>>>>  
>>>> +/*
>>>> + * Maximum ioend IO size is used to prevent ioends from becoming unbound in
>>>> + * size. bios can reach 4GB in size if pages are contiguous, and bio chains are
>>>> + * effectively unbound in length. Hence the only limits on the size of the bio
>>>> + * chain is the contiguity of the extent on disk and the length of the run of
>>>> + * sequential dirty pages in the page cache. This can be tens of GBs of physical
>>>> + * extents and if memory is large enough, tens of millions of dirty pages.
>>>> + * Locking them all under writeback until the final bio in the chain is
>>>> + * submitted and completed locks all those pages for the legnth of time it takes
>>>
>>> s/legnth/length/
>>>
>>
>> Fixed.
>>  
>>>> + * to write those many, many GBs of data to storage.
>>>> + *
>>>> + * Background writeback caps any single writepages call to half the device
>>>> + * bandwidth to ensure fairness and prevent any one dirty inode causing
>>>> + * writeback starvation. fsync() and other WB_SYNC_ALL writebacks have no such
>>>> + * cap on wbc->nr_pages, and that's where the above massive bio chain lengths
>>>> + * come from. We want large IOs to reach the storage, but we need to limit
>>>> + * completion latencies, hence we need to control the maximum IO size we
>>>> + * dispatch to the storage stack.
>>>> + *
>>>> + * We don't really have to care about the extra IO completion overhead here
>>>> + * because iomap has contiguous IO completion merging. If the device can sustain
>>>
>>> Assuming you're referring to iomap_finish_ioends, only XFS employs the
>>> ioend completion merging, and only for ioends where it decides to
>>> override the default bi_end_io.  iomap on its own never calls
>>> iomap_ioend_try_merge.
>>>
>>> This patch establishes a maximum ioend size of 4096 pages so that we
>>> don't trip the lockup watchdog while clearing pagewriteback and also so
>>> that we don't pin a large number of pages while constructing a big chain
>>> of bios.  On gfs2 and zonefs, each ioend completion will now have to
>>> clear up to 4096 pages from whatever context bio_endio is called.
>>>
>>> For XFS it's a more complicated -- XFS already overrode the bio handler
>>> for ioends that required further metadata updates (e.g. unwritten
>>> conversion, eof extension, or cow) so that it could combine ioends when
>>> possible.  XFS wants to combine ioends to amortize the cost of getting
>>> the ILOCK and running transactions over a larger number of pages.
>>>
>>> So I guess I see how the two changes dovetail nicely for XFS -- iomap
>>> issues smaller write bios, and the xfs ioend worker can recombine
>>> however many bios complete before the worker runs.  As a bonus, we don't
>>> have to worry about situations like the device driver completing so many
>>> bios from a single invocation of a bottom half handler that we run afoul
>>> of the soft lockup timer.
>>>
>>> Is that a correct understanding of how the two changes intersect with
>>> each other?  TBH I was expecting the two thresholds to be closer in
>>> value.
>>>
>>
>> I think so. That's interesting because my inclination was to make them
>> farther apart (or more specifically, increase the threshold in this
>> patch and leave the previous). The primary goal of this series was to
>> address the soft lockup warning problem, hence the thresholds on earlier
>> versions started at rather conservative values. I think both values have
>> been reasonably justified in being reduced, though this patch has a more
>> broad impact than the previous in that it changes behavior for all iomap
>> based fs'. Of course that's something that could also be addressed with
>> a more dynamic tunable..
> 
> <shrug> I think I'm comfortable starting with 256 for xfs to bump an
> ioend to a workqueue, and 4096 pages as the limit for an iomap ioend.
> If people demonstrate a need to smart-tune or manual-tune we can always
> add one later.
> 
> Though I guess I did kind of wonder if maybe a better limit for iomap
> would be max_hw_sectors?  Since that's the maximum size of an IO that
> the kernel will for that device?
> 
> (Hm, maybe not; my computers all have it set to 1280k, which is a
> pathetic 20 pages on a 64k-page system.)

Are you sure you are not looking at max_sectors (not max_hw_sectors) ?
For an average SATA HDD, generally, you get:

# cat max_hw_sectors_kb
32764
# cat max_sectors_kb
1280

So 32MB max command size per hardware limitations. That one cannot be changed.
The block IO layer uses the 1280KB soft limit defined by max_sectors
(max_sectors_kb in sysfs) but the user can tune this from 1 sector up to
max_hw_sectors_kb.

> 
>>> The other two users of iomap for buffered io (gfs2 and zonefs) don't
>>> have a means to defer and combine ioends like xfs does.  Do you think
>>> they should?  I think it's still possible to trip the softlockup there.
>>>
>>
>> I'm not sure. We'd probably want some feedback from developers of
>> filesystems other than XFS before incorporating a change like this. The
>> first patch in the series more just provides some infrastructure for
>> other filesystems to avoid the problem as they see fit.
> 
> Hmm.  Any input from the two other users of iomap buffered IO?  Who are
> now directly in the to: list? :D
> 
> Catch-up TLDR: we're evaluating a proposal to limit the length of an
> iomap writeback ioend to 4096 pages so that we don't trip the hangcheck
> warning while clearing pagewriteback if the ioend completion happens to
> run in softirq context (e.g. nvme completion).
> 
> --D
> 
>> Brian
>>
>>> --D
>>>
>>>> + * high throughput and large bios, the ioends are merged on completion and
>>>> + * processed in large, efficient chunks with no additional IO latency.
>>>> + */
>>>> +#define IOEND_MAX_IOSIZE	(4096ULL << PAGE_SHIFT)
>>>> +
>>>>  struct iomap_writeback_ops {
>>>>  	/*
>>>>  	 * Required, maps the blocks so that writeback can be performed on
>>>> -- 
>>>> 2.26.3
>>>>
>>>
>>
> 


-- 
Damien Le Moal
Western Digital Research




[Index of Archives]     [Linux Ext4 Filesystem]     [Union Filesystem]     [Filesystem Testing]     [Ceph Users]     [Ecryptfs]     [AutoFS]     [Kernel Newbies]     [Share Photos]     [Security]     [Netfilter]     [Bugtraq]     [Yosemite News]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux Cachefs]     [Reiser Filesystem]     [Linux RAID]     [Samba]     [Device Mapper]     [CEPH Development]

  Powered by Linux