On Mon 07-06-21 18:31:23, Roman Gushchin wrote: > Asynchronously try to release dying cgwbs by switching attached inodes > to the nearest living ancestor wb. It helps to get rid of per-cgroup > writeback structures themselves and of pinned memory and block cgroups, > which are significantly larger structures (mostly due to large per-cpu > statistics data). This prevents memory waste and helps to avoid > different scalability problems caused by large piles of dying cgroups. > > Reuse the existing mechanism of inode switching used for foreign inode > detection. To speed things up batch up to 115 inode switching in a > single operation (the maximum number is selected so that the resulting > struct inode_switch_wbs_context can fit into 1024 bytes). Because > every switching consists of two steps divided by an RCU grace period, > it would be too slow without batching. Please note that the whole > batch counts as a single operation (when increasing/decreasing > isw_nr_in_flight). This allows to keep umounting working (flush the > switching queue), however prevents cleanups from consuming the whole > switching quota and effectively blocking the frn switching. > > A cgwb cleanup operation can fail due to different reasons (e.g. not > enough memory, the cgwb has an in-flight/pending io, an attached inode > in a wrong state, etc). In this case the next scheduled cleanup will > make a new attempt. An attempt is made each time a new cgwb is offlined > (in other words a memcg and/or a blkcg is deleted by a user). In the > future an additional attempt scheduled by a timer can be implemented. > > Signed-off-by: Roman Gushchin <guro@xxxxxx> > Acked-by: Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx> > Acked-by: Dennis Zhou <dennis@xxxxxxxxxx> The patch looks good. Feel free to add: Reviewed-by: Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> Just one codingstyle nit below. > + if (!wb_tryget(wb)) > + continue; > + > + spin_unlock_irq(&cgwb_lock); > + while ((cleanup_offline_cgwb(wb))) ^^ too many parentheses here... > + cond_resched(); > + spin_lock_irq(&cgwb_lock); Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR