On Tue, Mar 31, 2009 at 06:07:30PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > On Tue, 31 Mar 2009 20:50:18 -0400 Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Tue, 31 Mar 2009 17:20:31 -0700 > > Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > On Tue, 31 Mar 2009 20:03:59 -0400 > > > Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > + * It's not sufficient to just do a time_after() check on > > > > + * dirtied_when. That assumes that dirtied_when will always > > > > + * change within a period of jiffies that encompasses half the > > > > + * machine word size (2^31 jiffies on 32-bit arch). That's not > > > > + * necessarily the case if an inode is being constantly > > > > + * redirtied. Since dirtied_when can never be in the future, > > > > + * we can assume that if it appears to be so then it is > > > > + * actually in the distant past. > > > > > > so this really is a 32-bit-only thing. > > > > > > I guess that isn't worth optimising for though. > > > > > > > Yeah, it's pretty much impossible to hit this on a 64-bit machine. > > > > > otoh, given that all three comparisons are the same: > > > > > > + time_after(inode->dirtied_when, *older_than_this) && > > > + time_before_eq(inode->dirtied_when, jiffies)) > > > > > > (although one is inverted (i think?)), it might end up nicer if this was all done > > > in a little helper function? > > > > > > That way we only need to comment what's going on at a single site, and > > > we could omit the additional test if !CONFIG_64BIT. > > > > Ok, that seems reasonable. > > > > At one point I had a macro similar to time_in_range(), but dropped it > > primarily because time_after_but_before_eq() wasn't easy on the eyes. > > Thoughts on better names? > > I was thinking > > bool inode_dirtied_after(...); > > and just leave the innards using time_after() and time_before_eq()? Andrew, here is the updated patch. Note that the first chunk for redirty_tail() was not absolutely necessary and so removed. Thanks, Fengguang --- Subject: writeback: guard against jiffies wraparound on inode->dirtied_when checks From: Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> The dirtied_when value on an inode is supposed to represent the first time that an inode has one of its pages dirtied. This value is in units of jiffies. It's used in several places in the writeback code to determine when to write out an inode. The problem is that these checks assume that dirtied_when is updated periodically. If an inode is continuously being used for I/O it can be persistently marked as dirty and will continue to age. Once the time difference between dirtied_when and the jiffies value it is being compared to is greater than or equal to half the maximum of the jiffies type, the logic of the time_*() macros inverts and the opposite of what is needed is returned. On 32-bit architectures that's just under 25 days (assuming HZ == 1000). As the least-recently dirtied inode, it'll end up being the first one that pdflush will try to write out. sync_sb_inodes() does this check: /* Was this inode dirtied after sync_sb_inodes was called? */ if (time_after(inode->dirtied_when, start)) break; ...but now dirtied_when appears to be in the future. sync_sb_inodes() bails out without attempting to write any dirty inodes. When this occurs, pdflush will stop writing out inodes for this superblock. Nothing can unwedge it until jiffies moves out of the problematic window. Fix this problem by changing the checks against dirtied_when to also check whether it appears to be in the future. If it does, then we consider the value to be far in the past. This should shrink the problematic window of time to such a small period(30s) as not to matter. Acked-by: Ian Kent <raven@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Wu Fengguang <fengguang.wu@xxxxxxxxx> --- fs/fs-writeback.c | 26 ++++++++++++++++++++++---- 1 file changed, 22 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) --- mm.orig/fs/fs-writeback.c +++ mm/fs/fs-writeback.c @@ -196,7 +196,7 @@ static void redirty_tail(struct inode *i struct inode *tail_inode; tail_inode = list_entry(sb->s_dirty.next, struct inode, i_list); - if (!time_after_eq(inode->dirtied_when, + if (time_before(inode->dirtied_when, tail_inode->dirtied_when)) inode->dirtied_when = jiffies; } @@ -220,6 +220,21 @@ static void inode_sync_complete(struct i wake_up_bit(&inode->i_state, __I_SYNC); } +static bool inode_dirtied_after(struct inode *inode, unsigned long t) +{ + bool ret = time_after(inode->dirtied_when, t); +#ifndef CONFIG_64BIT + /* + * For inodes being constantly redirtied, dirtied_when can get stuck. + * It _appears_ to be in the future, but is actually in distant past. + * This test is necessary to prevent such wrapped-around relative times + * from permanently stopping the whole pdflush writeback. + */ + ret = ret && time_before_eq(inode->dirtied_when, jiffies); +#endif + return ret; +} + /* * Move expired dirty inodes from @delaying_queue to @dispatch_queue. */ @@ -231,7 +246,7 @@ static void move_expired_inodes(struct l struct inode *inode = list_entry(delaying_queue->prev, struct inode, i_list); if (older_than_this && - time_after(inode->dirtied_when, *older_than_this)) + inode_dirtied_after(inode, *older_than_this)) break; list_move(&inode->i_list, dispatch_queue); } @@ -492,8 +507,11 @@ void generic_sync_sb_inodes(struct super continue; /* blockdev has wrong queue */ } - /* Was this inode dirtied after sync_sb_inodes was called? */ - if (time_after(inode->dirtied_when, start)) + /* + * Was this inode dirtied after sync_sb_inodes was called? + * This keeps sync from extra jobs and livelock. + */ + if (inode_dirtied_after(inode, start)) break; /* Is another pdflush already flushing this queue? */ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html