On Wed 23-10-24 18:00:32, Jim Zhao wrote: > With the strictlimit flag, wb_thresh acts as a hard limit in > balance_dirty_pages() and wb_position_ratio(). When device write > operations are inactive, wb_thresh can drop to 0, causing writes to > be blocked. The issue occasionally occurs in fuse fs, particularly > with network backends, the write thread is blocked frequently during > a period. To address it, this patch raises the minimum wb_thresh to a > controllable level, similar to the non-strictlimit case. > > Signed-off-by: Jim Zhao <jimzhao.ai@xxxxxxxxx> ... > + /* > + * With strictlimit flag, the wb_thresh is treated as > + * a hard limit in balance_dirty_pages() and wb_position_ratio(). > + * It's possible that wb_thresh is close to zero, not because > + * the device is slow, but because it has been inactive. > + * To prevent occasional writes from being blocked, we raise wb_thresh. > + */ > + if (unlikely(wb->bdi->capabilities & BDI_CAP_STRICTLIMIT)) { > + unsigned long limit = hard_dirty_limit(dom, dtc->thresh); > + u64 wb_scale_thresh = 0; > + > + if (limit > dtc->dirty) > + wb_scale_thresh = (limit - dtc->dirty) / 100; > + wb_thresh = max(wb_thresh, min(wb_scale_thresh, wb_max_thresh / 4)); > + } What you propose makes sense in principle although I'd say this is mostly a userspace setup issue - with strictlimit enabled, you're kind of expected to set min_ratio exactly if you want to avoid these startup issues. But I tend to agree that we can provide a bit of a slack for a bdi without min_ratio configured to ramp up. But I'd rather pick the logic like: /* * If bdi does not have min_ratio configured and it was inactive, * bump its min_ratio to 0.1% to provide it some room to ramp up. */ if (!wb_min_ratio && !numerator) wb_min_ratio = min(BDI_RATIO_SCALE / 10, wb_max_ratio / 2); That would seem like a bit more systematic way than the formula you propose above... Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR