On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 12:17:52PM +0100, Mel Gorman wrote: > Page reclaim cleans individual pages using a_ops->writepage() because from > the VM perspective, it is known that pages in a particular zone must be freed > soon, it considers the target page to be the oldest and it does not want > to wait while background flushers cleans other pages. From a filesystem > perspective this is extremely inefficient as it generates a very seeky > IO pattern leading to the perverse situation where it can take longer to > clean all dirty pages than it would have otherwise. > > This patch queues all dirty pages at once to maximise the chances that > the write requests get merged efficiently. It also makes the next patch > that avoids writeout from direct reclaim more straight-forward. Seeing as you have a list of pages for IO, perhaps they could be sorted before issuing ->writepage on them. That is, while this patch issues all the IO in one hit, it doesn't change the order in which the IO is issued - it is still issued in LRU order. Given that they are issued in a short period of time now, rather than across a longer scan period, it is likely that it will not be any faster as: a) IO will not be started as soon, and b) the IO scheduler still only has a small re-ordering window and will choke just as much on random IO patterns. However, there is a list_sort() function that could be used to sort the list; sorting the list of pages by mapping and page->index within the mapping would result in all the pages on each mapping being sent down in ascending offset order at once - exactly how the filesystems want IO to be sent to it. Perhaps this is a simple improvement that can be made to this code that will make a big difference to worst case performance. FWIW, I did this for delayed metadata buffer writeback in XFS recently (i.e. sort the queue of (potentially tens of thousands of) buffers in ascending block order before dispatch) and that showed a 10-15% reduction in seeks on simple kernel compile workloads. This shows that if we optimise IO patterns at higher layers where the sort window is much, much larger than in the IO scheduler, then overall system performance improves.... Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxx For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>