On Wed, Oct 24, 2018 at 03:18:53PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > On Tue, 23 Oct 2018 16:43:29 +0000 Roman Gushchin <guro@xxxxxx> wrote: > > > Spock reported that the commit 172b06c32b94 ("mm: slowly shrink slabs > > with a relatively small number of objects") leads to a regression on > > his setup: periodically the majority of the pagecache is evicted > > without an obvious reason, while before the change the amount of free > > memory was balancing around the watermark. > > > > The reason behind is that the mentioned above change created some > > minimal background pressure on the inode cache. The problem is that > > if an inode is considered to be reclaimed, all belonging pagecache > > page are stripped, no matter how many of them are there. So, if a huge > > multi-gigabyte file is cached in the memory, and the goal is to > > reclaim only few slab objects (unused inodes), we still can eventually > > evict all gigabytes of the pagecache at once. > > > > The workload described by Spock has few large non-mapped files in the > > pagecache, so it's especially noticeable. > > > > To solve the problem let's postpone the reclaim of inodes, which have > > more than 1 attached page. Let's wait until the pagecache pages will > > be evicted naturally by scanning the corresponding LRU lists, and only > > then reclaim the inode structure. > > > > ... > > > > --- a/fs/inode.c > > +++ b/fs/inode.c > > @@ -730,8 +730,11 @@ static enum lru_status inode_lru_isolate(struct list_head *item, > > return LRU_REMOVED; > > } > > > > - /* recently referenced inodes get one more pass */ > > - if (inode->i_state & I_REFERENCED) { > > + /* > > + * Recently referenced inodes and inodes with many attached pages > > + * get one more pass. > > + */ > > + if (inode->i_state & I_REFERENCED || inode->i_data.nrpages > 1) { > > inode->i_state &= ~I_REFERENCED; > > spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock); > > return LRU_ROTATE; > > hm, why "1"? > > I guess one could argue that this will encompass long symlinks, but I > just made that up to make "1" appear more justifiable ;) > Well, I'm slightly aware of introducing an inode leak here, so I was thinking about some small number of pages. It's definitely makes no sense to reclaim several Gb of pagecache, however throwing away a couple of pages to speed up inode reuse is totally fine. But then I realized that I don't have any justification for a number like 4 or 32, so I ended up with 1. I'm pretty open here, but not sure that switching to 0 is much better. Thanks!