Re: [PATCH] [Regression, v5.0] mm: boosted kswapd reclaim b0rks system cache balance

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On Wed, Aug 07, 2019 at 09:56:15PM +0100, Mel Gorman wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 07, 2019 at 04:03:16PM +0100, Mel Gorman wrote:
> > <SNIP>
> >
> > On that basis, it may justify ripping out the may_shrinkslab logic
> > everywhere. The downside is that some microbenchmarks will notice.
> > Specifically IO benchmarks that fill memory and reread (particularly
> > rereading the metadata via any inode operation) may show reduced
> > results. Such benchmarks can be strongly affected by whether the inode
> > information is still memory resident and watermark boosting reduces
> > the changes the data is still resident in memory. Technically still a
> > regression but a tunable one.
> > 
> > Hence the following "it builds" patch that has zero supporting data on
> > whether it's a good idea or not.
> > 
> 
> This is a more complete version of the same patch that summaries the
> problem and includes data from my own testing
....
> A fsmark benchmark configuration was constructed similar to
> what Dave reported and is codified by the mmtest configuration
> config-io-fsmark-small-file-stream.  It was evaluated on a 1-socket machine
> to avoid dealing with NUMA-related issues and the timing of reclaim. The
> storage was an SSD Samsung Evo and a fresh XFS filesystem was used for
> the test data.

Have you run fstrim on that drive recently? I'm running these tests
on a 960 EVO ssd, and when I started looking at shrinkers 3 weeks
ago I had all sorts of whacky performance problems and inconsistent
results. Turned out there were all sorts of random long IO latencies
occurring (in the hundreds of milliseconds) because the drive was
constantly running garbage collection to free up space. As a result
it was both blocking on GC and thermal throttling under these fsmark
workloads.

I made a new XFS filesystem on it (lazy man's rm -rf *), then ran
fstrim on it to tell the drive all the space is free. Drive temps
dropped 30C immediately, and all of the whacky performance anomolies
went away. I now fstrim the drive in my vm startup scripts before
each test run, and it's giving consistent results again.

> It is likely that the test configuration is not a proper match for Dave's
> test as the results are different in terms of performance. However, my
> configuration reports fsmark performance every 10% of memory worth of
> files and I suspect Dave's configuration reported Files/sec when memory
> was already full. THP was enabled for mine, disabled for Dave's and
> probably a whole load of other methodology differences that rarely
> get recorded properly.

Yup, like I forgot to mention that my test system is using a 4-node
fakenuma setup (i.e. 4 nodes, 4GB RAM and 4 CPUs per node, so
there are 4 separate kswapd's doing concurrent reclaim). That
changes reclaim patterns as well.


> fsmark
>                                    5.3.0-rc3              5.3.0-rc3
>                                      vanilla          shrinker-v1r1
> Min       1-files/sec     5181.70 (   0.00%)     3204.20 ( -38.16%)
> 1st-qrtle 1-files/sec    14877.10 (   0.00%)     6596.90 ( -55.66%)
> 2nd-qrtle 1-files/sec     6521.30 (   0.00%)     5707.80 ( -12.47%)
> 3rd-qrtle 1-files/sec     5614.30 (   0.00%)     5363.80 (  -4.46%)
> Max-1     1-files/sec    18463.00 (   0.00%)    18479.90 (   0.09%)
> Max-5     1-files/sec    18028.40 (   0.00%)    17829.00 (  -1.11%)
> Max-10    1-files/sec    17502.70 (   0.00%)    17080.90 (  -2.41%)
> Max-90    1-files/sec     5438.80 (   0.00%)     5106.60 (  -6.11%)
> Max-95    1-files/sec     5390.30 (   0.00%)     5020.40 (  -6.86%)
> Max-99    1-files/sec     5271.20 (   0.00%)     3376.20 ( -35.95%)
> Max       1-files/sec    18463.00 (   0.00%)    18479.90 (   0.09%)
> Hmean     1-files/sec     7459.11 (   0.00%)     6249.49 ( -16.22%)
> Stddev    1-files/sec     4733.16 (   0.00%)     4362.10 (   7.84%)
> CoeffVar  1-files/sec       51.66 (   0.00%)       57.49 ( -11.29%)
> BHmean-99 1-files/sec     7515.09 (   0.00%)     6351.81 ( -15.48%)
> BHmean-95 1-files/sec     7625.39 (   0.00%)     6486.09 ( -14.94%)
> BHmean-90 1-files/sec     7803.19 (   0.00%)     6588.61 ( -15.57%)
> BHmean-75 1-files/sec     8518.74 (   0.00%)     6954.25 ( -18.37%)
> BHmean-50 1-files/sec    10953.31 (   0.00%)     8017.89 ( -26.80%)
> BHmean-25 1-files/sec    16732.38 (   0.00%)    11739.65 ( -29.84%)
> 
>                    5.3.0-rc3   5.3.0-rc3
>                      vanillashrinker-v1r1
> Duration User          77.29       89.09
> Duration System      1097.13     1332.86
> Duration Elapsed     2014.14     2596.39

I'm not sure we are testing or measuring exactly the same things :)

> This is showing that fsmark runs slower as a result of this patch but
> there are other important observations that justify the patch.
> 
> 1. With the vanilla kernel, the number of dirty pages in the system
>    is very low for much of the test. With this patch, dirty pages
>    is generally kept at 10% which matches vm.dirty_background_ratio
>    which is normal expected historical behaviour.
> 
> 2. With the vanilla kernel, the ratio of Slab/Pagecache is close to
>    0.95 for much of the test i.e. Slab is being left alone and dominating
>    memory consumption. With the patch applied, the ratio varies between
>    0.35 and 0.45 with the bulk of the measured ratios roughly half way
>    between those values. This is a different balance to what Dave reported
>    but it was at least consistent.

Yeah, the balance is typically a bit different for different configs
and storage. The trick is getting the balance to be roughly
consistent across a range of different configs. The fakenuma setup
also has a significant impact on where the balance is found. And I
can't remember if the "fixed" memory usage numbers I quoted came
from a run with my "make XFS inode reclaim nonblocking" patchset or
not.

> 3. Slabs are scanned throughout the entire test with the patch applied.
>    The vanille kernel has long periods with no scan activity and then
>    relatively massive spikes.
> 
> 4. Overall vmstats are closer to normal expectations
> 
> 	                                5.3.0-rc3      5.3.0-rc3
> 	                                  vanilla  shrinker-v1r1
> 	Direct pages scanned             60308.00        5226.00
> 	Kswapd pages scanned          18316110.00    12295574.00
> 	Kswapd pages reclaimed        13121037.00     7280152.00
> 	Direct pages reclaimed           11817.00        5226.00
> 	Kswapd efficiency %                 71.64          59.21
> 	Kswapd velocity                   9093.76        4735.64
> 	Direct efficiency %                 19.59         100.00
> 	Direct velocity                     29.94           2.01
> 	Page reclaim immediate          247921.00           0.00
> 	Slabs scanned                 16602344.00    29369536.00
> 	Direct inode steals               1574.00         800.00
> 	Kswapd inode steals             130033.00     3968788.00
> 	Kswapd skipped wait                  0.00           0.00

That looks a lot better. Patch looks reasonable, though I'm
interested to know what impact it has on tests you ran in the
original commit for the boosting.

Cheers,

Dave.
-- 
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx




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