The global swap-in readahead policy takes in account the previous access patterns, using a scaling heuristic to determine the optimal readahead chunk dynamically. This works pretty well in most cases, but like any heuristic there are specific cases when this approach is not ideal, for example the swapoff scenario. During swapoff we just want to load back into memory all the swapped-out pages and for this specific use case a fixed-size readahead is more efficient. The specific use case this patch is addressing is to improve swapoff performance when a VM has been hibernated, resumed and all memory needs to be forced back to RAM by disabling swap (see the test case below). But it is not the only case where a fixed-size readahead can show its benefits. More in general, the fixed-size approach can be beneficial in all the cases when a task that is using a large part of swapped out pages needs to load them back to memory as fast as possible. Testing environment =================== - Host: CPU: 1.8GHz Intel Core i7-8565U (quad-core, 8MB cache) HDD: PC401 NVMe SK hynix 512GB MEM: 16GB - Guest (kvm): 8GB of RAM virtio block driver 16GB swap file on ext4 (/swapfile) Test case ========= - allocate 85% of memory - `systemctl hibernate` to force all the pages to be swapped-out to the swap file - resume the system - measure the time that swapoff takes to complete: # /usr/bin/time swapoff /swapfile Result ====== 5.6 vanilla 5.6 w/ this patch ----------- ----------------- page-cluster=1 26.77s 21.25s page-cluster=2 28.29s 12.66s page-cluster=3 22.09s 8.77s page-cluster=4 21.50s 7.60s page-cluster=5 25.35s 7.75s page-cluster=6 23.19s 8.32s page-cluster=7 22.25s 9.40s page-cluster=8 22.09s 8.93s Signed-off-by: Andrea Righi <andrea.righi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- Changes in v2: - avoid introducing a new ABI to select the fixed-size readahead NOTE: after running some tests with this new patch I don't see any difference in terms of performance, so I'm reporting the same test result of the previous version. mm/swap_state.c | 9 +++++++++ 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+) diff --git a/mm/swap_state.c b/mm/swap_state.c index ebed37bbf7a3..c71abc8df304 100644 --- a/mm/swap_state.c +++ b/mm/swap_state.c @@ -20,6 +20,7 @@ #include <linux/migrate.h> #include <linux/vmalloc.h> #include <linux/swap_slots.h> +#include <linux/oom.h> #include <linux/huge_mm.h> #include <asm/pgtable.h> @@ -507,6 +508,14 @@ static unsigned long swapin_nr_pages(unsigned long offset) max_pages = 1 << READ_ONCE(page_cluster); if (max_pages <= 1) return 1; + /* + * If current task is using too much memory or swapoff is running + * simply use the max readahead size. Since we likely want to load a + * lot of pages back into memory, using a fixed-size max readhaead can + * give better performance in this case. + */ + if (oom_task_origin(current)) + return max_pages; hits = atomic_xchg(&swapin_readahead_hits, 0); pages = __swapin_nr_pages(prev_offset, offset, hits, max_pages, -- 2.25.1