On Mon, 2021-11-29 at 15:01 +0000, Mel Gorman wrote: > On Sat, Nov 27, 2021 at 01:12:46AM +0900, Alexey Avramov wrote: > > > After the patch, the test gets killed after roughly 15 seconds which is > > > the same length of time taken in 5.15. > > > > In my tests, the 5.15 still performs much better. > > > > New question: is timeout=1 has sense? Will it save CPU? > > Ok, the following on top of 5.16-rc1 survived 8 minutes of watching youtube > on a laptop while "tail /dev/zero" was running within the background. While > there were some very short glitches, they were no worse than 5.15. I've > not reproduced your exact test case yet or the memcg ones yet but sending > now in case I don't complete them before the end of the day. > > diff --git a/mm/vmscan.c b/mm/vmscan.c > index fb9584641ac7..1af12072f40e 100644 > --- a/mm/vmscan.c > +++ b/mm/vmscan.c > @@ -1021,6 +1021,39 @@ static void handle_write_error(struct address_space *mapping, > unlock_page(page); > } > > +bool skip_throttle_noprogress(pg_data_t *pgdat) > +{ > + int reclaimable = 0, write_pending = 0; > + int i; > + > + /* > + * If kswapd is disabled, reschedule if necessary but do not > + * throttle as the system is likely near OOM. > + */ > + if (pgdat->kswapd_failures >= MAX_RECLAIM_RETRIES) > + return true; > + > + /* > + * If there are a lot of dirty/writeback pages then do not > + * throttle as throttling will occur when the pages cycle > + * towards the end of the LRU if still under writeback. > + */ > + for (i = 0; i < MAX_NR_ZONES; i++) { > + struct zone *zone = pgdat->node_zones + i; > + > + if (!populated_zone(zone)) > + continue; > + > + reclaimable += zone_reclaimable_pages(zone); > + write_pending += zone_page_state_snapshot(zone, > + NR_ZONE_WRITE_PENDING); > + } > + if (2 * write_pending <= reclaimable) That is always true here... -Mike