On Fri, May 26, 2023 at 08:32:27PM +0200, Domenico Cerasuolo wrote: > This update addresses an issue with the zswap reclaim mechanism, which > hinders the efficient offloading of cold pages to disk, thereby > compromising the preservation of the LRU order and consequently > diminishing, if not inverting, its performance benefits. > > The functioning of the zswap shrink worker was found to be inadequate, > as shown by basic benchmark test. For the test, a kernel build was > utilized as a reference, with its memory confined to 1G via a cgroup and > a 5G swap file provided. The results are presented below, these are > averages of three runs without the use of zswap: > > real 46m26s > user 35m4s > sys 7m37s > > With zswap (zbud) enabled and max_pool_percent set to 1 (in a 32G > system), the results changed to: > > real 56m4s > user 35m13s > sys 8m43s > > written_back_pages: 18 > reject_reclaim_fail: 0 > pool_limit_hit:1478 > > Besides the evident regression, one thing to notice from this data is > the extremely low number of written_back_pages and pool_limit_hit. > > The pool_limit_hit counter, which is increased in zswap_frontswap_store > when zswap is completely full, doesn't account for a particular > scenario: once zswap hits his limit, zswap_pool_reached_full is set to > true; with this flag on, zswap_frontswap_store rejects pages if zswap is > still above the acceptance threshold. Once we include the rejections due > to zswap_pool_reached_full && !zswap_can_accept(), the number goes from > 1478 to a significant 21578266. > > Zswap is stuck in an undesirable state where it rejects pages because > it's above the acceptance threshold, yet fails to attempt memory > reclaimation. This happens because the shrink work is only queued when > zswap_frontswap_store detects that it's full and the work itself only > reclaims one page per run. > > This state results in hot pages getting written directly to disk, > while cold ones remain memory, waiting only to be invalidated. The LRU > order is completely broken and zswap ends up being just an overhead > without providing any benefits. > > This commit applies 2 changes: a) the shrink worker is set to reclaim > pages until the acceptance threshold is met and b) the task is also > enqueued when zswap is not full but still above the threshold. > > Testing this suggested update showed much better numbers: > > real 36m37s > user 35m8s > sys 9m32s > > written_back_pages: 10459423 > reject_reclaim_fail: 12896 > pool_limit_hit: 75653 > > V2: > - loop against == -EAGAIN rather than != -EINVAL and also break the loop > on MAX_RECLAIM_RETRIES (thanks Yosry) > - cond_resched() to ensure that the loop doesn't burn the cpu (thanks > Vitaly) > > V3: > - fix wrong loop break, should continue on !ret (thanks Johannes) > > Fixes: 45190f01dd40 ("mm/zswap.c: add allocation hysteresis if pool limit is hit") > Signed-off-by: Domenico Cerasuolo <cerasuolodomenico@xxxxxxxxx> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@xxxxxxxxxxx>