> On May 11, 2022, at 8:38 AM, Greg KH <gregkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, May 11, 2022 at 12:03:13PM +0200, Wolfgang Walter wrote: >> Hi, >> >> starting with 5.4.188 wie see a massive performance regression on our >> nfs-server. It basically is serving requests very very slowly with cpu >> utilization of 100% (with 5.4.187 and earlier it is 10%) so that it is >> unusable as a fileserver. >> >> The culprit are commits (or one of it): >> >> c32f1041382a88b17da5736886da4a492353a1bb "nfsd: cleanup >> nfsd_file_lru_dispose()" >> 628adfa21815f74c04724abc85847f24b5dd1645 "nfsd: Containerise filecache >> laundrette" >> >> (upstream 36ebbdb96b694dd9c6b25ad98f2bbd263d022b63 and >> 9542e6a643fc69d528dfb3303f145719c61d3050) >> >> If I revert them in v5.4.192 the kernel works as before and performance is >> ok again. >> >> I did not try to revert them one by one as any disruption of our nfs-server >> is a severe problem for us and I'm not sure if they are related. >> >> 5.10 and 5.15 both always performed very badly on our nfs-server in a >> similar way so we were stuck with 5.4. >> >> I now think this is because of 36ebbdb96b694dd9c6b25ad98f2bbd263d022b63 >> and/or 9542e6a643fc69d528dfb3303f145719c61d3050 though I didn't tried to >> revert them in 5.15 yet. > > Odds are 5.18-rc6 is also a problem? We believe that 6b8a94332ee4 ("nfsd: Fix a write performance regression") addresses the performance regression. It was merged into 5.18-rc. > If so, I'll just wait for the fix to get into Linus's tree as this does > not seem to be a stable-tree-only issue. Unfortunately I've received a recent report that the fix introduces a "sleep while spinlock is held" for NFSv4.0 in rare cases. -- Chuck Lever