On Thu 29-11-18 23:02:53, Dave Chinner wrote: > On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 09:52:38AM +0100, Jan Kara wrote: > > On Wed 28-11-18 12:11:23, Liu Bo wrote: > > > On Tue, Nov 27, 2018 at 12:42:49PM +0100, Jan Kara wrote: > > > > CCed fsdevel since this may be interesting to other filesystem developers > > > > as well. > > > > > > > > On Tue 30-10-18 08:22:49, Liu Bo wrote: > > > > > mpage_prepare_extent_to_map() tries to build up a large bio to stuff down > > > > > the pipe. But if it needs to wait for a page lock, it needs to make sure > > > > > and send down any pending writes so we don't deadlock with anyone who has > > > > > the page lock and is waiting for writeback of things inside the bio. > > > > > > > > Thanks for report! I agree the current code has a deadlock possibility you > > > > describe. But I think the problem reaches a bit further than what your > > > > patch fixes. The problem is with pages that are unlocked but have > > > > PageWriteback set. Page reclaim may end up waiting for these pages and > > > > thus any memory allocation with __GFP_FS set can block on these. So in our > > > > current setting page writeback must not block on anything that can be held > > > > while doing memory allocation with __GFP_FS set. Page lock is just one of > > > > these possibilities, wait_on_page_writeback() in > > > > mpage_prepare_extent_to_map() is another suspect and there mat be more. Or > > > > to say it differently, if there's lock A and GFP_KERNEL allocation can > > > > happen under lock A, then A cannot be taken by the writeback path. This is > > > > actually pretty subtle deadlock possibility and our current lockdep > > > > instrumentation isn't going to catch this. > > > > > > > > > > Thanks for the nice summary, it's true that a lock A held in both > > > writeback path and memory reclaim can end up with deadlock. > > > > > > Fortunately, by far there're only deadlock reports of page's lock bit > > > and writeback bit in both ext4 and btrfs[1]. I think > > > wait_on_page_writeback() would be OK as it's been protected by page > > > lock. > > > > > > [1]: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=01d658f2ca3c85c1ffb20b306e30d16197000ce7 > > > > Yes, but that may just mean that the other deadlocks are just harder to > > hit... > > > > > > So I see two ways how to fix this properly: > > > > > > > > 1) Change ext4 code to always submit the bio once we have a full page > > > > prepared for writing. This may be relatively simple but has a higher CPU > > > > overhead for bio allocation & freeing (actual IO won't really differ since > > > > the plugging code should take care of merging the submitted bios). XFS > > > > seems to be doing this. > > > > > > Seems that that's the safest way to do it, but as you said there's > > > some tradeoff. > > > > > > (Just took a look at xfs's writepages, xfs also did the page > > > collection if there're adjacent pages in xfs_add_to_ioend(), and since > > > xfs_vm_writepages() is using the generic helper write_cache_pages() > > > which calls lock_page() as well, it's still possible to run into the > > > above kind of deadlock.) > > > > Originally I thought XFS doesn't have this problem but now when I look > > again, you are right that their ioend may accumulate more pages to write > > and so they are prone to the same deadlock ext4 is. Added XFS list to CC. > > I don't think XFS has a problem here, because the deadlock is > dependent on holding a lock that writeback might take and then doing > a GFP_KERNEL allocation. I don't think we do that anywhere in XFS - > the only lock that is of concern here is the ip->i_ilock, and I > think we always do GFP_NOFS allocations inside that lock. > > As it is, this sort of lock vs reclaim inversion should be caught by > lockdep - allocations and reclaim contexts are recorded by lockdep > we get reports if we do lock A - alloc and then do reclaim - lock A. > We've always had problems with false positives from lockdep for > these situations where common XFS code can be called from GFP_KERNEL > valid contexts as well as reclaim or GFP_NOFS-only contexts, but I > don't recall ever seeing such a report for the writeback path.... I think for A == page lock, XFS may have the problem (and lockdep won't notice because it does not track page locks). There are some parts of kernel which do GFP_KERNEL allocations under page lock - pte_alloc_one() is one such function which allocates page tables with GFP_KERNEL and gets called with the faulted page locked. And I believe there are others. So direct reclaim from pte_alloc_one() can wait for writeback on page B while holding lock on page A. And if B is just prepared (added to bio, under writeback, unlocked) but not submitted in xfs_writepages() and we block on lock_page(A), we have a deadlock. Generally deadlocks like these will be invisible to lockdep because it does not track either PageWriteback or PageLocked as a dependency. > > > > 2) Change the code to unlock the page only when we submit the bio. > > > > This sounds doable but not good IMO, the concern is that page locks > > > can be held for too long, or if we do 2), submitting one bio per page > > > in 1) is also needed. > > > > Hum, you're right that page lock hold times may increase noticeably and > > that's not very good. Ideally we'd need a way to submit whatever we have > > prepared when we are going to sleep but there's no easy way to do that. > > XFS unlocks the page after it has been added to the bio and marked > as under writeback, not when the bio is submitted. i.e. > > writepage w/ locked page dirty > lock ilock > <mapping, allocation> > unlock ilock > bio_add_page > clear_page_dirty_for_io > set_page_writeback > unlock_page > ..... > <gather more dirty pages into bio> > ..... > <bio is full or discontiguous page to be written> > submit_bio() Yes, ext4 works the same way. But thanks for confirmation. > If we switch away which holding a partially built bio, the only page > we have locked is the one we are currently trying to add to the bio. > Lock ordering prevents deadlocks on that one page, and all other > pages in the bio being built are marked as under writeback and are > not locked. Hence anything that wants to modify a page held in the > bio will block waiting for page writeback to clear, not the page > lock. Yes, and the blocking on writeback of such page in direct reclaim is exactly one link in the deadlock chain... Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR