Re: heavy xfsaild I/O blocking process exit

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Thank you for your reply and your time. Your assumptions are correct. The process is killed by systemd.

I can't use perf -p on it since it has freed all of its memory.

Metadata writeback is a very good explanation that is consistent with everything I have seen - as the process writes lots of files and then deletes them at some later point.

Why does this writeback happens in the process context? Why isn't it in a kworker?

What really surprises me is that this happens even if the process has been idle for half an hour or so (it produces its files in bursts then idles a little bit) - this rules out speculative preallocation since it is freed on file close?

Does xfssyncd_centisecs influence metadata writeback? I am currently trying this.

Maybe I will reduce the journal size as a last resort.

Anyway, this is more of an annoyance, than a real problem.


On 08/09/2021 23:27, Dave Chinner wrote:
On Wed, Sep 08, 2021 at 10:15:59AM +0200, Momtchil Momtchev wrote:
Hello,


I have a puzzling problem with XFS on Debian 10. I am running
number-crunching driven by Node.js - I have a process that creates about 2
million 1MB to 5MB files per day with an about 24h lifespan (weather
forecasting). The file system is obviously heavily fragmented. I have
absolutely no problems when running this in cruise mode, but every time I
decide to stop that process, especially when it has been running for a few
What does "stop that process" mean? You kill it, or do you run a
stop command that tells the process to do a controlled shutdown?

weeks or months, the process will become a zombie (freeing all its user
memory and file descriptors) and then xfsaild/kworker will continue flushing
the log for about 30-45 minutes before the process really quits.
The xfsaild is not flushing the log. It's doing metadata writeback.
If it is constantly busy, it means the log has run out of space and
something else wants log space. That something else will block until
the log space has been freed up by metadata writeback....

It will
keep its binds to network ports (which is my main problem) but the system
will remain responsive and usable. The I/O pattern is several seconds of
random reading then a second or two of sequential writing.
That would be expected from final close on lots of dirty inodes or
finalising unlinks on final close. But that won't stop anything else
from functioning.

The kernel functions that are running in the zombie process context are
mainly xfs_btree_lookup, xfs_log_commit_cil, xfs_next_bit,
xfs_buf_find_isra.26
Full profiles (e.g. from perf top -U -p <pid>) would be useful here,
but this sounds very much like extent removal on final close. This
will be removing either speculative preallocation beyond EOF or the
workload has open but unlinked files and the unlink is being done at
process exit.

Either way, if the files are fragmented into millions of extents,
this could take minutes per file being closed. But with only 1-5MB
files, that shouldn't be occurring...

xfsaild is spending time in radix_tree_next_chunk, xfs_inode_buf_verify
xfsaild should never be doing radix tree lookups - it only works on
internal in-memory filessytem objects that it has direct references
to. IOWs, I really need to see the actual profile outputs to
determine what it is doing...

xfs_inode_buf_verify() is expected if it is writing back dirty inode
clusters. Which it will be, but at only 2 million files a day I
wouldn't expect that to show up in profiles at all. It doesn't
really even show up in profiles even at half a million inodes per
_second_

kworker is in xfs_reclaim_inode, radix_tree_next_chunk
Which kworker is that? Likely background inode reclaim, but that
doesn't limit anything - it just indicates there are inodes
available to be reclaimed.

This is on (standard up-to date Debian 10):

Linux version 4.19.0-16-amd64 (debian-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) (gcc version
8.3.0 (Debian 8.3.0-6)) #1 SMP Debian 4.19.181-1 (2021-03-19)

xfs_progs 4.20.0-1



File system is RAID-0, 2x2TB disks with LVM over md (512k chunks)
Are these SSDs or HDDs? I'll assume HDD at this point.

meta-data=/dev/mapper/vg0-home   isize=512    agcount=32, agsize=29849728
blks
          =                       sectsz=4096  attr=2, projid32bit=1
          =                       crc=1        finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
          =                       reflink=0
data     =                       bsize=4096   blocks=955191296, imaxpct=5
          =                       sunit=128    swidth=256 blks
naming   =version 2              bsize=4096   ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log      =internal log           bsize=4096   blocks=466402, version=2
          =                       sectsz=4096  sunit=1 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =none                   extsz=4096   blocks=0, rtextents=0
Ok, so you have a 1.7GB log. If those are HDDs, then you could have
hundreds of thousands of dirty inodes tracked in the log, and
metadata writeback has been falling behind for days because the log
can be filled much faster than it can be drained.

Assuming 200 write IOPS, 30 minutes would be 360,000 writes, which
pretty much matches up with having half a million dirty inodes in
the log and the process exiting needing to run a bunch of
transactions that need a chunk of log space to make progress and
having to wait on inode writeback to free up log space...

MemTotal:       32800968 kB
MemFree:          759308 kB
MemAvailable:   27941208 kB
Buffers:           43900 kB
Cached:         26504332 kB
SwapCached:         7560 kB
Active:         16101380 kB
Inactive:       11488252 kB
Active(anon):     813424 kB
Inactive(anon):   228180 kB
Active(file):   15287956 kB
Inactive(file): 11260072 kB
So all your memory is in the page cache.

Unevictable:           0 kB
Mlocked:               0 kB
SwapTotal:      16777212 kB
SwapFree:       16715524 kB
Dirty:              2228 kB
And almost all the page cache is clean.

Writeback:             0 kB
AnonPages:       1034280 kB
Mapped:            89660 kB
Shmem:               188 kB
Slab:            1508868 kB
SReclaimable:    1097804 kB
SUnreclaim:       411064 kB
And that's enough slab cache to hold half a million cached, dirty
inodes...

More information required.

Cheers,

Dave.

--
Momtchil Momtchev <momtchil@xxxxxxxxxxxx>




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