Re: XFS blocked task in xlog_cil_force_lsn

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On 12/20/2013 11:30 PM, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 06:36:33AM -0600, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
>> On 12/20/2013 4:26 AM, Kevin Richter wrote:
>>> 'top' while copying with stripe size of 2048 (the source disk is ntfs):
>>>> top - 10:48:24 up 1 day,  1:41,  2 users,  load average: 5.66, 3.53, 2.17
>>>> Tasks: 210 total,   2 running, 208 sleeping,   0 stopped,   0 zombie
>>>> Cpu(s):  0.1%us, 35.8%sy,  0.0%ni, 46.0%id, 17.9%wa,  0.0%hi,  0.2%si,  0.0%st
>>>> Mem:  32913992k total, 32709208k used,   204784k free, 10770344k buffers
>>>> Swap:  7812496k total,        0k used,  7812496k free, 20866844k cached
>>>>
>>>>   PID USER      PR  NI  VIRT  RES  SHR S %CPU %MEM    TIME+  COMMAND
>>>> 19524 root      20   0     0    0    0 R   93  0.0   4:00.12 kworker/3:1
>>>> 23744 root      20   0     0    0    0 S   55  0.0   0:50.84 kworker/0:1
>>>> 23738 root      20   0     0    0    0 S   29  0.0   0:56.94 kworker/4:0
>>>>  3893 root      20   0     0    0    0 S   28  0.0  36:47.50 md2_raid6
>>>>  4551 root      20   0 22060 3328  720 D   25  0.0  20:21.61 mount.ntfs
>>>> 23273 root      20   0     0    0    0 S   22  0.0   1:54.86 kworker/7:2
>>>> 23734 root      20   0 21752 1280 1040 D   21  0.0   0:49.84 cp
>>>>    84 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    7  0.0   8:19.34 kswapd1
>>>>    83 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    6  0.0  11:55.81 kswapd0
>>>> 23745 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    2  0.0   0:33.60 kworker/1:2
>>>> 21598 root      20   0     0    0    0 D    1  0.0   0:11.33 kworker/u17:1
>>
>> Hmm, what's kworker/3:1?  That's not a crypto thread eating 93% of a
>> SandyBridge core at only ~180 MB/s throughput is it?
> 
> Kworkers are an anonymous kernel worker threads that do work that
> has been pushed to a workqueue. kworker/3:1 is the 2nd worker thread
> on CPU 3 (3:0 is the first). The kworker is a thread pool that grows
> and shrinks according to demand.
> 
> As the naming suggests, kworker threads are per-CPU, and there can
> be hundreds of them per CPU is there is enough workqueue work blocks
> during execution of the work (e.g. on locks, waiting for IO, etc).
> If there is little blocking occurring, there might on ly be a couple
> of kworker threads that do all the work, and hence you see them
> consuming huge amounts of CPU on behalf of other systems...
> 
> XFS uses workqueues for lots of things, so it's not unusual to see
> an IO or metadata heavy workload end up with this huge numbers of
> kworker threads doing work:
> 
> <run parallel fsmark test>
> ....
> $ ps -ef |grep kworker |wc -l
> 91

For the record, again, I've never used dm-crypt.  I'm just trying to
work through the layers to identify the source of Kevin's problems.  So
please don't clobber me too hard for going OT, or trying to speak
(somewhat) intelligently about something I'm just learning about...

So, how does one identify who is doing work inside a worker thread?  In
this case we're trying to figure out if dm-crypt might be eating a CPU
core thus limiting its throughput.  However...

I just read a thread on dm-devel about dm-crypt performance dated late
March 2013.  It wasn't clear to me if dm-crypt yet uses unbound
workqueues, if it dispatches work to multiple queues, or if it still
uses the hand built dispatcher, as of kernel 3.11, which Kevin just
updated to.

What was clear is that as of March dm-crypt was not preserving IO
ordering.  If this is still the case, that would imply RMW with md
parity arrays, which would tend to explain Kevin's write throughput
being ~1/3rd of his read, and less than a single disk.

Mikulas Patocka posted 400-620 MB/s dm-crypt throughput with a RAMdisk.
 It was not stated which CPU/clock he was using.  Even if it were a 4GHz
core, Kevin's 2.4GHz SandyBridge should be capable of far more than ~80
MB/s of encryption.

So if dm-crypt is contributing to Kevin's low throughput I'd think it
would be due to the IO ordering causing RMW, not due to CPU starvation.
 Is there an easy way for a mere mortal to peek under the hood and see
if dm-crypt is causing RMW?

Christoph you were involved in that thread WRT IO ordering.  Can you
shed more light on this, and if it may be a factor here.

-- 
Stan

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