Thread (3 messages) 3 messages, 2 authors, 2012-11-22

Re: [PATCH 14/14] mm: Account for WRITEBACK_TEMP in balance_dirty_pages

From: Maxim V. Patlasov <hidden>
Date: 2012-11-22 13:56:01
Also in: linux-fsdevel, lkml

Hi,

11/22/2012 05:27 PM, Jaegeuk Hanse пишет:
On 11/21/2012 08:01 PM, Maxim Patlasov wrote:
quoted
Added linux-mm@ to cc:. The patch can stand on it's own.
quoted
Make balance_dirty_pages start the throttling when the WRITEBACK_TEMP
counter is high enough. This prevents us from having too many dirty
pages on fuse, thus giving the userspace part of it a chance to write
stuff properly.

Note, that the existing balance logic is per-bdi, i.e. if the fuse
user task gets stuck in the function this means, that it either
writes to the mountpoint it serves (but it can deadlock even without
the writeback) or it is writing to some _other_ dirty bdi and in the
latter case someone else will free the memory for it.
Signed-off-by: Maxim V. Patlasov <redacted>
Signed-off-by: Pavel Emelyanov <redacted>
---
  mm/page-writeback.c |    3 ++-
  1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
diff --git a/mm/page-writeback.c b/mm/page-writeback.c
index 830893b..499a606 100644
--- a/mm/page-writeback.c
+++ b/mm/page-writeback.c
@@ -1220,7 +1220,8 @@ static void balance_dirty_pages(struct 
address_space *mapping,
           */
          nr_reclaimable = global_page_state(NR_FILE_DIRTY) +
                      global_page_state(NR_UNSTABLE_NFS);
-        nr_dirty = nr_reclaimable + global_page_state(NR_WRITEBACK);
+        nr_dirty = nr_reclaimable + global_page_state(NR_WRITEBACK) +
+            global_page_state(NR_WRITEBACK_TEMP);
Could you explain NR_WRITEBACK_TEMP is used for accounting what? And 
when it will increase?
The only user of NR_WRITEBACK_TEMP is fuse. Handling .writepage it:

1) allocates new page
2) copies original page (that came to .writepage as argument) to new page
3) attaches new page to fuse request
4) increments NR_WRITEBACK_TEMP
5) does end_page_writeback on original page
6) schedules fuse request for processing

Later, fuse request will be send to userspace, then userspace will 
process it and ACK it to kernel fuse. Processing this ACK from 
userspace, in-kernel fuse will free that new page and decrement 
NR_WRITEBACK_TEMP.

So, effectively, NR_WRITEBACK_TEMP keeps track of pages which are under 
'fuse writeback'.

Thanks,
Maxim
quoted
global_dirty_limits(&background_thresh, &dirty_thresh);

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