Thread (24 messages) 24 messages, 3 authors, 2022-10-31

Re: [PATCH v2 3/3] nfsd: start non-blocking writeback after adding nfsd_file to the LRU

From: Chuck Lever III <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
Date: 2022-10-28 15:30:46

On Oct 28, 2022, at 11:05 AM, Jeff Layton [off-list ref] wrote:

On Fri, 2022-10-28 at 13:16 +0000, Chuck Lever III wrote:
quoted
quoted
On Oct 27, 2022, at 5:52 PM, Jeff Layton [off-list ref] wrote:

When a GC entry gets added to the LRU, kick off SYNC_NONE writeback
so that we can be ready to close it out when the time comes.
For a large file, a background flush still has to walk the file's
pages to see if they are dirty, and that consumes time, CPU, and
memory bandwidth. We're talking hundreds of microseconds for a
large file.

Then the final flush does all that again.

Basically, two (or more!) passes through the file for exactly the
same amount of work. Is there any measured improvement in latency
or throughput?

And then... for a GC file, no-one is waiting on data persistence
during nfsd_file_put() so I'm not sure what is gained by taking
control of the flushing process away from the underlying filesystem.


Remind me why the filecache is flushing? Shouldn't NFSD rely on
COMMIT operations for that? (It's not obvious reading the code,
maybe there should be a documenting comment somewhere that
explains this arrangement).

Fair point. I was trying to replicate the behaviors introduced in these
patches:

b6669305d35a nfsd: Reduce the number of calls to nfsd_file_gc()
6b8a94332ee4 nfsd: Fix a write performance regression

AFAICT, the fsync is there to catch writeback errors so that we can
reset the write verifiers (AFAICT). The rationale for that is described
here:

055b24a8f230 nfsd: Don't garbage collect files that might contain write errors
Yes, I've been confused about this since then :-)

So, the patch description says:

    If a file may contain unstable writes that can error out, then we want
    to avoid garbage collecting the struct nfsd_file that may be
    tracking those errors.

That doesn't explain why that's a problem, it just says what we plan to
do about it.

The problem with not calling vfs_fsync is that we might miss writeback
errors. The nfsd_file could get reaped before a v3 COMMIT ever comes in.
nfsd would eventually reopen the file but it could miss seeing the error
if it got opened locally in the interim.
That helps. So we're surfacing writeback errors for local writers?

I guess I would like this flushing to interfere as little as possible
with the server's happy zone, since it's not something clients need to
wait for, and an error is exceptionally rare.

But also, we can't let writeback errors hold onto a bunch of memory
indefinitely. How much nfsd_file and page cache memory might be be
pinned by a writeback error, and for how long?

I'm not sure we need to worry about that so much for v4 though. Maybe we
should just do this for GC files?
I'm not caffeinated yet. Why is it not a problem for v4? Is it because
an open or delegation stateid will prevent the nfsd_file from going
away?

Sorry for the noise. It's all a little subtle.

quoted
quoted
Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org>
---
fs/nfsd/filecache.c | 37 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------
1 file changed, 31 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
diff --git a/fs/nfsd/filecache.c b/fs/nfsd/filecache.c
index d2bbded805d4..491d3d9a1870 100644
--- a/fs/nfsd/filecache.c
+++ b/fs/nfsd/filecache.c
@@ -316,7 +316,7 @@ nfsd_file_alloc(struct nfsd_file_lookup_key *key, unsigned int may)
}

static void
-nfsd_file_flush(struct nfsd_file *nf)
+nfsd_file_fsync(struct nfsd_file *nf)
{
	struct file *file = nf->nf_file;
@@ -327,6 +327,22 @@ nfsd_file_flush(struct nfsd_file *nf)
		nfsd_reset_write_verifier(net_generic(nf->nf_net, nfsd_net_id));
}

+static void
+nfsd_file_flush(struct nfsd_file *nf)
+{
+	struct file *file = nf->nf_file;
+	unsigned long nrpages;
+
+	if (!file || !(file->f_mode & FMODE_WRITE))
+		return;
+
+	nrpages = file->f_mapping->nrpages;
+	if (nrpages) {
+		this_cpu_add(nfsd_file_pages_flushed, nrpages);
+		filemap_flush(file->f_mapping);
+	}
+}
+
static void
nfsd_file_free(struct nfsd_file *nf)
{
@@ -337,7 +353,7 @@ nfsd_file_free(struct nfsd_file *nf)
	this_cpu_inc(nfsd_file_releases);
	this_cpu_add(nfsd_file_total_age, age);

-	nfsd_file_flush(nf);
+	nfsd_file_fsync(nf);

	if (nf->nf_mark)
		nfsd_file_mark_put(nf->nf_mark);
@@ -500,12 +516,21 @@ nfsd_file_put(struct nfsd_file *nf)
	if (test_bit(NFSD_FILE_GC, &nf->nf_flags)) {
		/*
-		 * If this is the last reference (nf_ref == 1), then transfer
-		 * it to the LRU. If the add to the LRU fails, just put it as
-		 * usual.
+		 * If this is the last reference (nf_ref == 1), then try
+		 * to transfer it to the LRU.
+		 */
+		if (refcount_dec_not_one(&nf->nf_ref))
+			return;
+
+		/*
+		 * If the add to the list succeeds, try to kick off SYNC_NONE
+		 * writeback. If the add fails, then just fall through to
+		 * decrement as usual.
These comments simply repeat what the code does, so they seem
redundant to me. Could they instead explain why?

quoted
		 */
-		if (refcount_dec_not_one(&nf->nf_ref) || nfsd_file_lru_add(nf))
+		if (nfsd_file_lru_add(nf)) {
+			nfsd_file_flush(nf);
			return;
+		}
	}
	__nfsd_file_put(nf);
}
-- 
2.37.3
--
Chuck Lever

-- 
Jeff Layton [off-list ref]
--
Chuck Lever


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