Thread (4 messages) 4 messages, 3 authors, 2021-05-26

Re: patch review scheduling...

From: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Date: 2021-05-26 18:26:17

On Wed, May 26, 2021 at 07:53:11AM -0400, Brian Foster wrote:
On Tue, May 25, 2021 at 06:27:04PM -0700, Darrick J. Wong wrote:
quoted
Hello list, frequent-submitters, and usual-reviewer-suspects:

As you've all seen, we have quite a backlog of patch review for 5.14
already.  The people cc'd on this message are the ones who either (a)
authored the patches caught in the backlog, (b) commented on previous
iterations of them, or (c) have participated in a lot of reviews before.

Normally I'd just chug through them all until I get to the end, but even
after speed-reading through the shorter series (deferred xattrs,
mmaplock, reflink+dax) I still have 73 to go, which is down from 109
this morning.

So, time to be a bit more aggressive about planning.  I would love it if
people dedicated some time this week to reviewing things, but before we
even get there, I have other questions:

Dave: Between the CIL improvements and the perag refactoring, which
would you rather get reviewed first?  The CIL improvments patches have
been circulating longer, but they're more subtle changes.

Dave and Christoph: Can I rely on you both to sort out whatever
conflicts arose around reworking memory page allocation for xfs_bufs?

Brian: Is it worth the time to iterate more on the ioend thresholds in
the "iomap: avoid soft lockup warnings" series?  Specifically, I was
kind of interested in whether or not we should/could scale the max ioend
size limit with the optimal/max io request size that devices report,
though I'm getting a feeling that block device limits are all over the
place maybe we should start with the static limit and iterate up (or
down?) from there...?
I was starting to think about the optimal I/O size thing yesterday given
the latest feedback. I think it makes sense and it's probably easy
enough to incorporate, but if you're asking me about patch processing
logistics, IMO none of the changes or outstanding feedback since the v2
(inline w/ v1) are terribly important to fix the original problem.

Most of the feedback since v2 has been additive (i.e. "fix this problem
too") or surmising about inconsequential things like cond_resched()
usage or whether the threshold should be defined based on pages or not.
v2 used a large threshold to avoid things like risk of
unintended/unexpected consequences causing a revert down the line and
reintroducing the soft lockup problem, which is otherwise easily fixable
without significant change to functional behavior (given the current
worst case of unbound aggregation). So since you ask and after having
thought about it, if you're looking for a targeted fix to merge sooner
rather than later I think the smart thing to do is stick with v2 and
rebase the subsequent changes to reduce interrupt context latency and
general completion latency on top of that. (In fact, I probably should
have done that for v3.)
Yeah, this basically comes down to: take v2 as a fix for 5.13?  Or v3
as a larger fix for 5.14?  I guess I'm the one ranting about having too
many stall warning escalations, so it's up to me to pick something.
TBH I like the "put v3 in 5.14" option since it gives us a much longer
testing ramp...

--D
Brian
quoted
Everyone else: If you'd like to review something, please stake a claim
and start reading.

Everyone else not on cc: You're included too!  If you like! :)

--D
Keyboard shortcuts
hback out one level
jnext message in thread
kprevious message in thread
ldrill in
Escclose help / fold thread tree
?toggle this help