[Cluster-devel] [PATCH 0/2] scop GFP_NOFS api
NeilBrown
mr at neil.brown.name
Sat Apr 30 14:17:56 PDT 2016
On Fri, Apr 29 2016, Steven Whitehouse wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 29/04/16 06:35, NeilBrown wrote:
>> If we could similarly move evict() into kswapd (and I believe we can)
>> then most file systems would do nothing in reclaim context that
>> interferes with allocation context.
> evict() is an issue, but moving it into kswapd would be a potential
> problem for GFS2. We already have a memory allocation issue when
> recovery is taking place and memory is short. The code path is as follows:
>
> 1. Inode is scheduled for eviction (which requires deallocation)
> 2. The glock is required in order to perform the deallocation, which
> implies getting a DLM lock
> 3. Another node in the cluster fails, so needs recovery
> 4. When the DLM lock is requested, it gets blocked until recovery is
> complete (for the failed node)
> 5. Recovery is performed using a userland fencing utility
> 6. Fencing requires memory and then blocks on the eviction
> 7. Deadlock (Fencing waiting on memory alloc, memory alloc waiting on
> DLM lock, DLM lock waiting on fencing)
You even have user-space in the loop there - impressive! You can't
really pass GFP_NOFS to a user-space thread, can you :-?
>
> It doesn't happen often, but we've been looking at the best place to
> break that cycle, and one of the things we've been wondering is whether
> we could avoid deallocation evictions from memory related contexts, or
> at least make it async somehow.
I think "async" is definitely the answer and I think
evict()/evict_inode() is the best place to focus attention.
I can see now (thanks) that just moving the evict() call to kswapd isn't
really a solution as it will just serve to block kswapd and so lots of
other freeing of memory won't happen.
I'm now imagining giving ->evict_inode() a "don't sleep" flag and
allowing it to return -EAGAIN. In that case evict would queue the inode
to kswapd (or maybe another thread) for periodic retry.
The flag would only get set when prune_icache_sb() calls dispose_list()
to call evict(). Other uses (e.g. unmount, iput) would still be
synchronous.
How difficult would it be to change gfs's evict_inode() to optionally
never block?
For this to work we would need to add a way for
deactivate_locked_super() to wait for all the async evictions to
complete. Currently prune_icache_sb() is called under s_umount. If we
moved part of the eviction out of that lock some other synchronization
would be needed. Possibly a per-superblock list of "inodes being
evicted" would suffice.
Thanks,
NeilBrown
>
> The issue is that it is not possible to know in advance whether an
> eviction will result in mearly writing things back to disk (because the
> inode is being dropped from cache, but still resides on disk) which is
> easy to do, or whether it requires a full deallocation (n_link==0) which
> may require significant resources and time,
>
> Steve.
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