Commit 0bab43f0 authored by Darrick J. Wong's avatar Darrick J. Wong Committed by Zheng Zengkai
Browse files

xfs: throttle inode inactivation queuing on memory reclaim

mainline-inclusion
from mainline-v5.14-rc4
commit 40b1de00
category: bugfix
bugzilla: https://gitee.com/openeuler/kernel/issues/I4KIAO
CVE: NA

Reference: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=40b1de007aca4f9ec4ee4322c29f026ebb60ac96



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Now that we defer inode inactivation, we've decoupled the process of
unlinking or closing an inode from the process of inactivating it.  In
theory this should lead to better throughput since we now inactivate the
queued inodes in batches instead of one at a time.

Unfortunately, one of the primary risks with this decoupling is the loss
of rate control feedback between the frontend and background threads.
In other words, a rm -rf /* thread can run the system out of memory if
it can queue inodes for inactivation and jump to a new CPU faster than
the background threads can actually clear the deferred work.  The
workers can get scheduled off the CPU if they have to do IO, etc.

To solve this problem, we configure a shrinker so that it will activate
the /second/ time the shrinkers are called.  The custom shrinker will
queue all percpu deferred inactivation workers immediately and set a
flag to force frontend callers who are releasing a vfs inode to wait for
the inactivation workers.

On my test VM with 560M of RAM and a 2TB filesystem, this seems to solve
most of the OOMing problem when deleting 10 million inodes.

Signed-off-by: default avatarDarrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: default avatarDave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarLihong Kou <koulihong@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: default avatarZhang Yi <yi.zhang@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarZheng Zengkai <zhengzengkai@huawei.com>
parent 3f0a724e
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