We have been hitting some early ENOSPC issues in production with more recent kernels, and I tracked it down to us simply not flushing delalloc as aggressively as we should be. With tracing I was seeing us failing all tickets with all of the block rsvs at or around 0, with very little pinned space, but still around 120mib of outstanding bytes_may_used. Upon further investigation I saw that we were flushing around 14 pages per shrink call for delalloc, despite having around 2gib of delalloc outstanding.
Consider the example of a 8 way machine, all cpu's trying to create a file in parallel, which at the time of this commit requires 5 items to do. Assuming a 16k leaf size, we have 10mib of total metadata reclaim size waiting on reservations. Now assume we have 128mib of delalloc outstanding. With our current math we would set items to 20, and then set to_reclaim to 20 * 256k, or 5mib.
Assuming that we went through this loop all 3 times, for both FLUSH_DELALLOC and FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT, and then did the full loop twice, we'd only flush 60mib of the 128mib delalloc space. This could leave a fair bit of delalloc reservations still hanging around by the time we go to ENOSPC out all the remaining tickets.
Fix this two ways. First, change the calculations to be a fraction of the total delalloc bytes on the system. Prior to my change we were calculating based on dirty inodes so our math made more sense, now it's just completely unrelated to what we're actually doing.
Second add a FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL state, that we hold off until we've gone through the flush states at least once. This will empty the system of all delalloc so we're sure to be truly out of space when we start failing tickets.
I'm tagging stable 5.10 and forward, because this is where we started using the page stuff heavily again. This affects earlier kernel versions as well, but would be a pain to backport to them as the flushing mechanisms aren't the same.
CC: stable@vger.kernel.org # 5.10 Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik josef@toxicpanda.com --- fs/btrfs/ctree.h | 11 ++++++----- fs/btrfs/space-info.c | 36 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------- include/trace/events/btrfs.h | 1 + 3 files changed, 34 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-)
diff --git a/fs/btrfs/ctree.h b/fs/btrfs/ctree.h index 5d0398528a7a..20d7121225d9 100644 --- a/fs/btrfs/ctree.h +++ b/fs/btrfs/ctree.h @@ -2788,11 +2788,12 @@ enum btrfs_flush_state { FLUSH_DELAYED_REFS = 4, FLUSH_DELALLOC = 5, FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT = 6, - ALLOC_CHUNK = 7, - ALLOC_CHUNK_FORCE = 8, - RUN_DELAYED_IPUTS = 9, - COMMIT_TRANS = 10, - FORCE_COMMIT_TRANS = 11, + FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL = 7, + ALLOC_CHUNK = 8, + ALLOC_CHUNK_FORCE = 9, + RUN_DELAYED_IPUTS = 10, + COMMIT_TRANS = 11, + FORCE_COMMIT_TRANS = 12, };
int btrfs_subvolume_reserve_metadata(struct btrfs_root *root, diff --git a/fs/btrfs/space-info.c b/fs/btrfs/space-info.c index 42d0fa2092d4..fc329aff478f 100644 --- a/fs/btrfs/space-info.c +++ b/fs/btrfs/space-info.c @@ -505,6 +505,10 @@ static void shrink_delalloc(struct btrfs_fs_info *fs_info, long time_left; int loops;
+ delalloc_bytes = percpu_counter_sum_positive( + &fs_info->delalloc_bytes); + ordered_bytes = percpu_counter_sum_positive(&fs_info->ordered_bytes); + /* Calc the number of the pages we need flush for space reservation */ if (to_reclaim == U64_MAX) { items = U64_MAX; @@ -512,19 +516,21 @@ static void shrink_delalloc(struct btrfs_fs_info *fs_info, /* * to_reclaim is set to however much metadata we need to * reclaim, but reclaiming that much data doesn't really track - * exactly, so increase the amount to reclaim by 2x in order to - * make sure we're flushing enough delalloc to hopefully reclaim - * some metadata reservations. + * exactly. What we really want to do is reclaim full inode's + * worth of reservations, however that's not available to us + * here. We will take a fraction of the delalloc bytes for our + * flushing loops and hope for the best. Delalloc will expand + * the amount we write to cover an entire dirty extent, which + * will reclaim the metadata reservation for that range. If + * it's not enough subsequent flush stages will be more + * aggressive. */ + to_reclaim = max(to_reclaim, delalloc_bytes >> 3); items = calc_reclaim_items_nr(fs_info, to_reclaim) * 2; - to_reclaim = items * EXTENT_SIZE_PER_ITEM; }
trans = (struct btrfs_trans_handle *)current->journal_info;
- delalloc_bytes = percpu_counter_sum_positive( - &fs_info->delalloc_bytes); - ordered_bytes = percpu_counter_sum_positive(&fs_info->ordered_bytes); if (delalloc_bytes == 0 && ordered_bytes == 0) return;
@@ -710,8 +716,11 @@ static void flush_space(struct btrfs_fs_info *fs_info, break; case FLUSH_DELALLOC: case FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT: + case FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL: + if (state == FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL) + num_bytes = U64_MAX; shrink_delalloc(fs_info, space_info, num_bytes, - state == FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT, for_preempt); + state != FLUSH_DELALLOC, for_preempt); break; case FLUSH_DELAYED_REFS_NR: case FLUSH_DELAYED_REFS: @@ -1037,6 +1046,14 @@ static void btrfs_async_reclaim_metadata_space(struct work_struct *work) commit_cycles--; }
+ /* + * We do not want to empty the system of delalloc unless we're + * under heavy pressure, so allow one trip through the flushing + * logic before we start doing a FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL. + */ + if (flush_state == FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL && !commit_cycles) + flush_state++; + /* * We don't want to force a chunk allocation until we've tried * pretty hard to reclaim space. Think of the case where we @@ -1219,7 +1236,7 @@ static void btrfs_preempt_reclaim_metadata_space(struct work_struct *work) * so if we now have space to allocate do the force chunk allocation. */ static const enum btrfs_flush_state data_flush_states[] = { - FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT, + FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL, RUN_DELAYED_IPUTS, FLUSH_DELAYED_REFS, COMMIT_TRANS, @@ -1309,6 +1326,7 @@ static const enum btrfs_flush_state evict_flush_states[] = { FLUSH_DELAYED_REFS, FLUSH_DELALLOC, FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT, + FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL, ALLOC_CHUNK, COMMIT_TRANS, }; diff --git a/include/trace/events/btrfs.h b/include/trace/events/btrfs.h index 76e0be7e14d0..8144b8e345b5 100644 --- a/include/trace/events/btrfs.h +++ b/include/trace/events/btrfs.h @@ -94,6 +94,7 @@ struct btrfs_space_info; EM( FLUSH_DELAYED_ITEMS, "FLUSH_DELAYED_ITEMS") \ EM( FLUSH_DELALLOC, "FLUSH_DELALLOC") \ EM( FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT, "FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT") \ + EM( FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL, "FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL") \ EM( FLUSH_DELAYED_REFS_NR, "FLUSH_DELAYED_REFS_NR") \ EM( FLUSH_DELAYED_REFS, "FLUSH_ELAYED_REFS") \ EM( ALLOC_CHUNK, "ALLOC_CHUNK") \
Is there a better description of the change? I don't find the 'differently' helpful, could it be something like "split delalloc flush waiting states"?
On Tue, Jun 01, 2021 at 03:45:08PM -0400, Josef Bacik wrote:
We have been hitting some early ENOSPC issues in production with more recent kernels, and I tracked it down to us simply not flushing delalloc as aggressively as we should be. With tracing I was seeing us failing all tickets with all of the block rsvs at or around 0, with very little pinned space, but still around 120mib of outstanding bytes_may_used. Upon further investigation I saw that we were flushing around 14 pages per shrink call for delalloc, despite having around 2gib of delalloc outstanding.
Consider the example of a 8 way machine, all cpu's trying to create a file in parallel, which at the time of this commit requires 5 items to do. Assuming a 16k leaf size, we have 10mib of total metadata reclaim size waiting on reservations. Now assume we have 128mib of delalloc outstanding. With our current math we would set items to 20, and then set to_reclaim to 20 * 256k, or 5mib.
Assuming that we went through this loop all 3 times, for both FLUSH_DELALLOC and FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT, and then did the full loop twice, we'd only flush 60mib of the 128mib delalloc space. This could leave a fair bit of delalloc reservations still hanging around by the time we go to ENOSPC out all the remaining tickets.
Fix this two ways. First, change the calculations to be a fraction of the total delalloc bytes on the system. Prior to my change we were calculating based on dirty inodes so our math made more sense, now it's just completely unrelated to what we're actually doing.
Second add a FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL state, that we hold off until we've gone through the flush states at least once. This will empty the system of all delalloc so we're sure to be truly out of space when we start failing tickets.
I'm tagging stable 5.10 and forward, because this is where we started using the page stuff heavily again. This affects earlier kernel versions as well, but would be a pain to backport to them as the flushing mechanisms aren't the same.
For 5.10 it depends on f00c42dd4cc8b856e6 ("btrfs: introduce a FORCE_COMMIT_TRANS flush operation") and is followed by the premptive flushing series. Prior to the commit introducing COMMIT_TRANS there are 3 patches that seem lightweight enough for stable backport to 5.10 but that should be evaluated first.
5.11.x stable is EOL, so 5.12 is ok to pick it but in case there's interest to backport it to 5.10, more work is needed than just tagging.
On Tue, Jun 01, 2021 at 03:45:08PM -0400, Josef Bacik wrote:
We have been hitting some early ENOSPC issues in production with more recent kernels, and I tracked it down to us simply not flushing delalloc as aggressively as we should be. With tracing I was seeing us failing all tickets with all of the block rsvs at or around 0, with very little pinned space, but still around 120mib of outstanding bytes_may_used. Upon further investigation I saw that we were flushing around 14 pages per shrink call for delalloc, despite having around 2gib of delalloc outstanding.
Consider the example of a 8 way machine, all cpu's trying to create a file in parallel, which at the time of this commit requires 5 items to do. Assuming a 16k leaf size, we have 10mib of total metadata reclaim size waiting on reservations. Now assume we have 128mib of delalloc outstanding. With our current math we would set items to 20, and then set to_reclaim to 20 * 256k, or 5mib.
Assuming that we went through this loop all 3 times, for both FLUSH_DELALLOC and FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT, and then did the full loop twice, we'd only flush 60mib of the 128mib delalloc space. This could leave a fair bit of delalloc reservations still hanging around by the time we go to ENOSPC out all the remaining tickets.
Fix this two ways. First, change the calculations to be a fraction of the total delalloc bytes on the system. Prior to my change we were calculating based on dirty inodes so our math made more sense, now it's just completely unrelated to what we're actually doing.
Second add a FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL state, that we hold off until we've gone through the flush states at least once. This will empty the system of all delalloc so we're sure to be truly out of space when we start failing tickets.
I'm tagging stable 5.10 and forward, because this is where we started using the page stuff heavily again. This affects earlier kernel versions as well, but would be a pain to backport to them as the flushing mechanisms aren't the same.
CC: stable@vger.kernel.org # 5.10 Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik josef@toxicpanda.com
As this is going to be resent, I'll remove it from misc-next for now. Updated version can go in as a fix after rc1.
On Tue, Jun 22, 2021 at 01:16:04PM +0200, David Sterba wrote:
On Tue, Jun 01, 2021 at 03:45:08PM -0400, Josef Bacik wrote:
We have been hitting some early ENOSPC issues in production with more recent kernels, and I tracked it down to us simply not flushing delalloc as aggressively as we should be. With tracing I was seeing us failing all tickets with all of the block rsvs at or around 0, with very little pinned space, but still around 120mib of outstanding bytes_may_used. Upon further investigation I saw that we were flushing around 14 pages per shrink call for delalloc, despite having around 2gib of delalloc outstanding.
Consider the example of a 8 way machine, all cpu's trying to create a file in parallel, which at the time of this commit requires 5 items to do. Assuming a 16k leaf size, we have 10mib of total metadata reclaim size waiting on reservations. Now assume we have 128mib of delalloc outstanding. With our current math we would set items to 20, and then set to_reclaim to 20 * 256k, or 5mib.
Assuming that we went through this loop all 3 times, for both FLUSH_DELALLOC and FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT, and then did the full loop twice, we'd only flush 60mib of the 128mib delalloc space. This could leave a fair bit of delalloc reservations still hanging around by the time we go to ENOSPC out all the remaining tickets.
Fix this two ways. First, change the calculations to be a fraction of the total delalloc bytes on the system. Prior to my change we were calculating based on dirty inodes so our math made more sense, now it's just completely unrelated to what we're actually doing.
Second add a FLUSH_DELALLOC_FULL state, that we hold off until we've gone through the flush states at least once. This will empty the system of all delalloc so we're sure to be truly out of space when we start failing tickets.
I'm tagging stable 5.10 and forward, because this is where we started using the page stuff heavily again. This affects earlier kernel versions as well, but would be a pain to backport to them as the flushing mechanisms aren't the same.
CC: stable@vger.kernel.org # 5.10 Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik josef@toxicpanda.com
As this is going to be resent, I'll remove it from misc-next for now. Updated version can go in as a fix after rc1.
Ok so that does not work, the patchset "[PATCH 0/4][v2] btrfs: commit the transaction unconditionally for ensopc" https://lore.kernel.org/linux-btrfs/cover.1623421213.git.josef@toxicpanda.co... touches the defines and can't be trivially resolved.
On Tue, Jun 22, 2021 at 01:25:50PM +0200, David Sterba wrote:
On Tue, Jun 22, 2021 at 01:16:04PM +0200, David Sterba wrote:
On Tue, Jun 01, 2021 at 03:45:08PM -0400, Josef Bacik wrote: As this is going to be resent, I'll remove it from misc-next for now. Updated version can go in as a fix after rc1.
Ok so that does not work, the patchset "[PATCH 0/4][v2] btrfs: commit the transaction unconditionally for ensopc" https://lore.kernel.org/linux-btrfs/cover.1623421213.git.josef@toxicpanda.co... touches the defines and can't be trivially resolved.
Nikolay was kind to resolve the conflict so the final status is that "btrfs: handle shrink_delalloc pages calculation differently" has been removed from misc-next (due to known performance drop) and the refreshed patchset is now in misc-next.
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