In a simple dd test on a 8p system with "mem=256M", I find all light dirtier tasks on the root fs are get heavily throttled. That happens because the global limit is exceeded. It's unbelievable at first sight, because the test fs doing the heavy dd is under its bdi limit. After doing some tracing, it's discovered that bdi_dirty < bdi_dirty_limit() < global_dirty_limit() < nr_dirty So the root cause is, the bdi_dirty is well under the global nr_dirty due to accounting errors. This can be fixed by using bdi_stat_sum(), however that's costly on large NUMA machines. So do a less costly fix of lowering the bdi limit, so that the accounting errors won't lead to the absurd situation "global limit exceeded but bdi limit not exceeded". This provides guarantee when there is only 1 heavily dirtied bdi, and works by opportunity for 2+ heavy dirtied bdi's (hopefully they won't reach big error _and_ exceed their bdi limit at the same time). CC: Peter Zijlstra Signed-off-by: Wu Fengguang --- mm/page-writeback.c | 18 ++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) --- linux-next.orig/mm/page-writeback.c 2010-12-08 22:44:21.000000000 +0800 +++ linux-next/mm/page-writeback.c 2010-12-08 22:44:21.000000000 +0800 @@ -434,10 +434,16 @@ void global_dirty_limits(unsigned long * *pdirty = dirty; } -/* +/** * bdi_dirty_limit - @bdi's share of dirty throttling threshold + * @bdi: the backing_dev_info to query + * @dirty: global dirty limit in pages + * @dirty_pages: current number of dirty pages * - * Allocate high/low dirty limits to fast/slow devices, in order to prevent + * Returns @bdi's dirty limit in pages. The term "dirty" in the context of + * dirty balancing includes all PG_dirty, PG_writeback and NFS unstable pages. + * + * It allocates high/low dirty limits to fast/slow devices, in order to prevent * - starving fast devices * - piling up dirty pages (that will take long time to sync) on slow devices * @@ -458,6 +464,14 @@ unsigned long bdi_dirty_limit(struct bac long numerator, denominator; /* + * try to prevent "global limit exceeded but bdi limit not exceeded" + */ + if (likely(dirty > bdi_stat_error(bdi))) + dirty -= bdi_stat_error(bdi); + else + return 0; + + /* * Provide a global safety margin of ~1%, or up to 32MB for a 20GB box. */ dirty -= min(dirty / 128, 32768ULL >> (PAGE_SHIFT-10)); -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/