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author | Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> | 2024-11-15 15:01:55 -0500 |
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committer | Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org> | 2024-11-21 09:35:25 +0100 |
commit | fde4c4c3ec1c1590eb09f97f9525fa7dd8df8343 (patch) | |
tree | 95a57b4e1f8042d7459ea08da93cb49700f390d5 /fs/iomap | |
parent | 889ac75787cbeb129df7faf917ce7d53a32ea696 (diff) | |
download | linux-stable-fde4c4c3ec1c1590eb09f97f9525fa7dd8df8343.tar.gz linux-stable-fde4c4c3ec1c1590eb09f97f9525fa7dd8df8343.tar.bz2 linux-stable-fde4c4c3ec1c1590eb09f97f9525fa7dd8df8343.zip |
iomap: elide flush from partial eof zero range
iomap zero range flushes pagecache in certain situations to
determine which parts of the range might require zeroing if dirty
data is present in pagecache. The kernel robot recently reported a
regression associated with this flushing in the following stress-ng
workload on XFS:
stress-ng --timeout 60 --times --verify --metrics --no-rand-seed --metamix 64
This workload involves repeated small, strided, extending writes. On
XFS, this produces a pattern of post-eof speculative preallocation,
conversion of preallocation from delalloc to unwritten, dirtying
pagecache over newly unwritten blocks, and then rinse and repeat
from the new EOF. This leads to repetitive flushing of the EOF folio
via the zero range call XFS uses for writes that start beyond
current EOF.
To mitigate this problem, special case EOF block zeroing to prefer
zeroing the folio over a flush when the EOF folio is already dirty.
To do this, split out and open code handling of an unaligned start
offset. This brings most of the performance back by avoiding flushes
on zero range calls via write and truncate extension operations. The
flush doesn't occur in these situations because the entire range is
post-eof and therefore the folio that overlaps EOF is the only one
in the range.
Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20241115200155.593665-4-bfoster@redhat.com
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/iomap')
-rw-r--r-- | fs/iomap/buffered-io.c | 28 |
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c b/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c index cb5aa3cded0e..0708be776740 100644 --- a/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c +++ b/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c @@ -1403,6 +1403,10 @@ iomap_zero_range(struct inode *inode, loff_t pos, loff_t len, bool *did_zero, .len = len, .flags = IOMAP_ZERO, }; + struct address_space *mapping = inode->i_mapping; + unsigned int blocksize = i_blocksize(inode); + unsigned int off = pos & (blocksize - 1); + loff_t plen = min_t(loff_t, len, blocksize - off); int ret; bool range_dirty; @@ -1412,12 +1416,28 @@ iomap_zero_range(struct inode *inode, loff_t pos, loff_t len, bool *did_zero, * mapping converts on writeback completion and so must be zeroed. * * The simplest way to deal with this across a range is to flush - * pagecache and process the updated mappings. To avoid an unconditional - * flush, check pagecache state and only flush if dirty and the fs - * returns a mapping that might convert on writeback. + * pagecache and process the updated mappings. To avoid excessive + * flushing on partial eof zeroing, special case it to zero the + * unaligned start portion if already dirty in pagecache. + */ + if (off && + filemap_range_needs_writeback(mapping, pos, pos + plen - 1)) { + iter.len = plen; + while ((ret = iomap_iter(&iter, ops)) > 0) + iter.processed = iomap_zero_iter(&iter, did_zero); + + iter.len = len - (iter.pos - pos); + if (ret || !iter.len) + return ret; + } + + /* + * To avoid an unconditional flush, check pagecache state and only flush + * if dirty and the fs returns a mapping that might convert on + * writeback. */ range_dirty = filemap_range_needs_writeback(inode->i_mapping, - pos, pos + len - 1); + iter.pos, iter.pos + iter.len - 1); while ((ret = iomap_iter(&iter, ops)) > 0) { const struct iomap *srcmap = iomap_iter_srcmap(&iter); |