[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

RE: [Xen-devel] OOM problems



> Performance is noticeably lower with aio on these bursty write
> workloads; I've been getting a number of complaints.

That's the cost of having guest data safely committed to disk before being 
ACK'ed.   The users will presumably be happier when a host failure doesn't 
trash their filesystems due to the total loss of any of the write ordering the 
filesystem implementer intended. 

Personally, I wouldn't want any data of mine stored on such a system, but I 
guess others mileage may vary.

If unsafe write buffering is desired, I'd be inclined to implement it 
explicitly in tapdisk rather than rely on the total vagaries of the linux 
buffer cache. It would thus be possible to bound the amount of outstanding 
data, continue to respect ordering, and still respect explicit flushes. 

Ian
 
> I see that 2.6.36 has some page_writeback changes:
> http://www.kernel.org/diff/diffview.cgi?file=%2Fpub%2Flinux%2Fkernel%2Fv2.
> 6%2Fpatch-2.6.36.bz2;z=8379
> . Any thoughts on whether these would make a difference for the problems
> with "file:"? I'm still trying to find a way to reproduce the issue in
> the lab, so I'd have to test the patch in production -- that's not a
> tantalizing prospect, unless there is a real chance that it will affect
> it.
> 
> -John
> 
> On 11/15/2010 9:59 AM, John Weekes wrote:
> >
> >> They are throttled, but the single control I'm aware of
> >> is /proc/sys/vm/dirty_ratio (or dirty_bytes, nowadays). Which is only
> >> per process, not a global limit. Could well be that's part of the
> >> problem -- outwitting mm with just too many writers on too many cores?
> >>
> >> We had a bit of trouble when switching dom0 to 2.6.32, buffered writes
> >> made it much easier than with e.g. 2.6.27 to drive everybody else into
> >> costly reclaims.
> >>
> >> The Oom shown here reports about ~650M in dirty pages. The fact alone
> >> that this counts as on oom condition doesn't sound quite right in
> >> itself. That qemu might just have dared to ask at the wrong point in
> >> time.
> >>
> >> Just to get an idea -- how many guests did this box carry?
> >
> > It carries about two dozen guests, with a mix of mostly HVMs (all
> > stubdom-based, some with PV-on-HVM drivers) and some PV.
> >
> > This problem occurred more often for me under 2.6.32 than 2.6.31, I
> > noticed. Since I made the switch to aio, I haven't seen a crash, but
> > it hasn't been long enough for that to mean much.
> >
> > Having extra caching in the dom0 is nice because it allows for domUs
> > to get away with having small amounts of free memory, while still
> > having very good (much faster than hardware) write performance. If you
> > have a large number of domUs that are all memory-constrained and use
> > the disk in infrequent, large bursts, this can work out pretty well,
> > since the big communal pool provides a better value proposition than
> > giving each domU a few more megabytes of RAM.
> >
> > If the OOM problem isn't something that can be fixed, it might be a
> > good idea to print out a warning to the user when a domain using
> > "file:" is started. Or, to go a step further and automatically run
> > "file" based domains as though "aio" was specified, possibly with a
> > warning and a way to override that behavior. It's not really intuitive
> > that "file" would cause crashes.
> >
> > -John
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Xen-devel mailing list
> > Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel

 


Rackspace

Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our
servers 24x7x365 and backed by RackSpace's Fanatical Support®.