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NFS: switch nfsiod to be an UNBOUND workqueue.

[ Upstream commit bf701b765e ]

nfsiod is currently a concurrency-managed workqueue (CMWQ).
This means that workitems scheduled to nfsiod on a given CPU are queued
behind all other work items queued on any CMWQ on the same CPU.  This
can introduce unexpected latency.

Occaionally nfsiod can even cause excessive latency.  If the work item
to complete a CLOSE request calls the final iput() on an inode, the
address_space of that inode will be dismantled.  This takes time
proportional to the number of in-memory pages, which on a large host
working on large files (e.g..  5TB), can be a large number of pages
resulting in a noticable number of seconds.

We can avoid these latency problems by switching nfsiod to WQ_UNBOUND.
This causes each concurrent work item to gets a dedicated thread which
can be scheduled to an idle CPU.

There is precedent for this as several other filesystems use WQ_UNBOUND
workqueue for handling various async events.

Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
Fixes: ada609ee2a ("workqueue: use WQ_MEM_RECLAIM instead of WQ_RESCUER")
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@hammerspace.com>
Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@kernel.org>
5.4-rM2-2.2.x-imx-squashed
NeilBrown 2020-11-27 11:24:33 +11:00 committed by Greg Kroah-Hartman
parent 1094bd2eda
commit 0588b8a034
1 changed files with 1 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -2151,7 +2151,7 @@ static int nfsiod_start(void)
{
struct workqueue_struct *wq;
dprintk("RPC: creating workqueue nfsiod\n");
wq = alloc_workqueue("nfsiod", WQ_MEM_RECLAIM, 0);
wq = alloc_workqueue("nfsiod", WQ_MEM_RECLAIM | WQ_UNBOUND, 0);
if (wq == NULL)
return -ENOMEM;
nfsiod_workqueue = wq;