From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Beata Michalska Subject: Re: [RFC v3 1/4] fs: Add generic file system event notifications Date: Mon, 22 Jun 2015 17:46:27 +0200 Message-ID: <55882DD3.5040002@samsung.com> References: <1434460173-18427-1-git-send-email-b.michalska@samsung.com> <1434460173-18427-2-git-send-email-b.michalska@samsung.com> <20150617230605.GK10224@dastard> <55828064.5040301@samsung.com> <20150619000341.GM10224@dastard> <5584512B.5020301@samsung.com> <20150619232117.GN10224@dastard> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org, linux-api@vger.kernel.org, greg@kroah.com, jack@suse.cz, tytso@mit.edu, adilger.kernel@dilger.ca, hughd@google.com, lczerner@redhat.com, hch@infradead.org, linux-ext4@vger.kernel.org, linux-mm@kvack.org, kyungmin.park@samsung.com, kmpark@infradead.org To: Dave Chinner Return-path: In-reply-to: <20150619232117.GN10224@dastard> Sender: owner-linux-mm@kvack.org List-Id: linux-fsdevel.vger.kernel.org On 06/20/2015 01:21 AM, Dave Chinner wrote: > On Fri, Jun 19, 2015 at 07:28:11PM +0200, Beata Michalska wrote: >> On 06/19/2015 02:03 AM, Dave Chinner wrote: >>> On Thu, Jun 18, 2015 at 10:25:08AM +0200, Beata Michalska wrote: >>>> On 06/18/2015 01:06 AM, Dave Chinner wrote: >>>>> On Tue, Jun 16, 2015 at 03:09:30PM +0200, Beata Michalska wrote: >>>>>> Introduce configurable generic interface for file >>>>>> system-wide event notifications, to provide file >>>>>> systems with a common way of reporting any potential >>>>>> issues as they emerge. >>>>>> >>>>>> The notifications are to be issued through generic >>>>>> netlink interface by newly introduced multicast group. >>>>>> >>>>>> Threshold notifications have been included, allowing >>>>>> triggering an event whenever the amount of free space drops >>>>>> below a certain level - or levels to be more precise as two >>>>>> of them are being supported: the lower and the upper range. >>>>>> The notifications work both ways: once the threshold level >>>>>> has been reached, an event shall be generated whenever >>>>>> the number of available blocks goes up again re-activating >>>>>> the threshold. >>>>>> >>>>>> The interface has been exposed through a vfs. Once mounted, >>>>>> it serves as an entry point for the set-up where one can >>>>>> register for particular file system events. >>>>>> >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Beata Michalska >>>>> >>>>> This has massive scalability problems: >>> .... >>>>> Have you noticed that the filesystems have percpu counters for >>>>> tracking global space usage? There's good reason for that - taking a >>>>> spinlock in such a hot accounting path causes severe contention. >>> .... >>>>> Then puts the entire netlink send path inside this spinlock, which >>>>> includes memory allocation and all sorts of non-filesystem code >>>>> paths. And it may be inside critical filesystem locks as well.... >>>>> >>>>> Apart from the serialisation problem of the locking, adding >>>>> memory allocation and the network send path to filesystem code >>>>> that is effectively considered "innermost" filesystem code is going >>>>> to have all sorts of problems for various filesystems. In the XFS >>>>> case, we simply cannot execute this sort of function in the places >>>>> where we update global space accounting. >>>>> >>>>> As it is, I think the basic concept of separate tracking of free >>>>> space if fundamentally flawed. What I think needs to be done is that >>>>> filesystems need access to the thresholds for events, and then the >>>>> filesystems call fs_event_send_thresh() themselves from appropriate >>>>> contexts (ie. without compromising locking, scalability, memory >>>>> allocation recursion constraints, etc). >>>>> >>>>> e.g. instead of tracking every change in free space, a filesystem >>>>> might execute this once every few seconds from a workqueue: >>>>> >>>>> event = fs_event_need_space_warning(sb, ) >>>>> if (event) >>>>> fs_event_send_thresh(sb, event); >>>>> >>>>> User still gets warnings about space usage, but there's no runtime >>>>> overhead or problems with lock/memory allocation contexts, etc. >>>> >>>> Having fs to keep a firm hand on thresholds limits would indeed be >>>> far more sane approach though that would require each fs to >>>> add support for that and handle most of it on their own. Avoiding >>>>> this was the main rationale behind this rfc. >>>> If fs people agree to that, I'll be more than willing to drop this >>>> in favour of the per-fs tracking solution. >>>> Personally, I hope they will. >>> >>> I was hoping that you'd think a little more about my suggestion and >>> work out how to do background threshold event detection generically. >>> I kind of left it as "an exercise for the reader" because it seems >>> obvious to me. >>> >>> Hint: ->statfs allows you to get the total, free and used space >>> from filesystems in a generic manner. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> >>> Dave. >>> >> >> I haven't given up on that, so yes, I'm still working on a more suitable >> generic solution. >> Background detection is one of the options, though it needs some more thoughts. >> Giving up the sync approach means less accuracy for the threshold notifications, >> but I guess this could be fine-tuned to get an acceptable level. > > Accuracy really doesn't matter for threshold notifications - by the > time the event is delivered to userspace it can already be wrong. > >> Another bump: >> how this tuning is supposed to be done (additional config option maybe)? > > Why would you need to tune it at all? You can't *stop* the operation > that is triggering the threshold, so a few seconds delay on delivery > isn't going to make any difference to anyone.... > > You're overthinking this massively. All this needs is a work item > per superblock, and when the thresholds are turned on it queues a > self-repeating delayed work that calls ->statfs, checks against the > configured threshold, issues an event if necessary, and then queues > itself again to run next period. When the threshold is turned off, > the work is cancelled. > > Another option: a kernel thread that runs periodically and just > calls iterate_supers() with a function that checks the sb for > threshold events, and if configured runs ->statfs and does the work, > otherwise skips the sb. That avoids all the lifetime issues with > using workqueues, you don't need a struct work, etc. > >> There is also an idea of using an interface resembling the stackable fs: > > No. Just .... No. > > Cheers, > > Dave. > Alright, I'll make appropriate changes to move the threshold verification into the background and see how it works. Thanks, Best Regards Beata -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@kvack.org. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: email@kvack.org