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Re: [Xen-devel] OOM problems

To: Daniel Stodden <daniel.stodden@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [Xen-devel] OOM problems
From: John Weekes <lists.xen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 17 Nov 2010 23:15:17 -0800
Cc: Ian Pratt <Ian.Pratt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Jan Beulich <JBeulich@xxxxxxxxxx>
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I think [XCP blktap] should work fine, or wouldn't ask. If not, lemme know.

k.

In my last bit of troubleshooting, I took O_DIRECT out of the open call
in tools/blktap2/drivers/block-aio.c, and preliminary testing indicates
that this might have eliminated the problem with corruption. I'm testing
further now, but could there be an issue with alignment (since the
kernel is apparently very strict about it with direct I/O)?
Nope. It is, but they're 4k-aligned all over the place. You'd see syslog
yelling quite miserably in cases like that. Keeping an eye on syslog
(the daemon and kern facilites) is a generally good idea btw.

I've been doing that and haven't seen any unusual output so far, which I guess is good.

(Removing
this flag also brings back in use of the page cache, of course.)
I/O-wise it's not much different from the file:-path. Meaning it should
have carried you directly back into the Oom realm.

Does it make a difference that it's not using "loop" and instead the CPU usage (and presumably some blocking) occurs in user-space? There's not too much information on this out there, but it seems at though the OOM issue might be at least somewhat loop device-specific. One document that references loop OOM problems that I found is this one: http://sources.redhat.com/lvm2/wiki/DMLoop. My initial take on it was that it might be saying that it mattered when these things were being done in the kernel, but now I'm not so certain --

".. [their method and loop] submit[s] [I/O requests] via a kernel thread to the VFS layer using traditional I/O calls (read, write etc.). This has the advantage that it should work with any file system type supported by the Linux VFS (including networked file systems), but has some drawbacks that may affect performance and scalability. This is because it is hard to predict what a file system may attempt to do when an I/O request is submitted; for example, it may need to allocate memory to handle the request and the loopback driver has no control over this. Particularly under low-memory or intensive I/O scenarios this can lead to out of memory (OOM) problems or deadlocks as the kernel tries to make memory available to the VFS layer while satisfying a request from the block layer. "

Would there be an advantage to using blktap/blktap2 over loop, if I leave off O_DIRECT? Would it be faster, or anything like that?

Just reducing the cpu count alone sounds like sth worth trying even on a
production box, if the current state of things already tends to take the
system down. Also, the dirty_ratio sysctl should be pretty safe to tweak
at runtime.

That's good to hear.

The default for dirty_ratio is 20. I tried halving that to 10, but it
didn't help.
Still too much. That's meant to be %/task. Try 2, with 1.5G that's still
a decent 30M write cache and should block all out of 24 disks after some
700M, worst case. Or so I think...

Ah, ok. I was thinking that it was global. With a small per-process cache like that, it becomes much closer to AIO for writes, but at least the leftover memory could still be used for the read cache.

-John

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