#define WB_WORK_REASON \
EM( WB_REASON_BACKGROUND, "background") \
- EM( WB_REASON_TRY_TO_FREE_PAGES, "try_to_free_pages") \
+ EM( WB_REASON_VMSCAN, "vmscan") \
EM( WB_REASON_SYNC, "sync") \
EM( WB_REASON_PERIODIC, "periodic") \
EM( WB_REASON_LAPTOP_TIMER, "laptop_timer") \
/*
* If dirty pages are scanned that are not queued for IO, it
- * implies that flushers are not keeping up. In this case, flag
- * the pgdat PGDAT_DIRTY and kswapd will start writing pages from
- * reclaim context.
+ * implies that flushers are not doing their job. This can
+ * happen when memory pressure pushes dirty pages to the end of
+ * the LRU before the dirty limits are breached and the dirty
+ * data has expired. It can also happen when the proportion of
+ * dirty pages grows not through writes but through memory
+ * pressure reclaiming all the clean cache. And in some cases,
+ * the flushers simply cannot keep up with the allocation
+ * rate. Nudge the flusher threads in case they are asleep, but
+ * also allow kswapd to start writing pages during reclaim.
*/
- if (stat.nr_unqueued_dirty == nr_taken)
+ if (stat.nr_unqueued_dirty == nr_taken) {
+ wakeup_flusher_threads(0, WB_REASON_VMSCAN);
set_bit(PGDAT_DIRTY, &pgdat->flags);
+ }
/*
* If kswapd scans pages marked marked for immediate
writeback_threshold = sc->nr_to_reclaim + sc->nr_to_reclaim / 2;
if (total_scanned > writeback_threshold) {
wakeup_flusher_threads(laptop_mode ? 0 : total_scanned,
- WB_REASON_TRY_TO_FREE_PAGES);
+ WB_REASON_VMSCAN);
sc->may_writepage = 1;
}
} while (--sc->priority >= 0);