diff options
| author | Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org> | 2026-04-09 05:26:36 -0700 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> | 2026-04-18 00:10:55 -0700 |
| commit | 2b19bf05719b73f7d04d7d27ec423b459b868852 (patch) | |
| tree | f24c270a2aaf72be6bff53005b0c1b4fe389518c /tools/perf/scripts/python/bin/stackcollapse-report | |
| parent | c45b354911d01565156e38d7f6bc07edb51fc34c (diff) | |
mm/vmstat: fix vmstat_shepherd double-scheduling vmstat_update
vmstat_shepherd uses delayed_work_pending() to check whether vmstat_update
is already scheduled for a given CPU before queuing it. However,
delayed_work_pending() only tests WORK_STRUCT_PENDING_BIT, which is
cleared the moment a worker thread picks up the work to execute it.
This means that while vmstat_update is actively running on a CPU,
delayed_work_pending() returns false. If need_update() also returns true
at that point (per-cpu counters not yet zeroed mid-flush), the shepherd
queues a second invocation with delay=0, causing vmstat_update to run
again immediately after finishing.
On a 72-CPU system this race is readily observable: before the fix, many
CPUs show invocation gaps well below 500 jiffies (the minimum
round_jiffies_relative() can produce), with the most extreme cases
reaching 0 jiffies—vmstat_update called twice within the same jiffy.
Fix this by replacing delayed_work_pending() with work_busy(), which
returns non-zero for both WORK_BUSY_PENDING (timer armed or work queued)
and WORK_BUSY_RUNNING (work currently executing). The shepherd now
correctly skips a CPU in all busy states.
After the fix, all sub-jiffy and most sub-100-jiffie gaps disappear. The
remaining early invocations have gaps in the 700–999 jiffie range,
attributable to round_jiffies_relative() aligning to a nearer
jiffie-second boundary rather than to this race.
Each spurious vmstat_update invocation has a measurable side effect:
refresh_cpu_vm_stats() calls decay_pcp_high() for every zone, which drains
idle per-CPU pages back to the buddy allocator via free_pcppages_bulk(),
taking the zone spinlock each time. Eliminating the double-scheduling
therefore reduces zone lock contention directly. On a 72-CPU stress-ng
workload measured with perf lock contention:
free_pcppages_bulk contention count: ~55% reduction
free_pcppages_bulk total wait time: ~57% reduction
free_pcppages_bulk max wait time: ~47% reduction
Note: work_busy() is inherently racy—between the check and the
subsequent queue_delayed_work_on() call, vmstat_update can finish
execution, leaving the work neither pending nor running. In that narrow
window the shepherd can still queue a second invocation. After the fix,
this residual race is rare and produces only occasional small gaps, a
significant improvement over the systematic double-scheduling seen with
delayed_work_pending().
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/20260409-vmstat-v2-1-e9d9a6db08ad@debian.org
Fixes: 7b8da4c7f07774 ("vmstat: get rid of the ugly cpu_stat_off variable")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Reviewed-by: Vlastimil Babka (SUSE) <vbabka@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Ilvokhin <d@ilvokhin.com>
Cc: Christoph Lameter <cl@linux.com>
Cc: David Hildenbrand <david@kernel.org>
Cc: Liam Howlett <liam.howlett@oracle.com>
Cc: Lorenzo Stoakes <ljs@kernel.org>
Cc: Mike Rapoport <rppt@kernel.org>
Cc: Shakeel Butt <shakeel.butt@linux.dev>
Cc: Suren Baghdasaryan <surenb@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/perf/scripts/python/bin/stackcollapse-report')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions
