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Re: [PATCHv 2] tcp: properly initialize tcp memory limits part 2 (fix nfs regression) |
On 03/02/2012 02:50 PM, Sergei Trofimovich wrote:
The change looks like a typo (division flipped to multiplication):limit = nr_free_buffer_pages() / 8; limit = nr_free_buffer_pages()<< (PAGE_SHIFT - 10);Hi, thanks for the reporting. It's not a typo. It was previously: sysctl_tcp_mem[1]<< (PAGE_SHIFT - 7). Looks like we need to do the limit check before shift the value. Please try the following patch, thanks.Still does not help. I test it by checking sha1sum of a large file over NFS (small files seem to work simetimes): $ strace sha1sum /gentoo/distfiles/gcc-4.6.2.tar.bz2 ... open("/gentoo/distfiles/gcc-4.6.2.tar.bz2", O_RDONLY <HUNG> After a certain timeout dmesg gets odd spam: [ 314.848094] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.848134] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.848145] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.957047] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.957066] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.957075] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.957085] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.957100] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.958023] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.958035] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.958044] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying [ 314.958054] nfs: server vmhost not responding, still trying looks like bogus messages. Might be relevant to mishandled timings somewhere else or a bug in nfs code.And after 120 seconds hung tasks shows it might be an OOM issue Likely caused by patch, as it's a 2GB RAM +4GB swap amd64 box not running anything heavy:
That is a bit weird.First because with Jason's patch, we should end up with the very same calculation, at the same exact order, as it was in older kernels. Second, because by shifting << 10, you should be ending up with very small numbers, effectively having tcp_rmem[1] == tcp_rmem[2], and the same for wmem.
Can you share which numbers you end up with at /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_{r,w}mem ?
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