• Dave Chinner's avatar
    xfs: push the AIL from memory reclaim and periodic sync · fd074841
    Dave Chinner authored
    When we are short on memory, we want to expedite the cleaning of
    dirty objects.  Hence when we run short on memory, we need to kick
    the AIL flushing into action to clean as many dirty objects as
    quickly as possible.  To implement this, sample the lsn of the log
    item at the head of the AIL and use that as the push target for the
    AIL flush.
    
    Further, we keep items in the AIL that are dirty that are not
    tracked any other way, so we can get objects sitting in the AIL that
    don't get written back until the AIL is pushed. Hence to get the
    filesystem to the idle state, we might need to push the AIL to flush
    out any remaining dirty objects sitting in the AIL. This requires
    the same push mechanism as the reclaim push.
    
    This patch also renames xfs_trans_ail_tail() to xfs_ail_min_lsn() to
    match the new xfs_ail_max_lsn() function introduced in this patch.
    Similarly for xfs_trans_ail_push -> xfs_ail_push.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarAlex Elder <aelder@sgi.com>
    fd074841
xfs_sync.c 28.4 KB