On Tue, 02 Oct 2007 23:37:31 +0200 (CEST)
Anders Bostr__m <[email protected]> wrote:
> My computer suffers from high load average when the system is idle,
> introduced by commit 44d306e1508fef6fa7a6eb15a1aba86ef68389a6 .
>
> Long story:
>
> 2.6.20 and all later versions I've tested, including 2.6.21 and
> 2.6.22, make the load average high. Even when the computer is totally
> idle (I've tested in single user mode), the load average end up
> at ~0.30. The computer is still responsive, and the only fault seems
> to be the too high load average. All versions up to and including
> 2.6.19.7 is fine, and don't suffer from the problem.
>
> I git bisect between 2.6.19 and 2.6.20 gave me
> 44d306e1508fef6fa7a6eb15a1aba86ef68389a6 "[PATCH] user of the jiffies
> rounding code: JBD" as the first patch with the
> problem. 2.6.20 with 44d306e1508fef6fa7a6eb15a1aba86ef68389a6 reverted
> works fine. 2.6.23-rc8 with 44d306e1508fef6fa7a6eb15a1aba86ef68389a6
> reverted also works fine.
>
> This fixes the problem:
>
> -------------------------- fs/jbd/transaction.c -----------------------------
> index cceaf57..d38e0d5 100644
> @@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ get_transaction(journal_t *journal, transaction_t *transaction)
> spin_lock_init(&transaction->t_handle_lock);
>
> /* Set up the commit timer for the new transaction. */
> - journal->j_commit_timer.expires = round_jiffies(transaction->t_expires);
> + journal->j_commit_timer.expires = transaction->t_expires;
> add_timer(&journal->j_commit_timer);
>
> J_ASSERT(journal->j_running_transaction == NULL);
>
>
> I've only seen this problem on my home desktop computer. My work
> desktop computer and several other computers at work don't suffer from
> this problem. However, all other computers I've tested on is using
> AMD64 as architecture, and not i386 as my home desktop computer.
>
> Please let me know how I can assist in further debugging of this, if
> needed.
This is unexpected. High load average is due to either a task chewing a
lot of CPU time or a task stuck in uninterruptible sleep.
Can you please work out which of these is happening? Run `top' on an idle
system. Is the CPU less than 1% loaded?
Run
ps aux | grep " D"
or something like that on an idle system, see if you can spot a task which
is spending time in D state.
If there's a task whcih is spending time in D state, try running
echo w > /proc/sysrq-trigger ; dmesg -c > foo
the check "foo" to see if it has a task in D state (search foo for " D ").
If it's not there, do the sysrq again, repeat until you've managed to
capture a trace of the blocked task.
If it turns out that the CPU really is spending excess amounts of time
being busy then a kernel profile would be a good way of finding out where
it is spinning. Or run sysrq-P from the keyboard a few times.
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