mm, compaction: skip blocks where isolation fails in async direct compaction

The goal of direct compaction is to quickly make a high-order page
available for the pending allocation.  Within an aligned block of pages
of desired order, a single allocated page that cannot be isolated for
migration means that the block cannot fully merge to a buddy page that
would satisfy the allocation request.  Therefore we can reduce the
allocation stall by skipping the rest of the block immediately on
isolation failure.  For async compaction, this also means a higher
chance of succeeding until it detects contention.

We however shouldn't completely sacrifice the second objective of
compaction, which is to reduce overal long-term memory fragmentation.
As a compromise, perform the eager skipping only in direct async
compaction, while sync compaction (including kcompactd) remains
thorough.

Testing was done using stress-highalloc from mmtests, configured for
order-4 GFP_KERNEL allocations:

                                 4.6-rc1               4.6-rc1
                                  before                 after
  Success 1 Min         24.00 (  0.00%)       27.00 (-12.50%)
  Success 1 Mean        30.20 (  0.00%)       31.60 ( -4.64%)
  Success 1 Max         37.00 (  0.00%)       35.00 (  5.41%)
  Success 2 Min         42.00 (  0.00%)       32.00 ( 23.81%)
  Success 2 Mean        44.00 (  0.00%)       44.80 ( -1.82%)
  Success 2 Max         48.00 (  0.00%)       52.00 ( -8.33%)
  Success 3 Min         91.00 (  0.00%)       92.00 ( -1.10%)
  Success 3 Mean        92.20 (  0.00%)       92.80 ( -0.65%)
  Success 3 Max         94.00 (  0.00%)       93.00 (  1.06%)

We can see that success rates are unaffected by the skipping.

                4.6-rc1     4.6-rc1
                 before       after
  User         2587.42     2566.53
  System        482.89      471.20
  Elapsed      1395.68     1382.00

Times are not so useful metric for this benchmark as main portion is the
interfering kernel builds, but results do hint at reduced system times.

                                      4.6-rc1     4.6-rc1
                                       before       after
  Direct pages scanned                163614      159608
  Kswapd pages scanned               2070139     2078790
  Kswapd pages reclaimed             2061707     2069757
  Direct pages reclaimed              163354      159505

Reduced direct reclaim was unintended, but could be explained by more
successful first attempt at (async) direct compaction, which is
attempted before the first reclaim attempt in __alloc_pages_slowpath().

  Compaction stalls                    33052       39853
  Compaction success                   12121       19773
  Compaction failures                  20931       20079

Compaction is indeed more successful, and thus less likely to get
deferred, so there are also more direct compaction stalls.

  Page migrate success               3781876     3326819
  Page migrate failure                 45817       41774
  Compaction pages isolated          7868232     6941457
  Compaction migrate scanned       168160492   127269354
  Compaction migrate prescanned            0           0
  Compaction free scanned         2522142582  2326342620
  Compaction free direct alloc             0           0
  Compaction free dir. all. miss           0           0
  Compaction cost                       5252        4476

The patch reduces migration scanned pages by 25% thanks to the eager
skipping.

[hughd@google.com: prevent nr_isolated_* from going negative]
Signed-off-by: Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Hugh Dickins <hughd@google.com>
Cc: Joonsoo Kim <iamjoonsoo.kim@lge.com>
Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@techsingularity.net>
Cc: Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com>
Cc: David Rientjes <rientjes@google.com>
Cc: Minchan Kim <minchan@kernel.org>
Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
1 file changed