From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S1753876AbZGFRtU (ORCPT ); Mon, 6 Jul 2009 13:49:20 -0400 Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org id S1751329AbZGFRtJ (ORCPT ); Mon, 6 Jul 2009 13:49:09 -0400 Received: from moutng.kundenserver.de ([212.227.126.188]:52633 "EHLO moutng.kundenserver.de" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1751950AbZGFRtH (ORCPT ); Mon, 6 Jul 2009 13:49:07 -0400 Message-ID: <4A5238EC.1070505@vlnb.net> Date: Mon, 06 Jul 2009 21:48:28 +0400 From: Vladislav Bolkhovitin User-Agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.21 (X11/20090320) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: Ronald Moesbergen CC: Wu Fengguang , linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, akpm@linux-foundation.org, kosaki.motohiro@jp.fujitsu.com, Alan.Brunelle@hp.com, hifumi.hisashi@oss.ntt.co.jp, linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org, jens.axboe@oracle.com, randy.dunlap@oracle.com, Bart Van Assche Subject: Re: [RESEND] [PATCH] readahead:add blk_run_backing_dev References: <4A3CD62B.1020407@vlnb.net> <20090629142124.GA28945@localhost> <20090629150109.GA3534@localhost> <4A48DFC5.3090205@vlnb.net> <20090630010414.GB31418@localhost> <4A49EEF9.6010205@vlnb.net> <4A4DE3C1.5080307@vlnb.net> <4A51DC0A.10302@vlnb.net> In-Reply-To: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Provags-ID: V01U2FsdGVkX1800sRMLQ3KfEZ86XtEtONhpnGI4oZEqMnggJb 7OvmitE9cwBVnFoowb29IBA/VtpMBszGq7O1yj1hXNWSXnjBiR /4Q48RKSZ1cGztK8XwdSQ== Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Ronald Moesbergen, on 07/06/2009 06:37 PM wrote: > 2009/7/6 Vladislav Bolkhovitin : >> (Restored the original list of recipients in this thread as I was asked.) >> >> Hi Ronald, >> >> Ronald Moesbergen, on 07/04/2009 07:19 PM wrote: >>> 2009/7/3 Vladislav Bolkhovitin : >>>> Ronald Moesbergen, on 07/03/2009 01:14 PM wrote: >>>>>>> OK, now I tend to agree on decreasing max_sectors_kb and increasing >>>>>>> read_ahead_kb. But before actually trying to push that idea I'd like >>>>>>> to >>>>>>> - do more benchmarks >>>>>>> - figure out why context readahead didn't help SCST performance >>>>>>> (previous traces show that context readahead is submitting perfect >>>>>>> large io requests, so I wonder if it's some io scheduler bug) >>>>>> Because, as we found out, without your >>>>>> http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 >>>>>> patch read-ahead was nearly disabled, hence there were no difference >>>>>> which >>>>>> algorithm was used? >>>>>> >>>>>> Ronald, can you run the following tests, please? This time with 2 >>>>>> hosts, >>>>>> initiator (client) and target (server) connected using 1 Gbps iSCSI. It >>>>>> would be the best if on the client vanilla 2.6.29 will be ran, but any >>>>>> other >>>>>> kernel will be fine as well, only specify which. Blockdev-perftest >>>>>> should >>>>>> be >>>>>> ran as before in buffered mode, i.e. with "-a" switch. >>>>>> >>>>>> 1. All defaults on the client, on the server vanilla 2.6.29 with >>>>>> Fengguang's >>>>>> http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 patch with all default settings. >>>>>> >>>>>> 2. All defaults on the client, on the server vanilla 2.6.29 with >>>>>> Fengguang's >>>>>> http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 patch with default RA size and 64KB >>>>>> max_sectors_kb. >>>>>> >>>>>> 3. All defaults on the client, on the server vanilla 2.6.29 with >>>>>> Fengguang's >>>>>> http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 patch with 2MB RA size and default >>>>>> max_sectors_kb. >>>>>> >>>>>> 4. All defaults on the client, on the server vanilla 2.6.29 with >>>>>> Fengguang's >>>>>> http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 patch with 2MB RA size and 64KB >>>>>> max_sectors_kb. >>>>>> >>>>>> 5. All defaults on the client, on the server vanilla 2.6.29 with >>>>>> Fengguang's >>>>>> http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 patch and with context RA patch. RA >>>>>> size >>>>>> and max_sectors_kb are default. For your convenience I committed the >>>>>> backported context RA patches into the SCST SVN repository. >>>>>> >>>>>> 6. All defaults on the client, on the server vanilla 2.6.29 with >>>>>> Fengguang's >>>>>> http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 and context RA patches with default >>>>>> RA >>>>>> size and 64KB max_sectors_kb. >>>>>> >>>>>> 7. All defaults on the client, on the server vanilla 2.6.29 with >>>>>> Fengguang's >>>>>> http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 and context RA patches with 2MB RA >>>>>> size >>>>>> and default max_sectors_kb. >>>>>> >>>>>> 8. All defaults on the client, on the server vanilla 2.6.29 with >>>>>> Fengguang's >>>>>> http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 and context RA patches with 2MB RA >>>>>> size >>>>>> and 64KB max_sectors_kb. >>>>>> >>>>>> 9. On the client default RA size and 64KB max_sectors_kb. On the server >>>>>> vanilla 2.6.29 with Fengguang's http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 and >>>>>> context RA patches with 2MB RA size and 64KB max_sectors_kb. >>>>>> >>>>>> 10. On the client 2MB RA size and default max_sectors_kb. On the server >>>>>> vanilla 2.6.29 with Fengguang's http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 and >>>>>> context RA patches with 2MB RA size and 64KB max_sectors_kb. >>>>>> >>>>>> 11. On the client 2MB RA size and 64KB max_sectors_kb. On the server >>>>>> vanilla >>>>>> 2.6.29 with Fengguang's http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/319 and context >>>>>> RA >>>>>> patches with 2MB RA size and 64KB max_sectors_kb. >>>>> Ok, done. Performance is pretty bad overall :( >>>>> >>>>> The kernels I used: >>>>> client kernel: 2.6.26-15lenny3 (debian) >>>>> server kernel: 2.6.29.5 with blk_dev_run patch >>>>> >>>>> And I adjusted the blockdev-perftest script to drop caches on both the >>>>> server (via ssh) and the client. >>>>> >>>>> The results: >>>>> >>> ... previous results ... >>> >>>> Those are on the server without io_context-2.6.29 and readahead-2.6.29 >>>> patches applied and with CFQ scheduler, correct? >>>> >>>> Then we see how reorder of requests caused by many I/O threads submitting >>>> I/O in separate I/O contexts badly affect performance and no RA, >>>> especially >>>> with default 128KB RA size, can solve it. Less max_sectors_kb on the >>>> client >>>> => more requests it sends at once => more reorder on the server => worse >>>> throughput. Although, Fengguang, in theory, context RA with 2MB RA size >>>> should considerably help it, no? >>>> >>>> Ronald, can you perform those tests again with both io_context-2.6.29 and >>>> readahead-2.6.29 patches applied on the server, please? >>> Hi Vlad, >>> >>> I have retested with the patches you requested (and got access to the >>> systems today :) ) The results are better, but still not great. >>> >>> client kernel: 2.6.26-15lenny3 (debian) >>> server kernel: 2.6.29.5 with io_context and readahead patch >>> >>> 5) client: default, server: default >>> blocksize R R R R(avg, R(std R >>> (bytes) (s) (s) (s) MB/s) ,MB/s) (IOPS) >>> 67108864 18.303 19.867 18.481 54.299 1.961 0.848 >>> 33554432 18.321 17.681 18.708 56.181 1.314 1.756 >>> 16777216 17.816 17.406 19.257 56.494 2.410 3.531 >>> 8388608 18.077 17.727 19.338 55.789 2.056 6.974 >>> 4194304 17.918 16.601 18.287 58.276 2.454 14.569 >>> 2097152 17.426 17.334 17.610 58.661 0.384 29.331 >>> 1048576 19.358 18.764 17.253 55.607 2.734 55.607 >>> 524288 17.951 18.163 17.440 57.379 0.983 114.757 >>> 262144 18.196 17.724 17.520 57.499 0.907 229.995 >>> 131072 18.342 18.259 17.551 56.751 1.131 454.010 >>> 65536 17.733 18.572 17.134 57.548 1.893 920.766 >>> 32768 19.081 19.321 17.364 55.213 2.673 1766.818 >>> 16384 17.181 18.729 17.731 57.343 2.033 3669.932 >>> >>> 6) client: default, server: 64 max_sectors_kb, RA default >>> blocksize R R R R(avg, R(std R >>> (bytes) (s) (s) (s) MB/s) ,MB/s) (IOPS) >>> 67108864 21.790 20.062 19.534 50.153 2.304 0.784 >>> 33554432 20.212 19.744 19.564 51.623 0.706 1.613 >>> 16777216 20.404 19.329 19.738 51.680 1.148 3.230 >>> 8388608 20.170 20.772 19.509 50.852 1.304 6.356 >>> 4194304 19.334 18.742 18.522 54.296 0.978 13.574 >>> 2097152 19.413 18.858 18.884 53.758 0.715 26.879 >>> 1048576 20.472 18.755 18.476 53.347 2.377 53.347 >>> 524288 19.120 20.104 18.404 53.378 1.925 106.756 >>> 262144 20.337 19.213 18.636 52.866 1.901 211.464 >>> 131072 19.199 18.312 19.970 53.510 1.900 428.083 >>> 65536 19.855 20.114 19.592 51.584 0.555 825.342 >>> 32768 20.586 18.724 20.340 51.592 2.204 1650.941 >>> 16384 21.119 19.834 19.594 50.792 1.651 3250.669 >>> >>> 7) client: default, server: default max_sectors_kb, RA 2MB >>> blocksize R R R R(avg, R(std R >>> (bytes) (s) (s) (s) MB/s) ,MB/s) (IOPS) >>> 67108864 17.767 16.489 16.949 60.050 1.842 0.938 >>> 33554432 16.777 17.034 17.102 60.341 0.500 1.886 >>> 16777216 18.509 16.784 16.971 58.891 2.537 3.681 >>> 8388608 18.058 17.949 17.599 57.313 0.632 7.164 >>> 4194304 18.286 17.648 17.026 58.055 1.692 14.514 >>> 2097152 17.387 18.451 17.875 57.226 1.388 28.613 >>> 1048576 18.270 17.698 17.570 57.397 0.969 57.397 >>> 524288 16.708 17.900 17.233 59.306 1.668 118.611 >>> 262144 18.041 17.381 18.035 57.484 1.011 229.934 >>> 131072 17.994 17.777 18.146 56.981 0.481 455.844 >>> 65536 17.097 18.597 17.737 57.563 1.975 921.011 >>> 32768 17.167 17.035 19.693 57.254 3.721 1832.127 >>> 16384 17.144 16.664 17.623 59.762 1.367 3824.774 >>> >>> 8) client: default, server: 64 max_sectors_kb, RA 2MB >>> blocksize R R R R(avg, R(std R >>> (bytes) (s) (s) (s) MB/s) ,MB/s) (IOPS) >>> 67108864 20.003 21.133 19.308 50.894 1.881 0.795 >>> 33554432 19.448 20.015 18.908 52.657 1.222 1.646 >>> 16777216 19.964 19.350 19.106 52.603 0.967 3.288 >>> 8388608 18.961 19.213 19.318 53.437 0.419 6.680 >>> 4194304 18.135 19.508 19.361 53.948 1.788 13.487 >>> 2097152 18.753 19.471 18.367 54.315 1.306 27.158 >>> 1048576 19.189 18.586 18.867 54.244 0.707 54.244 >>> 524288 18.985 19.199 18.840 53.874 0.417 107.749 >>> 262144 19.064 21.143 19.674 51.398 2.204 205.592 >>> 131072 18.691 18.664 19.116 54.406 0.594 435.245 >>> 65536 18.468 20.673 18.554 53.389 2.729 854.229 >>> 32768 20.401 21.156 19.552 50.323 1.623 1610.331 >>> 16384 19.532 20.028 20.466 51.196 0.977 3276.567 >>> >>> 9) client: 64 max_sectors_kb, default RA. server: 64 max_sectors_kb, RA >>> 2MB >>> blocksize R R R R(avg, R(std R >>> (bytes) (s) (s) (s) MB/s) ,MB/s) (IOPS) >>> 67108864 16.458 16.649 17.346 60.919 1.364 0.952 >>> 33554432 16.479 16.744 17.069 61.096 0.878 1.909 >>> 16777216 17.128 16.585 17.112 60.456 0.910 3.778 >>> 8388608 17.322 16.780 16.885 60.262 0.824 7.533 >>> 4194304 17.530 16.725 16.756 60.250 1.299 15.063 >>> 2097152 16.580 17.875 16.619 60.221 2.076 30.110 >>> 1048576 17.550 17.406 17.075 59.049 0.681 59.049 >>> 524288 16.492 18.211 16.832 59.718 2.519 119.436 >>> 262144 17.241 17.115 17.365 59.397 0.352 237.588 >>> 131072 17.430 16.902 17.511 59.271 0.936 474.167 >>> 65536 16.726 16.894 17.246 60.404 0.768 966.461 >>> 32768 16.662 17.517 17.052 59.989 1.224 1919.658 >>> 16384 17.429 16.793 16.753 60.285 1.085 3858.268 >>> >>> 10) client: default max_sectors_kb, 2MB RA. server: 64 max_sectors_kb, RA >>> 2MB >>> blocksize R R R R(avg, R(std R >>> (bytes) (s) (s) (s) MB/s) ,MB/s) (IOPS) >>> 67108864 17.601 18.334 17.379 57.650 1.307 0.901 >>> 33554432 18.281 18.128 17.169 57.381 1.610 1.793 >>> 16777216 17.660 17.875 17.356 58.091 0.703 3.631 >>> 8388608 17.724 17.810 18.383 56.992 0.918 7.124 >>> 4194304 17.475 17.770 19.003 56.704 2.031 14.176 >>> 2097152 17.287 17.674 18.492 57.516 1.604 28.758 >>> 1048576 17.972 17.460 18.777 56.721 1.689 56.721 >>> 524288 18.680 18.952 19.445 53.837 0.890 107.673 >>> 262144 18.070 18.337 18.639 55.817 0.707 223.270 >>> 131072 16.990 16.651 16.862 60.832 0.507 486.657 >>> 65536 17.707 16.972 17.520 58.870 1.066 941.924 >>> 32768 17.767 17.208 17.205 58.887 0.885 1884.399 >>> 16384 18.258 17.252 18.035 57.407 1.407 3674.059 >>> >>> 11) client: 64 max_sectors_kb, 2MB. RA server: 64 max_sectors_kb, RA 2MB >>> blocksize R R R R(avg, R(std R >>> (bytes) (s) (s) (s) MB/s) ,MB/s) (IOPS) >>> 67108864 17.993 18.307 18.718 55.850 0.902 0.873 >>> 33554432 19.554 18.485 17.902 54.988 1.993 1.718 >>> 16777216 18.829 18.236 18.748 55.052 0.785 3.441 >>> 8388608 21.152 19.065 18.738 52.257 2.745 6.532 >>> 4194304 19.131 19.703 17.850 54.288 2.268 13.572 >>> 2097152 19.093 19.152 19.509 53.196 0.504 26.598 >>> 1048576 19.371 18.775 18.804 53.953 0.772 53.953 >>> 524288 20.003 17.911 18.602 54.470 2.476 108.940 >>> 262144 19.182 19.460 18.476 53.809 1.183 215.236 >>> 131072 19.403 19.192 18.907 53.429 0.567 427.435 >>> 65536 19.502 19.656 18.599 53.219 1.309 851.509 >>> 32768 18.746 18.747 18.250 55.119 0.701 1763.817 >>> 16384 20.977 19.437 18.840 51.951 2.319 3324.862 >> The results look inconsistently with what you had previously (89.7 MB/s). >> How can you explain it? > > I had more patches applied with that test: (scst_exec_req_fifo-2.6.29, > put_page_callback-2.6.29) and I used a different dd command: > > dd if=/dev/sdc of=/dev/zero bs=512K count=2000 > > But all that said, I can't reproduce speeds that high now. Must have > made a mistake back then (maybe I forgot to clear the pagecache). If you forgot to clear the cache, you would had had the wire throughput (110 MB/s) or more. >> I think, most likely, there was some confusion between the tested and >> patched versions of the kernel or you forgot to apply the io_context patch. >> Please recheck. > > The tests above were definitely done right, I just rechecked the > patches, and I do see an average increase of about 10MB/s over an > unpatched kernel. But overall the performance is still pretty bad. Have you rebuild and reinstall SCST after patching kernel? > Ronald. > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/ >