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Date:	Wed, 18 Feb 2009 11:22:29 +0900
From:	Hisashi Hifumi <hifumi.hisashi@....ntt.co.jp>
To:	Trond Myklebust <Trond.Myklebust@...app.com>,
	Nick Piggin <nickpiggin@...oo.com.au>
Cc:	linux-nfs@...r.kernel.org, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
	linux-fsdevel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH] NFS: Pagecache usage optimization on nfs


At 23:18 09/02/17, Trond Myklebust wrote:
>On Tue, 2009-02-17 at 23:43 +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
>> On Tuesday 17 February 2009 15:55:12 Hisashi Hifumi wrote:
>> > Hi, Trond.
>> >
>> > I wrote "is_partially_uptodate" aops for nfs client named
>> > nfs_is_partially_uptodate(). This aops checks that nfs_page is attached to
>> > a page and read IO to a page is within the range between wb_pgbase and
>> > wb_pgbase + wb_bytes of the nfs_page. If this aops succeed, we do not have
>> > to issue actual read IO to NFS server even if a page is not uptodate
>> > because the portion we want to read are uptodate. So with this patch random
>> > read/write mixed workloads or random read after random write workloads can
>> > be optimized and we can get performance improvement.
>> >
>> > I did benchmark test using sysbench.
>> >
>> > sysbench --num-threads=16 --max-requests=100000 --test=fileio
>> > --file-block-size=2K --file-total-size=200M --file-test-mode=rndrw
>> > --file-fsync-freq=0
>> > --file-rw-ratio=0.5 run
>> >
>> > The result was:
>> >
>> > -2.6.29-rc4
>> >
>> > Operations performed:  33356 Read, 66682 Write, 128 Other = 100166 Total
>> > Read 65.148Mb  Written 130.24Mb  Total transferred 195.39Mb  (3.1093Mb/sec)
>> >  1591.97 Requests/sec executed
>> >
>> > Test execution summary:
>> >     total time:                          62.8391s
>> >     total number of events:              100038
>> >     total time taken by event execution: 841.7603
>> >     per-request statistics:
>> >          min:                            0.0000s
>> >          avg:                            0.0084s
>> >          max:                            16.4564s
>> >          approx.  95 percentile:         0.0446s
>> >
>> > Threads fairness:
>> >     events (avg/stddev):           6252.3750/306.48
>> >     execution time (avg/stddev):   52.6100/0.38
>> >
>> >
>> > -2.6.29-rc4 + patch
>> >
>> > Operations performed:  33346 Read, 66662 Write, 128 Other = 100136 Total
>> > Read 65.129Mb  Written 130.2Mb  Total transferred 195.33Mb  (5.0113Mb/sec)
>> >  2565.81 Requests/sec executed
>> >
>> > Test execution summary:
>> >     total time:                          38.9772s
>> >     total number of events:              100008
>> >     total time taken by event execution: 339.6821
>> >     per-request statistics:
>> >          min:                            0.0000s
>> >          avg:                            0.0034s
>> >          max:                            1.6768s
>> >          approx.  95 percentile:         0.0200s
>> >
>> > Threads fairness:
>> >     events (avg/stddev):           6250.5000/302.04
>> >     execution time (avg/stddev):   21.2301/0.45
>> >
>> >
>> > I/O performance was significantly improved by following patch.
>> 
>> OK, but again this is not something too sane to do is it (ask for 2K IO
>> size on 4K page system)? What are the comparison results with 4K IO
>> size? I guess it will help some cases, but it's probably hard to find
>> realistic workloads that see such an improvement.

2K IO size on 4K page system workload might not be realistic, but
on architectures that has large page size like powerpc or ia64 , I think
this patch has significant effect(4K or 8K IO size on 16K page size).
 
>
>The other thing that worries me about it is that the scheme relies
>entirely on using the page dirtying mechanism to track updated parts of
>a page. You will lose that information as soon as the page cache is
>flushed to disk.

Can we reserve updated parts of a page even after dirty page is flushed
to HDD? If so we can get better performance number. 

>IOW: I would expect those numbers to change greatly if you increase the
>file size to the point where the VM starts evicting the pages.

Yes you are right. I think when the file size goes beyond memory size,
performance number would decrease. 

>
>There are plenty of ways in which one can tune the performance of NFS.
>It all depends on the application. For instance, our lack of tracking of
>holes means that we tend to perform very poorly when dealing with reads
>of sparse files such as in the above test. Perhaps that might be
>considered as an alternative idea?
>

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