Try to prevent negatively impact moderately dense random reads on SSD. Transaction-Per-Second numbers provided by Taobao: QPS case ------------------------------------------------------- 7536 disable context readahead totally w/ patch: 7129 slower size rampup and start RA on the 3rd read 6717 slower size rampup w/o patch: 5581 unmodified context readahead Before, readahead will be started whenever reading page N+1 when it happen to read N recently. After patch, we'll only start readahead when *three* random reads happen to access pages N, N+1, N+2. The probability of this happening is extremely low for pure random reads, unless they are very dense, which actually deserves some readahead. Also start with a smaller readahead window. The impact to interleaved sequential reads should be small, because for a long run stream, the the small readahead window rampup phase is negletable. The context readahead actually benefits clustered random reads on HDD whose seek cost is pretty high. However as SSD is increasingly used for random read workloads it's better for the context readahead to concentrate on interleaved sequential reads. Tested-by: Tao Ma Signed-off-by: Wu Fengguang --- mm/readahead.c | 8 ++++---- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) --- linux-next.orig/mm/readahead.c 2012-01-25 15:57:47.000000000 +0800 +++ linux-next/mm/readahead.c 2012-01-25 15:57:49.000000000 +0800 @@ -369,10 +369,10 @@ static int try_context_readahead(struct size = count_history_pages(mapping, ra, offset, max); /* - * no history pages: + * not enough history pages: * it could be a random read */ - if (!size) + if (size <= req_size) return 0; /* @@ -383,8 +383,8 @@ static int try_context_readahead(struct size *= 2; ra->start = offset; - ra->size = get_init_ra_size(size + req_size, max); - ra->async_size = ra->size; + ra->size = min(size + req_size, max); + ra->async_size = 1; return 1; } -- 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/