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Message-Id: <1223302903.16546.58.camel@think.oraclecorp.com>
Date: Mon, 06 Oct 2008 10:21:43 -0400
From: Chris Mason <chris.mason@...cle.com>
To: "Aneesh Kumar K.V" <aneesh.kumar@...ux.vnet.ibm.com>
Cc: Dave Chinner <david@...morbit.com>,
Andrew Morton <akpm@...ux-foundation.org>,
linux-kernel <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
linux-fsdevel <linux-fsdevel@...r.kernel.org>,
ext4 <linux-ext4@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] Improve buffered streaming write ordering
On Mon, 2008-10-06 at 15:46 +0530, Aneesh Kumar K.V wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 03, 2008 at 03:45:55PM -0400, Chris Mason wrote:
> > On Fri, 2008-10-03 at 09:43 +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > > On Thu, Oct 02, 2008 at 11:48:56PM +0530, Aneesh Kumar K.V wrote:
> > > > On Thu, Oct 02, 2008 at 08:20:54AM -0400, Chris Mason wrote:
> > > > > On Wed, 2008-10-01 at 21:52 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > > > > For a 4.5GB streaming buffered write, this printk inside
> > > > > ext4_da_writepage shows up 37,2429 times in /var/log/messages.
> > > > >
> > > >
> > > > Part of that can happen due to shrink_page_list -> pageout -> writepagee
> > > > call back with lots of unallocated buffer_heads(blocks).
> > >
> > > Quite frankly, a simple streaming buffered write should *never*
> > > trigger writeback from the LRU in memory reclaim.
> >
> > The blktrace runs on ext4 didn't show kswapd doing any IO. It isn't
> > clear if this is because ext4 did the redirty trick or if kswapd didn't
> > call writepage.
> >
> > -chris
>
> This patch actually reduced the number of extents for the below test
> from 564 to 171.
>
For my array, this patch brings the number of ext4 extents down from
over 4000 to 27. The throughput reported by dd goes up from ~80MB/s to
330MB/s, which means buffered IO is going as fast as O_DIRECT.
Here's the graph:
http://oss.oracle.com/~mason/bugs/writeback_ordering/ext4-aneesh.png
The strange metadata writeback for the uninit block groups is gone.
Looking at the patch, I think the ext4_writepages code should just make
its own write_cache_pages. It's pretty hard to follow the code that is
there for ext4 vs the code that is there to make write_cache_pages do
what ext4 expects it to.
-chris
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