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Message-ID: <20100520202913.GC3078@redhat.com>
Date: Thu, 20 May 2010 16:29:13 -0400
From: Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@...hat.com>
To: Nauman Rafique <nauman@...gle.com>
Cc: Corrado Zoccolo <czoccolo@...il.com>,
linux kernel mailing list <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
Jens Axboe <jens.axboe@...cle.com>,
Moyer Jeff Moyer <jmoyer@...hat.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] cfq-iosched: Revert the logic of deep queues
On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 01:09:22PM -0700, Nauman Rafique wrote:
> On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 11:57 AM, Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@...hat.com> wrote:
> > On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 10:50:24AM -0400, Vivek Goyal wrote:
> >> On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 04:01:55PM +0200, Corrado Zoccolo wrote:
> >> > On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 3:18 PM, Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@...hat.com> wrote:
> >> > > On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 01:51:49AM +0200, Corrado Zoccolo wrote:
> >> > > Hi Corrado,
> >> > >
> >> > > Deep queues can happen often on high end storage. One case I can think of is
> >> > > multiple kvm virt machines running and doing IO using AIO.
> >> > >
> >> > > I am not too keen on introducing a tunable at this point of time. Reason
> >> > > being that somebody having a SATA disk and driving deep queue depths is
> >> > > not very practical thing to do. At the same time we have fixed a theoritical
> >> > > problem in the past. If somebody really runs into the issue of deep queue
> >> > > starving other random IO, then we can fix it.
> >> > >
> >> > > Even if we have to fix it, I think instead of a tunable, a better solution
> >> > > would be to expire the deep queue after one round of dispatch (after
> >> > > having dispatched "quantum" number of requests from queue). That way no
> >> > > single sync-noidle queue will starve other queues and they will get to
> >> > > dispatch IO very nicely without intorducing any bottlenecks.
> >> >
> >> > Can you implement this solution in the patch? It seems that this will
> >> > solve both the performance issue as well as non-reintroducing the
> >> > theoretical starvation problem.
> >> > If we don't mind some more tree operations, the queue could be expired
> >> > at every dispatch (if there are other queues in the service tree),
> >> > instead of every quantum dispatches, to cycle through all no-idle
> >> > queues more quickly and more fairly.
> >>
> >> Alright. Following is a copile tested only patch. I have yet to do the
> >> testing to make sure it works. But I think it should address your concern
> >> of a deep queue starving other shallow sync-noidle queues.
> >>
> >> Does this one look good?
> >
> > Well, this patch does not work. The reason being that over a period of
> > time we drive deeper queue depths (due to all the queues doing IO at
> > same time) and that means somebody doing 1 random read is stuck somewhere
> > in that 32 requests dispatched to disk and it does not issue next IO
> > till previous one is completed.
> >
> > So even if you expire the deep queue early, it will be selected again and
> > it will do more dispatches (cfq quantum seems to work only for one round
> > and for next round we don't keep track how many requests have already been
> > disptached from this queue).
> >
> > Even your solution of tunable and turning it off by default on NCQ will
> > not work as most of the SATA disks are now NCQ enabled. Its hard to find
> > non-NCQ hardware.
>
> I do not agree with the some of the statements you are making here.
> Even if drives generally support NCQ, it can still be turned off. And
> there are advantages associated with turning off NCQ, like more
> predictable latencies for IOs.
I am not sure what are you disagreeing with. If you turn off NCQ, then my
patch should work well. Issue happens only when less capable SATA disks
advertise themselves as having queue depth of 32 and IO scheduler pumps
in those many requests.
So are you agreeing that we can treat deep queues as sync-idle on non
NCQ hardware or hardware where NCQ has been turned off. On NCQ hardware
we will by default treat it as sync-noidle and that can starve other
shallow readers and for better response user should turn off NCQ?
>
> >
> > CFQ's tunable and everything is so much geared towards SATA disks that it
> > is hard to use it with servers. Now IO controller feature is primarily
> > useful for servers and it is dependent on CFQ. This seems to be a bad
> > situation. Now CFQ has to scale so that one can comfortably use with
> > high end storage without losing performance. So far folks will easily
> > switch to dealine but that take IO controller out of the picture.
>
> I beg to disagree here too. IO controller is useful for plain SATA
> disks too.
So are you creating some kind of software RAID of SATA disks and that's
why it is useful? In enterprise environment I will assume it is not
reasonable to run lots of things on single SATA disk.
> Actually I would go one step further and argue that doing
> resource management is more important for resources that see higher
> level of contention, due to lesser capacity than the demand. That's
> why IO controller would be more useful on traditional hardware.
Couple of thoughts.
- One can put more applicatoions on same piece of hardware once proper
IO control mechanism is there and create more demand and again get
into a situation where demand is more than capacity.
- Secondly, one might still want to priotize the applications so that
one application gets more bandwidth. Especially to protect against
some really heavy writer and that is independent of SATA vs enterprise
array.
Vivek
>
> >
> > Autotuning seems to be only reliable way. Default can be set right only
> > for one type of usage and other type of users will be left with the
> > exercise of setting the tunables right. Sadly, getting autotuning right
> > is hard.
> >
> > Vivek
> >
> >>
> >> Index: linux-2.6/block/cfq-iosched.c
> >> ===================================================================
> >> --- linux-2.6.orig/block/cfq-iosched.c
> >> +++ linux-2.6/block/cfq-iosched.c
> >> @@ -313,7 +313,6 @@ enum cfqq_state_flags {
> >> CFQ_CFQQ_FLAG_sync, /* synchronous queue */
> >> CFQ_CFQQ_FLAG_coop, /* cfqq is shared */
> >> CFQ_CFQQ_FLAG_split_coop, /* shared cfqq will be splitted */
> >> - CFQ_CFQQ_FLAG_deep, /* sync cfqq experienced large depth */
> >> CFQ_CFQQ_FLAG_wait_busy, /* Waiting for next request */
> >> };
> >>
> >> @@ -342,7 +341,6 @@ CFQ_CFQQ_FNS(slice_new);
> >> CFQ_CFQQ_FNS(sync);
> >> CFQ_CFQQ_FNS(coop);
> >> CFQ_CFQQ_FNS(split_coop);
> >> -CFQ_CFQQ_FNS(deep);
> >> CFQ_CFQQ_FNS(wait_busy);
> >> #undef CFQ_CFQQ_FNS
> >>
> >> @@ -2377,6 +2375,17 @@ static int cfq_dispatch_requests(struct
> >> cfq_class_idle(cfqq))) {
> >> cfqq->slice_end = jiffies + 1;
> >> cfq_slice_expired(cfqd, 0);
> >> + } else if (cfqq_type(cfqq) == SYNC_NOIDLE_WORKLOAD
> >> + && cfqq->service_tree->count > 1
> >> + && cfqq->slice_dispatch >= cfq_prio_to_maxrq(cfqd, cfqq)/2) {
> >> + /*
> >> + * Expire a sync-noidle queue immediately if it has already
> >> + * dispatched many requests. This will make sure one deep
> >> + * sync-noidle queue will not starve other shallow sync-noidle
> >> + * queues.
> >> + */
> >> + cfqq->slice_end = jiffies + 1;
> >> + cfq_slice_expired(cfqd, 0);
> >> }
> >>
> >> cfq_log_cfqq(cfqd, cfqq, "dispatched a request");
> >> @@ -3036,11 +3045,8 @@ cfq_update_idle_window(struct cfq_data *
> >>
> >> enable_idle = old_idle = cfq_cfqq_idle_window(cfqq);
> >>
> >> - if (cfqq->queued[0] + cfqq->queued[1] >= 4)
> >> - cfq_mark_cfqq_deep(cfqq);
> >> -
> >> if (!atomic_read(&cic->ioc->nr_tasks) || !cfqd->cfq_slice_idle ||
> >> - (!cfq_cfqq_deep(cfqq) && CFQQ_SEEKY(cfqq)))
> >> + CFQQ_SEEKY(cfqq))
> >> enable_idle = 0;
> >> else if (sample_valid(cic->ttime_samples)) {
> >> if (cic->ttime_mean > cfqd->cfq_slice_idle)
> >> @@ -3593,11 +3599,6 @@ static void cfq_idle_slice_timer(unsigne
> >> */
> >> if (!RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&cfqq->sort_list))
> >> goto out_kick;
> >> -
> >> - /*
> >> - * Queue depth flag is reset only when the idle didn't succeed
> >> - */
> >> - cfq_clear_cfqq_deep(cfqq);
> >> }
> >> expire:
> >> cfq_slice_expired(cfqd, timed_out);
> > --
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