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Message-ID: <A1D98E0E70C35541AEBDE192A520C5434DB3BC@AMSPEX01CL03.citrite.net>
Date:	Tue, 11 Aug 2015 09:45:42 +0000
From:	Rafal Mielniczuk <rafal.mielniczuk@...rix.com>
To:	Bob Liu <bob.liu@...cle.com>, Jens Axboe <axboe@...com>
CC:	Marcus Granado <Marcus.Granado@...rix.com>,
	Arianna Avanzini <avanzini.arianna@...il.com>,
	Felipe Franciosi <felipe.franciosi@...rix.com>,
	"linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
	"Christoph Hellwig" <hch@...radead.org>,
	David Vrabel <david.vrabel@...rix.com>,
	"xen-devel@...ts.xenproject.org" <xen-devel@...ts.xenproject.org>,
	"boris.ostrovsky@...cle.com" <boris.ostrovsky@...cle.com>,
	Jonathan Davies <Jonathan.Davies@...rix.com>
Subject: Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH RFC v2 0/5] Multi-queue support for
 xen-blkfront and xen-blkback

On 11/08/15 07:08, Bob Liu wrote:
> On 08/10/2015 11:52 PM, Jens Axboe wrote:
>> On 08/10/2015 05:03 AM, Rafal Mielniczuk wrote:
>>> On 01/07/15 04:03, Jens Axboe wrote:
>>>> On 06/30/2015 08:21 AM, Marcus Granado wrote:
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> Our measurements for the multiqueue patch indicate a clear improvement
>>>>> in iops when more queues are used.
>>>>>
>>>>> The measurements were obtained under the following conditions:
>>>>>
>>>>> - using blkback as the dom0 backend with the multiqueue patch applied to
>>>>> a dom0 kernel 4.0 on 8 vcpus.
>>>>>
>>>>> - using a recent Ubuntu 15.04 kernel 3.19 with multiqueue frontend
>>>>> applied to be used as a guest on 4 vcpus
>>>>>
>>>>> - using a micron RealSSD P320h as the underlying local storage on a Dell
>>>>> PowerEdge R720 with 2 Xeon E5-2643 v2 cpus.
>>>>>
>>>>> - fio 2.2.7-22-g36870 as the generator of synthetic loads in the guest.
>>>>> We used direct_io to skip caching in the guest and ran fio for 60s
>>>>> reading a number of block sizes ranging from 512 bytes to 4MiB. Queue
>>>>> depth of 32 for each queue was used to saturate individual vcpus in the
>>>>> guest.
>>>>>
>>>>> We were interested in observing storage iops for different values of
>>>>> block sizes. Our expectation was that iops would improve when increasing
>>>>> the number of queues, because both the guest and dom0 would be able to
>>>>> make use of more vcpus to handle these requests.
>>>>>
>>>>> These are the results (as aggregate iops for all the fio threads) that
>>>>> we got for the conditions above with sequential reads:
>>>>>
>>>>> fio_threads  io_depth  block_size   1-queue_iops  8-queue_iops
>>>>>       8           32       512           158K         264K
>>>>>       8           32        1K           157K         260K
>>>>>       8           32        2K           157K         258K
>>>>>       8           32        4K           148K         257K
>>>>>       8           32        8K           124K         207K
>>>>>       8           32       16K            84K         105K
>>>>>       8           32       32K            50K          54K
>>>>>       8           32       64K            24K          27K
>>>>>       8           32      128K            11K          13K
>>>>>
>>>>> 8-queue iops was better than single queue iops for all the block sizes.
>>>>> There were very good improvements as well for sequential writes with
>>>>> block size 4K (from 80K iops with single queue to 230K iops with 8
>>>>> queues), and no regressions were visible in any measurement performed.
>>>> Great results! And I don't know why this code has lingered for so long,
>>>> so thanks for helping get some attention to this again.
>>>>
>>>> Personally I'd be really interested in the results for the same set of
>>>> tests, but without the blk-mq patches. Do you have them, or could you
>>>> potentially run them?
>>>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> We rerun the tests for sequential reads with the identical settings but with Bob Liu's multiqueue patches reverted from dom0 and guest kernels.
>>> The results we obtained were *better* than the results we got with multiqueue patches applied:
>>>
>>> fio_threads  io_depth  block_size   1-queue_iops  8-queue_iops  *no-mq-patches_iops*
>>>       8           32       512           158K         264K         321K
>>>       8           32        1K           157K         260K         328K
>>>       8           32        2K           157K         258K         336K
>>>       8           32        4K           148K         257K         308K
>>>       8           32        8K           124K         207K         188K
>>>       8           32       16K            84K         105K         82K
>>>       8           32       32K            50K          54K         36K
>>>       8           32       64K            24K          27K         16K
>>>       8           32      128K            11K          13K         11K
>>>
>>> We noticed that the requests are not merged by the guest when the multiqueue patches are applied,
>>> which results in a regression for small block sizes (RealSSD P320h's optimal block size is around 32-64KB).
>>>
>>> We observed similar regression for the Dell MZ-5EA1000-0D3 100 GB 2.5" Internal SSD
>>>
>>> As I understand blk-mq layer bypasses I/O scheduler which also effectively disables merges.
>>> Could you explain why it is difficult to enable merging in the blk-mq layer?
>>> That could help closing the performance gap we observed.
>>>
>>> Otherwise, the tests shows that the multiqueue patches does not improve the performance,
>>> at least when it comes to sequential read/writes operations.
>> blk-mq still provides merging, there should be no difference there. Does the xen patches set BLK_MQ_F_SHOULD_MERGE?
>>
> Yes.
> Is it possible that xen-blkfront driver dequeue requests too fast after we have multiple hardware queues?
> Because new requests don't have the chance merging with old requests which were already dequeued and issued.
>

For some reason we don't see merges even when we set multiqueue to 1.
Below are some stats from the guest system when doing sequential 4KB reads:

$ fio --name=test --ioengine=libaio --direct=1 --rw=read --numjobs=8
      --iodepth=32 --time_based=1 --runtime=300 --bs=4KB
--filename=/dev/xvdb

$ iostat -xt 5 /dev/xvdb
avg-cpu:  %user   %nice %system %iowait  %steal   %idle
           0.50    0.00    2.73   85.14    2.00    9.63

Device:         rrqm/s   wrqm/s       r/s     w/s     rkB/s    wkB/s
avgrq-sz avgqu-sz   await r_await w_await  svctm  %util
xvdb              0.00     0.00 156926.00    0.00 627704.00     0.00    
8.00    30.06    0.19    0.19    0.00   0.01 100.48

$ cat /sys/block/xvdb/queue/scheduler
none

$ cat /sys/block/xvdb/queue/nomerges
0

Relevant bits from the xenstore configuration on the dom0:

/local/domain/0/backend/vbd/2/51728/dev = "xvdb"
/local/domain/0/backend/vbd/2/51728/backend-kind = "vbd"
/local/domain/0/backend/vbd/2/51728/type = "phy"
/local/domain/0/backend/vbd/2/51728/multi-queue-max-queues = "1"

/local/domain/2/device/vbd/51728/multi-queue-num-queues = "1"
/local/domain/2/device/vbd/51728/ring-ref = "9"
/local/domain/2/device/vbd/51728/event-channel = "60"

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