Re: dm-ioband: Test results.

From: Mike Snitzer
Date: Wed Apr 22 2009 - 11:32:23 EST


On Tue, Apr 21 2009 at 11:14pm -0400,
Ryo Tsuruta <ryov@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> From: Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: [dm-devel] Re: dm-ioband: Test results.
> Date: Tue, 21 Apr 2009 10:16:07 -0400
>
> > On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 09:57:23AM -0400, Mike Snitzer wrote:
> > > On Tue, Apr 21 2009 at 8:10am -0400,
> > > Ryo Tsuruta <ryov@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > > > Hi Nauman,
> > > >
> > > > > > The real question is, once you create a version of dm-ioband that
> > > > > > co-operates with CFQ scheduler, how that solution would compare with
> > > > > > the patch set Vivek has posted? In my opinion, we need to converge to
> > > > > > one solution as soon as possible, so that we can work on it together
> > > > > > to refine and test it.
> > > > >
> > > > > I think I can do some help for your work. but I want to continue the
> > > > > development of dm-ioband, because dm-ioband actually works well and
> > > > > I think it has some advantages against other IO controllers.
> > > > > - It can use without cgroup.
> > > > > - It can control bandwidth on a per partition basis.
> > > > > - The driver module can be replaced without stopping the system.
> > > >
> > > > In addition, dm-ioband can run on the RHEL5.
> > >
> > > RHEL5 compatibility does not matter relative to merging an I/O bandwidth
> > > controller upstream. So both the "can [be] use without cgroup" and "can
> > > run on RHEL5" features do not help your cause of getting dm-ioband
> > > merged upstream. In fact these features serve as distractions.
> >
> > Exactly. I don't think that "it can be used without cgroup" is a feature
> > or advantage. To me it is a disadvantage and should be fixed. cgroup is
> > standard mechanism to group tasks arbitrarily and we should use that to make
> > things working instead of coming up with own ways of grouping things and
> > terming it as advantage.
> >
> > What do you mean by "The driver module can be replaced without stopping
> > the system"? I guess you mean that one does not have to reboot the system
> > to remove ioband device? So if one decides to not use the cgroup, then
> > one shall have to remove the ioband devices, remount the filesystems and
> > restart the application?
>
> Device-mapper has a feature that can replace an intermediate module
> without unmount the device like the following.
>
> --------------------- ---------------------
> | /mnt | | /mnt |
> |---------------------| |---------------------|
> | /dev/mapper/ioband1 | | /dev/mapper/ioband1 |
> |---------------------| |---------------------|
> | dm-ioband | <==> | dm-linear |
> |---------------------| |---------------------|
> | /dev/sda1 | | /dev/sda1 |
> --------------------- ---------------------
>
> So we can safely unload the dm-ioband module and update it.
>
> > With cgroup approach, if one does not want things to be classified, a user
> > can simply move all the tasks to root group and things will be fine. No
> > remounting, no application stopping etc. So this also does not look like
> > an advantage instead sounds like an disadvantage.
> >
> > Thanks
> > Vivek

Ryo,

Why is it that you repeatedly ignore concern/discussion about your
determination to continue using a custom grouping mechanism? It is this
type of excess layering that serves no purpose other than to facilitate
out-of-tree use-cases. dm-ioband would take a big step closer to being
merged upstream if you took others' feedback and showed more willingness
to work through the outstanding issues.

Mike
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