Re: [PATCH] btrfs: lower metadata writeback threshold on low dirtythreshold
From: Chris Mason
Date: Thu May 03 2012 - 08:32:33 EST
On Thu, May 03, 2012 at 11:25:28AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> On Thu 03-05-12 11:43:11, Wu Fengguang wrote:
> > This helps write performance when setting the dirty threshold to tiny numbers.
> >
> > 3.4.0-rc2 3.4.0-rc2-btrfs4+
> > ------------ ------------------------
> > 96.92 -0.4% 96.54 bay/thresh=1000M/btrfs-100dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> > 98.47 +0.0% 98.50 bay/thresh=1000M/btrfs-10dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> > 99.38 -0.3% 99.06 bay/thresh=1000M/btrfs-1dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> > 98.04 -0.0% 98.02 bay/thresh=100M/btrfs-100dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> > 98.68 +0.3% 98.98 bay/thresh=100M/btrfs-10dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> > 99.34 -0.0% 99.31 bay/thresh=100M/btrfs-1dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> > ==> 88.98 +9.6% 97.53 bay/thresh=10M/btrfs-10dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> > ==> 86.99 +13.1% 98.39 bay/thresh=10M/btrfs-1dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> > ==> 2.75 +2442.4% 69.88 bay/thresh=1M/btrfs-10dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> > ==> 3.31 +2634.1% 90.54 bay/thresh=1M/btrfs-1dd-1-3.4.0-rc2
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Fengguang Wu <fengguang.wu@xxxxxxxxx>
> > ---
> > fs/btrfs/disk-io.c | 3 ++-
> > 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
> >
> > --- linux-next.orig/fs/btrfs/disk-io.c 2012-05-02 14:04:00.989262395 +0800
> > +++ linux-next/fs/btrfs/disk-io.c 2012-05-02 14:04:01.773262414 +0800
> > @@ -930,7 +930,8 @@ static int btree_writepages(struct addre
> >
> > /* this is a bit racy, but that's ok */
> > num_dirty = root->fs_info->dirty_metadata_bytes;
> > - if (num_dirty < thresh)
> > + if (num_dirty < min(thresh,
> > + global_dirty_limit << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT-2)))
> > return 0;
> > }
> > return btree_write_cache_pages(mapping, wbc);
> Frankly, that whole condition on WB_SYNC_NONE in btree_writepages() looks
> like a hack. I think we also had problems with this condition when we tried
> to change b_more_io list handling. I found rather terse commit message
> explaining the code:
> Btrfs: Limit btree writeback to prevent seeks
It is definitely a hack ;) The basic point is that once we write a
metadata block, we have to cow it for any future changes. So writing
the metadata has a pretty big impact on performance, and I'd rather
write everything else that is dirty first. When that code was added I
was finding the metadata going to disk very soon under memory pressure.
I'm open to any ideas on this one.
-chris
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