RE: [RFC PATCH] f2fs: add extent cache base on rb-tree

From: Chao Yu
Date: Tue Dec 30 2014 - 05:12:08 EST


Hi Jaegeuk,

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jaegeuk Kim [mailto:jaegeuk@xxxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Tuesday, December 30, 2014 5:23 AM
> To: Chao Yu
> Cc: 'Changman Lee'; linux-f2fs-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: Re: [RFC PATCH] f2fs: add extent cache base on rb-tree
>
> Hi Chao,
>
> On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 03:19:18PM +0800, Chao Yu wrote:
>
> [snip]
>
> Nice draft. :)

Thanks! :)

>
> >
> > Please see the draft below.
> >
> > 1) Extent management:
> > If we use global management that managing all extents which are from different
> > inodes in sbi, we will face with serious lock contention when we access these
> > extents belong to different inodes concurrently, the loss may outweights the
> > gain.
>
> Agreed.
>
> > So we choose a local management for extent which means all extents are
> > managed by inode itself to avoid above lock contention. Addtionlly, we manage
> > all extents globally by linking all inode into a global lru list for extent
> > cache shrinker.
> > Approach:
> > a) build extent tree/rwlock/lru list/extent count in each inode.
> > *extent tree: link all extent in rb-tree;
> > *rwlock: protect fields when accessing extent cache concurrently;
> > *lru list: sort all extents in accessing time order;
> > *extent count: record total count of extents in cache.
> > b) use lru shrink list in sbi to manage all inode which cached extents.
> > *inode will be added or repostioned in this global list whenever
> > extent is being access in this inode.
> > *use spinlock to protect this shrink list.
>
> 1. How about adding a data structure with inode number instead of referring
> inode pointer?
>
> 2. How about managing extent entries globally and setting an upper bound to
> the number of extent entries instead of limiting them per each inode?
> (The rb-tree will handle many extents per inode.)

[assumption]
Approach A: global lru list;
Approach B: lru list per inode.

I have considered Approach A before writing the draft, although Approach A could
provide us higher ratio hit due to global lru, it may make lock contention more
intensively and has more memory overhead descripted below. So I choose more
conservative Approach B.
1) as extent_entry will split in Cow, we may lock extent_list more times when
move these separated extent entries in extent_list, unless we have batch mode
interface.
2) lock overhead between shrinker and lookuper and updater.
e.g. extent_list: (LRU) A -> B -> C -> D -> E -> F -> G (MRU)
(#1) has A, C, E, G in rb-tree
(#2) has B, D, F in rb-tree
shrinker op: lock list -> trylock #1 -> unlock list -> free A -> unlock #1
lock list -> trylock #2 -> unlock list -> free B -> unlock #2
lock list -> trylock #1 -> unlock list -> free C -> unlock #1
...
*trylock/unlock* for all free extent entries belong to one inode will be separated
to lots of parts, resulting in more contention.
3) it has more memory overhead in each extent entry:
Approach A: need add inode number for backref and list_head *
Approach B: need add list_head *

Or maybe it's not a problem because we can afford all these above.

Anyway, I'm not against.

>
> 3. It needs to set a minimum length for the candidate of extent cache.
> (e.g., 64)

Is this used for shrinker? Can you please explain more about this minimum length?

>
> So, for example,
> struct ino_entry_for_extents {
> inode number;
> rb_tree for extent_entry objects;
> rwlock;
> };
>
> struct extent_entry {
> blkaddr, len;
> list_head *;

We should add one other field 'inode number' here, as through it we can get
rb-tree root from ino_entry_for_extents for rb_erase when we free the extent
entry in shrinker.

> };
>
> Something like this.
>
> [A, B, C, ... are extent entry]
>
> The sbi has
> 1. an extent_list: (LRU) A -> B -> C -> D -> E -> F -> G (MRU)
> 2. radix_tree: ino_entry_for_extents (#10) has D, B in rb-tree
> ` ino_entry_for_extents (#11) has A, C in rb-tree
> ` ino_entry_for_extents (#12) has F in rb-tree
> ` ino_entry_for_extents (#13) has G, E in rb-tree
>
> In f2fs_update_extent_cache and __get_data_block for #10,
> ino_entry_for_extents (#10) was founded and updated D or B.
> Then, updated entries are moved to MRU.
>
> In f2fs_evict_inode for #11, A and C are moved to LRU.
> But, if this inode is unlinked, all the A, C, and ino_entry_for_extens (#11)
> should be released.
>
> In f2fs_balance_fs_bg, some LRU extents are released according to the amount
> of consumed memory. Then, it frees any ino_entry_for_extents having no extent.
>
> IMO, we don't need to consider readahead for this, since get_data_block will
> be called by VFS readahead.

In get_data_block we can cache only one blkaddr once after get_dnode_of_data
returned, it seems less efficient. So why not readahead selectively more
contiguous valid blkaddr in get_dnode_of_data once?

>
> Furthermore, we need to think about whether LRU is really best or not.
> IMO, the extent cache aims to improve second access speed, rather than initial
> cold misses. So, maybe MRU or another algorithms would be better.

Agree, let's rethink about this. :)

Thanks,

>
> Thanks,
>
> >
> > 2) Limitation:
> > In one inode, as we split or add extent in extent cache when read/write, extent
> > number will enlarge, so memory and CPU overhead will increase.
> > In order to control the overhead of memory and CPU, we try to set a upper bound
> > number to limit total extent number in each inode, This number is global
> > configuration which is visable to all inode. This number will be exported to
> > sysfs for configuring according to requirement of user. By default, designed
> > number is 8.
> >
> > 3) Shrinker:
> > There are two shrink paths:
> > a) one is triggered when extent count has exceed the upper bound of
> > inode's extent cache. We will try to release extent(s) from head of
> > inode's inner extent lru list until extent count is equal to upper bound.
> > This operation could be in f2fs_update_extent_cache().
> > b) the other one is triggered when memory util exceed threshold, we try
> > get inode from head of global lru list(s), and release extent(s) with
> > fixed number (by default: 64 extents) in inode one by one.
> > This operation could be in f2fs_balance_fs_bg().
> >
> > 4) Revalidation:
> > In ->evict(), extent cache will be released, in order to reuse extent cache
> > of inode when reopen for high hit ratio, a proper way is to add cached extent
> > tree into a hash table (could be radix tree), revalidate extent tree and recover
> > it to inode when reopen.
> > Besides, a global lru list is needed here for shrinker.
> >
> > 5) Readahead:
> > Expand extent cache by readaheading when we call get_dnode_of_data in non-emergency
> > path. Note, ra can affect lock contention for both ->rwlock in extent cache and
> > ->lock of global shrink list.
> >

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