Re: [PATCH RFC] storage:rbd: make the size of request is equal to the, size of the object
From: Ilya Dryomov
Date: Tue Jun 16 2015 - 09:30:43 EST
On Tue, Jun 16, 2015 at 2:57 PM, juncheng bai
<baijuncheng@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>
> On 2015/6/16 16:37, Ilya Dryomov wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, Jun 16, 2015 at 6:28 AM, juncheng bai
>> <baijuncheng@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 2015/6/15 22:27, Ilya Dryomov wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, Jun 15, 2015 at 4:23 PM, juncheng bai
>>>> <baijuncheng@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On 2015/6/15 21:03, Ilya Dryomov wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Mon, Jun 15, 2015 at 2:18 PM, juncheng bai
>>>>>> <baijuncheng@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> From 6213215bd19926d1063d4e01a248107dab8a899b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00
>>>>>>> 2001
>>>>>>> From: juncheng bai <baijuncheng@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>>>>>> Date: Mon, 15 Jun 2015 18:34:00 +0800
>>>>>>> Subject: [PATCH] storage:rbd: make the size of request is equal to
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> size of the object
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> ensures that the merged size of request can achieve the size of
>>>>>>> the object.
>>>>>>> when merge a bio to request or merge a request to request, the
>>>>>>> sum of the segment number of the current request and the segment
>>>>>>> number of the bio is not greater than the max segments of the
>>>>>>> request,
>>>>>>> so the max size of request is 512k if the max segments of request is
>>>>>>> BLK_MAX_SEGMENTS.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: juncheng bai <baijuncheng@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>>>>>> ---
>>>>>>> drivers/block/rbd.c | 2 ++
>>>>>>> 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> diff --git a/drivers/block/rbd.c b/drivers/block/rbd.c
>>>>>>> index 0a54c58..dec6045 100644
>>>>>>> --- a/drivers/block/rbd.c
>>>>>>> +++ b/drivers/block/rbd.c
>>>>>>> @@ -3757,6 +3757,8 @@ static int rbd_init_disk(struct rbd_device
>>>>>>> *rbd_dev)
>>>>>>> segment_size = rbd_obj_bytes(&rbd_dev->header);
>>>>>>> blk_queue_max_hw_sectors(q, segment_size / SECTOR_SIZE);
>>>>>>> blk_queue_max_segment_size(q, segment_size);
>>>>>>> + if (segment_size > BLK_MAX_SEGMENTS * PAGE_SIZE)
>>>>>>> + blk_queue_max_segments(q, segment_size / PAGE_SIZE);
>>>>>>> blk_queue_io_min(q, segment_size);
>>>>>>> blk_queue_io_opt(q, segment_size);
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I made a similar patch on Friday, investigating blk-mq plugging issue
>>>>>> reported by Nick. My patch sets it to BIO_MAX_PAGES unconditionally -
>>>>>> AFAIU there is no point in setting to anything bigger since the bios
>>>>>> will be clipped to that number of vecs. Given that BIO_MAX_PAGES is
>>>>>> 256, this gives is 1M direct I/Os.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi. For signal bio, the max number of bio_vec is BIO_MAX_PAGES, but a
>>>>> request can be merged from multiple bios. We can see the below
>>>>> function:
>>>>> ll_back_merge_fn, ll_front_merge_fn and etc.
>>>>> And I test in kernel 3.18 use this patch, and do:
>>>>> echo 4096 > /sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_sectors_kb
>>>>> We use systemtap to trace the request size, It is upto 4M.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Kernel 3.18 is pre rbd blk-mq transition, which happened in 4.0. You
>>>> should test whatever patches you have with at least 4.0.
>>>>
>>>> Putting that aside, I must be missing something. You'll get 4M
>>>> requests on 3.18 both with your patch and without it, the only
>>>> difference would be the size of bios being merged - 512k vs 1M. Can
>>>> you describe your test workload and provide before and after traces?
>>>>
>>> Hi. I update kernel version to 4.0.5. The test information as shown
>>> below:
>>> The base information:
>>> 03:28:13-root@server-186:~$uname -r
>>> 4.0.5
>>>
>>> My simple systemtap script:
>>> probe module("rbd").function("rbd_img_request_create")
>>> {
>>> printf("offset:%lu length:%lu\n", ulong_arg(2), ulong_arg(3));
>>> }
>>>
>>> I use dd to execute the test case:
>>> dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/rbd0 bs=4M count=1 oflag=direct
>>>
>>> Case one: Without patch
>>> 03:30:23-root@server-186:~$cat /sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_sectors_kb
>>> 4096
>>> 03:30:35-root@server-186:~$cat /sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_segments
>>> 128
>>>
>>> The output of systemtap for nornal data:
>>> offset:0 length:524288
>>> offset:524288 length:524288
>>> offset:1048576 length:524288
>>> offset:1572864 length:524288
>>> offset:2097152 length:524288
>>> offset:2621440 length:524288
>>> offset:3145728 length:524288
>>> offset:3670016 length:524288
>>>
>>> Case two:With patch
>>> cat /sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_sectors_kb
>>> 4096
>>> 03:49:14-root@server-186:linux-4.0.5$cat
>>> /sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_segments
>>> 1024
>>> The output of systemtap for nornal data:
>>> offset:0 length:1048576
>>> offset:1048576 length:1048576
>>> offset:2097152 length:1048576
>>> offset:3145728 length:1048576
>>>
>>> According to the test, you are right.
>>> Because the blk-mq doesn't use any scheduling policy.
>>> 03:52:13-root@server-186:linux-4.0.5$cat /sys/block/rbd0/queue/scheduler
>>> none
>>>
>>> In previous versions of the kernel 4.0, the rbd use the defualt
>>> scheduler:cfq
>>>
>>> So, I think that the blk-mq need to do more?
>>
>>
>> There is no scheduler support in blk-mq as of now but your numbers
>> don't have anything to do with that. The current behaviour is a result
>> of a bug in blk-mq. It's fixed by [1], if you apply it you should see
>> 4M requests with your stap script.
>>
>> [1] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/1941750
>>
> Hi.
> First, Let's look at the result in the kernel version 3.18
> The function blk_limits_max_hw_sectors different implemention between 3.18
> and 4.0+. We need do:
> echo 4094 >/sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_sectors_kb
>
> The rbd device information:
> 11:13:18-root@server-186:~$cat /sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_sectors_kb
> 4094
> 11:15:28-root@server-186:~$cat /sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_segments
> 1024
>
> The test command:
> dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/rbd0 bs=4M count=1
>
> The simple stap script:
> probe module("rbd").function("rbd_img_request_create")
> {
> printf("offset:%lu length:%lu\n", ulong_arg(2), ulong_arg(3));
> }
>
> The output from stap:
> offset:0 length:4190208
> offset:21474770944 length:4096
>
> Second, thanks for your patch [1].
> I use the patch [1], and recompile the kernel.
> The test information as shown below:
> 12:26:12-root@server-186:$cat /sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_segments
> 1024
> 12:26:23-root@server-186:$cat /sys/block/rbd0/queue/max_sectors_kb
> 4096
>
> The test command:
> dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/rbd0 bs=4M count=2 oflag=direct
>
> The simple systemtap script:
> probe module("rbd").function("rbd_img_request_create")
> {
> printf("offset:%lu length:%lu\n", ulong_arg(2), ulong_arg(3));
> }
>
> The output of systemtap for nornal data:
> offset:0 length:4194304
> offset:4194304 length:4194304
> offset:21474770944 length:4096
Sorry, I fail to see the purpose of the above tests. The test commands
differ, the kernels differ and it looks like you had your patch applied
for both tests. What I'm trying to get you to do is to show me some
data that will back your claim (which your patch is based on):
>
> So, I think that the max_segments of request_limits should be divide the
> object size by PAGE_SIZE.
For that you need to use the same kernel and run the same workload.
The only difference should be whether your patch is applied or not.
I still think that setting rbd max_segments to anything above
BIO_MAX_PAGES is bogus, but I'd be happy to be shown wrong on that
since that would mean better performance, at least in some
workloads.
Thanks,
Ilya
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/