[PATCHSET v5 0/12] Add support for async buffered reads
From: Jens Axboe
Date: Tue May 26 2020 - 15:51:32 EST
We technically support this already through io_uring, but it's
implemented with a thread backend to support cases where we would
block. This isn't ideal.
After a few prep patches, the core of this patchset is adding support
for async callbacks on page unlock. With this primitive, we can simply
retry the IO operation. With io_uring, this works a lot like poll based
retry for files that support it. If a page is currently locked and
needed, -EIOCBQUEUED is returned with a callback armed. The callers
callback is responsible for restarting the operation.
With this callback primitive, we can add support for
generic_file_buffered_read(), which is what most file systems end up
using for buffered reads. XFS/ext4/btrfs/bdev is wired up, but probably
trivial to add more.
The file flags support for this by setting FMODE_BUF_RASYNC, similar
to what we do for FMODE_NOWAIT. Open to suggestions here if this is
the preferred method or not.
In terms of results, I wrote a small test app that randomly reads 4G
of data in 4K chunks from a file hosted by ext4. The app uses a queue
depth of 32. If you want to test yourself, you can just use buffered=1
with ioengine=io_uring with fio. No application changes are needed to
use the more optimized buffered async read.
preadv for comparison:
real 1m13.821s
user 0m0.558s
sys 0m11.125s
CPU ~13%
Mainline:
real 0m12.054s
user 0m0.111s
sys 0m5.659s
CPU ~32% + ~50% == ~82%
This patchset:
real 0m9.283s
user 0m0.147s
sys 0m4.619s
CPU ~52%
The CPU numbers are just a rough estimate. For the mainline io_uring
run, this includes the app itself and all the threads doing IO on its
behalf (32% for the app, ~1.6% per worker and 32 of them). Context
switch rate is much smaller with the patchset, since we only have the
one task performing IO.
Also ran a simple fio based test case, varying the queue depth from 1
to 16, doubling every time:
[buf-test]
filename=/data/file
direct=0
ioengine=io_uring
norandommap
rw=randread
bs=4k
iodepth=${QD}
randseed=89
runtime=10s
QD/Test Patchset IOPS Mainline IOPS
1 9046 8294
2 19.8k 18.9k
4 39.2k 28.5k
8 64.4k 31.4k
16 65.7k 37.8k
Outside of my usual environment, so this is just running on a virtualized
NVMe device in qemu, using ext4 as the file system. NVMe isn't very
efficient virtualized, so we run out of steam at ~65K which is why we
flatline on the patched side (nvme_submit_cmd() eats ~75% of the test app
CPU). Before that happens, it's a linear increase. Not shown is context
switch rate, which is massively lower with the new code. The old thread
offload adds a blocking thread per pending IO, so context rate quickly
goes through the roof.
The goal here is efficiency. Async thread offload adds latency, and
it also adds noticable overhead on items such as adding pages to the
page cache. By allowing proper async buffered read support, we don't
have X threads hammering on the same inode page cache, we have just
the single app actually doing IO.
Been beating on this and it's solid for me, and I'm now pretty happy
with how it all turned out. Not aware of any missing bits/pieces or
code cleanups that need doing.
Series can also be found here:
https://git.kernel.dk/cgit/linux-block/log/?h=async-buffered.5
or pull from:
git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block async-buffered.5
fs/block_dev.c | 2 +-
fs/btrfs/file.c | 2 +-
fs/ext4/file.c | 2 +-
fs/io_uring.c | 130 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
fs/xfs/xfs_file.c | 2 +-
include/linux/blk_types.h | 3 +-
include/linux/fs.h | 10 ++-
include/linux/pagemap.h | 67 ++++++++++++++++++++
mm/filemap.c | 111 ++++++++++++++++++++------------
9 files changed, 279 insertions(+), 50 deletions(-)
Changes since v5:
- Correct commit message, iocb->private -> iocb->ki_waitq
- Get rid of io_uring goto, use an iter read helper
Changes since v3:
- io_uring: don't retry if REQ_F_NOWAIT is set
- io_uring: alloc req->io if the request type didn't already
- Add iocb->ki_waitq instead of (ab)using iocb->private
Changes since v2:
- Get rid of unnecessary wait_page_async struct, just use wait_page_async
- Add another prep handler, adding wake_page_match()
- Use wake_page_match() in both callers
Changes since v1:
- Fix an issue with inline page locking
- Fix a potential race with __wait_on_page_locked_async()
- Fix a hang related to not setting page_match, thus missing a wakeup
--
Jens Axboe