On 2012-07-14 07:56 Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx> Wrote:
>[ adding Shaohua ]
>
>On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 3:31 AM, majianpeng <majianpeng@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> To improve write perfomance by decreasing the preread stripe,only move
>> IO_THRESHOLD stripes from delay_list to hold_list once.
>>
>> Using the follow command:
>> dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/md0 bs=2M count=52100.
>>
>> At default condition: speed is 95MB/s.
>> At the condition of preread_bypass_threshold was equal zero:speed is 105MB/s.
>> Using this patch:speed is 123MB/s.
>>
>> If preread_bypass_threshold was zero,the performance will be better,but
>> not better than this patch.
>> I think maybe two reason:
>> 1:If bio is REQ_SYNC
>> 2:In function __get_priority_stripe():
>>>> } else if (!list_empty(&conf->hold_list) &&
>>>> ((conf->bypass_threshold &&
>>>> conf->bypass_count > conf->bypass_threshold) ||
>>>> atomic_read(&conf->pending_full_writes) == 0)) {
>> Preread_bypass_threshold is one condition of getting stripe from
>> hold_list.So only control the number of hold_list can get better
>> performance.
>
>So this is a pretty obvious tradeoff of increased latency for improved
>throughput. Any idea how much this change affects latency?
>Especially in the fast device case?
I did not think the latency.If it only fetch preread_bypass_threshold stripes from delay_list to
host_list,the latency can be control by userspace.
The code like :
static void raid5_activate_delayed(struct r5conf *conf)
{
+ int count = 0;
if (atomic_read(&conf->preread_active_stripes) < IO_THRESHOLD) {
while (!list_empty(&conf->delayed_list)) {
struct list_head *l = conf->delayed_list.next;
@@ -3672,6 +3673,8 @@ static void raid5_activate_delayed(struct r5conf *conf)
if (!test_and_set_bit(STRIPE_PREREAD_ACTIVE, &sh->state))
atomic_inc(&conf->preread_active_stripes);
list_add_tail(&sh->lru, &conf->hold_list);
+ if (++count >= conf->preread_active_stripes)
+ break;
}
?韬{.n?????%??檩??w?{.n???{炳盯w???塄}?财??j:+v??????2??璀??摺?囤??z夸z罐?+?????w棹f
[ATA RAID]
[Linux SCSI Target Infrastructure]
[Managing RAID on Linux]
[Linux IDE]
[Linux SCSI]
[Linux Hams]
[Device-Mapper]
[Kernel]
[Linux Books]
[Linux Admin]
[Linux Net]
[GFS]
[RPM]
[git]
[Photos]
[Yosemite Photos]
[Yosemite News]
[AMD 64]
[Linux Networking]