From: "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@sisk.pl>
To: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Cc: Pavel Machek <pavel@suse.cz>,
mtk.manpages@gmail.com, Hugh Dickins <hugh@veritas.com>,
kernel list <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: sync_file_range(SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE) blocks?
Date: Mon, 2 Jun 2008 00:00:07 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <200806020000.07708.rjw@sisk.pl> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20080601133727.4e62ae55.akpm@linux-foundation.org>
On Sunday, 1 of June 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Sun, 1 Jun 2008 13:40:09 +0200 Pavel Machek <pavel@suse.cz> wrote:
>
> > Hi!
> >
> > > > > > All I can say so far is that I find the same as you do:
> > > > > > SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE (after writing) takes a significant amount of time,
> > > > > > more than half as long as when you add in SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_AFTER too.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > Which make the sync_file_range call pretty pointless: your usage seems
> > > > > > perfectly reasonable to me, but somehow we've broken its behaviour.
> > > > > > I'll be investigating ...
> > > > >
> > > > > It will block on disk queue fullness - sysrq-W will tell.
> > > >
> > > > Ah, thank you. What a disappointment, though it's understandable.
> > > > Doesn't that very severely limit the usefulness of the system call?
> > >
> > > A bit. The request queue size is runtime tunable though.
> >
> > Which /sys is that?
>
> /sys/block/sda/queue/nr_requests
>
> > What happens if I set the queue size to pretty
> > much infinity, will memory management die horribly?
>
> In theory, no - it's always caused problems when the VM/VFS/FS layer
> has relied upon request-queue exhaustion for throttling. Hence all
> that code is supposed to work OK when there is no request-queue
> blocking. Of course, (theory/practice != 1.0).
>
> > > I expect major users of this system call will be applications which do
> > > small-sized overwrites into large files, mainly databases. That is,
> > > once the application developers discover its existence. I'm still
> > > getting expressions of wonder from people who I tell about the
> > > five-year-old fadvise().
> >
> > Hey, you have one user now, its called s2disk. But for this call to be
> > useful, we'd need asynchronous variant... is there such thing?
>
> Well if you're asking the syscall to shove more data into the block
> layer than it can concurrently handle, sure, the block layer will
> block. It's tunable...
>
> It can still block in places, of course - we might need to do
> synchronous reads to get at metadata and we'll need to allocate memory.
>
> > Okay, I can fork and do the call from another process, but...
>
> I sense a strangeness. What are you actually trying to do with all of this?
Pavel is trying to avoid me doing multithreaded s2disk, more or less. ;-)
However, I have some numbers showing that multithreaded image saving actually
helps a lot in case the image is compressed and encrypted.
Thanks,
Rafael
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2008-06-01 21:59 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 25+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-05-30 10:26 sync_file_range(SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE) blocks? Pavel Machek
2008-05-30 13:58 ` Hugh Dickins
2008-05-30 20:43 ` Pavel Machek
2008-05-31 18:44 ` Hugh Dickins
2008-06-01 0:39 ` Andrew Morton
2008-06-01 7:23 ` Hugh Dickins
2008-06-01 8:15 ` Andrew Morton
2008-06-01 11:40 ` Pavel Machek
2008-06-01 20:37 ` Andrew Morton
2008-06-01 22:00 ` Rafael J. Wysocki [this message]
2008-06-01 22:22 ` Pavel Machek
2008-06-01 22:47 ` Andrew Morton
2008-06-01 23:00 ` Pavel Machek
2008-06-01 23:11 ` Andrew Morton
2008-06-02 8:43 ` Hugh Dickins
2008-06-02 11:18 ` Rafael J. Wysocki
2008-06-02 12:11 ` Hugh Dickins
2008-06-02 11:43 ` Jens Axboe
2008-06-02 12:40 ` Hugh Dickins
2008-06-16 20:53 ` Rik van Riel
2008-06-17 4:54 ` Andrew Morton
2008-06-17 13:38 ` Rik van Riel
2008-06-02 16:50 ` Andrew Morton
2008-06-03 8:01 ` Michael Kerrisk
2008-06-03 8:05 ` Pavel Machek
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