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From: Bill Davidsen <davidsen@tmr.com>
To: Ric Wheeler <rwheeler@redhat.com>
Cc: Neil Brown <neilb@suse.de>,
	James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>,
	Greg Freemyer <greg.freemyer@norcrossgroup.com>,
	linux-raid <linux-raid@vger.kernel.org>,
	Dongjun Shin <djshin90@gmail.com>,
	IDE/ATA development list <linux-ide@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: SSD data reliable vs. unreliable [Was: Re: Data Recovery from SSDs - Impact of trim?]
Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2009 15:28:22 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <4980BFE6.1060704@tmr.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <497EEEC2.1040907@redhat.com>

Ric Wheeler wrote:
> Neil Brown wrote:
>> On Monday January 26, James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com wrote:
>>  
>>> On Mon, 2009-01-26 at 12:34 -0500, Greg Freemyer wrote:
>>>    
>>>> Adding mdraid list:
>>>>
>>>> Top post as a recap for mdraid list (redundantly at end of email if
>>>> anyone wants to respond to any of this).:
>>>>
>>>> == Start RECAP
>>>> With proposed spec changes for both T10 and T13 a new "unmap" or
>>>> "trim" command is proposed respectively.  The linux kernel is
>>>> implementing this as a sector discard and will be called by various
>>>> file systems as they delete data files.  Ext4 will be one of the first
>>>> to support this. (At least via out of kernel patches.)
>>>>
>>>> SCSI - see http://www.t10.org/cgi-bin/ac.pl?t=d&f=08-356r5.pdf
>>>> ATA - see T13/e08137r2 draft
>>>>
>>>> Per the proposed spec changes, the underlying SSD device can
>>>> optionally modify the unmapped data.  SCSI T10 at least restricts the
>>>> way the modification happens, but data modification of unmapped data
>>>> is still definitely allowed for both classes of SSD.
>>>>
>>>> Thus if a filesystem "discards" a sector, the contents of the sector
>>>> can change and thus parity values are no longer meaningful for the
>>>> stripe.
>>>>       
>>> This isn't correct.  The implementation is via bio and request discard
>>> flags.  linux raid as a bio->bio mapping entity can choose to drop or
>>> implement the discard flag (by default it will be dropped unless the
>>> raid layer is modified).
>>>     
>>
>> That's good.  I would be worried if they could slip through without
>> md/raid noticing.
>>
>>  
>>>> ie. If the unmap-ed blocks don't exactly correlate with the Raid-5 / 6
>>>> stripping, then the integrity of a stripe containing both mapped and
>>>> unmapped data is lost.
>>>>
>>>> Thus it seems that either the filesystem will have to understand the
>>>> raid 5 / 6 stripping / chunking setup and ensure it never issues a
>>>> discard command unless an entire stripe is being discarded.  Or that
>>>> the raid implementation must must snoop the discard commands and take
>>>> appropriate actions.
>>>>       
>>> No.  It only works if the discard is supported all the way through the
>>> stack to the controller and device ... any point in the stack can drop
>>> the discard.  It's also theoretically possible that any layer could
>>> accumulate them as well (i.e. up to stripe size for raid).
>>>     
>>
>> Accumulating them in the raid level would probably be awkward.
>>
>> It was my understanding that filesystems would (try to) send the
>> largest possible 'discard' covering any surrounding blocks that had
>> already been discarded.  Then e.g. raid5 could just round down any
>> discard request to an aligned number of complete stripes and just
>> discard those.  i.e. have all the accumulation done in the filesystem.
>>
>> To be able to safely discard stripes, raid5 would need to remember
>> which stripes were discarded so that it could be sure to write out the
>> whole stripe when updating any block on it, thus ensuring that parity
>> will be correct again and will remain correct.
>>
>> Probably the only practical data structure for this would be a bitmap
>> similar to the current write-intent bitmap.
>>
>> Is it really worth supporting this in raid5?   Are the sorts of
>> devices that will benefit from 'discard' requests likely to be used
>> inside an md/raid5 array I wonder....
>>
>> raid1 and raid10 are much easier to handle, so supporting 'discard'
>> there certainly makes sense.
>>
>> NeilBrown
>> -- 
>>   
>
> The benefit is also seen by SSD devices (T13) and high end arrays 
> (T10).  On the array end, they almost universally do RAID support 
> internally.
>
> I suppose that people might make RAID5 devices out of SSD's locally, 
> but it is probably not an immediate priority....

Depends on how you define "priority" here. It probably would not make 
much of a performance difference, it might make a significant lifetime 
difference in the devices.

Not RAID5, RAID6. As seek times shrink things which were performance 
limited become practical, journaling file systems are not a problem just 
a solution, mounting with atime disabled isn't needed, etc. I was given 
some CF to PATA adapters to test, and as soon as I grab some 16GB CFs I 
intend to try a 32GB RAID6. I have a perfect application for it, and if 
it works well after I test I can put journal files on it. I just wish I 
had a file system which could put the journal, inodes, and directories 
all on the fast device and leaves the files (data) on something cheap.

-- 
Bill Davidsen <davidsen@tmr.com>
  "Woe unto the statesman who makes war without a reason that will still
  be valid when the war is over..." Otto von Bismark 



  reply	other threads:[~2009-01-28 20:28 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 24+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2009-01-22 23:53 SSD data reliable vs. unreliable [Was: Re: Data Recovery from SSDs - Impact of trim?] Greg Freemyer
2009-01-23 20:40 ` Ric Wheeler
2009-01-23 22:24   ` James Bottomley
2009-01-23 23:26     ` Greg Freemyer
2009-01-23 23:35       ` Ric Wheeler
     [not found]         ` <7fce22690901260659u30ffd634m3fb7f75102141ee9@mail.gmail.com>
2009-01-26 16:22           ` Ric Wheeler
2009-01-26 17:34             ` Greg Freemyer
2009-01-26 17:46               ` Ric Wheeler
2009-01-26 17:47               ` James Bottomley
2009-01-27  5:16                 ` Neil Brown
2009-01-27 10:49                   ` John Robinson
2009-01-28 20:11                     ` Bill Davidsen
     [not found]                       ` <7fce22690901281556h67fb353dp879f88e6c2a76eaf@mail.gmail.com>
2009-01-29  1:49                         ` John Robinson
2009-01-27 11:23                   ` Ric Wheeler
2009-01-28 20:28                     ` Bill Davidsen [this message]
2009-01-27 14:48                   ` James Bottomley
2009-01-27 14:54                     ` Ric Wheeler
2009-01-26 17:51               ` Mark Lord
2009-01-26 18:09                 ` Greg Freemyer
2009-01-26 18:21                   ` Mark Lord
2009-01-29 14:07                     ` Dongjun Shin
2009-01-29 15:46                       ` Mark Lord
2009-01-29 16:27                         ` Greg Freemyer
2009-01-30 15:43                           ` Bill Davidsen

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