From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: "Alan D. Brunelle" Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2007 14:58:33 +0000 Subject: Re: Linux Kernel Markers - performance characterization with large Message-Id: <46F92219.9020406@hp.com> List-Id: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit To: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Cc: btrace , Jens Axboe , Mathieu Desnoyers Taking Linux 2.6.23-rc6 + 2.6.23-rc6-mm1 as a basis, I took some sample runs of the following on both it and after applying Mathieu Desnoyers 11-patch sequence (19 September 2007). * 32-way IA64 + 132GiB + 10 FC adapters + 10 HP MSA 1000s (one 72GiB volume per MSA used) * 10 runs with each configuration, averages shown below o 2.6.23-rc6 + 2.6.23-rc6-mm1 without blktrace running o 2.6.23-rc6 + 2.6.23-rc6-mm1 with blktrace running o 2.6.23-rc6 + 2.6.23-rc6-mm1 + markers without blktrace running o 2.6.23-rc6 + 2.6.23-rc6-mm1 + markers with blktrace running * A run consists of doing the following in parallel: o Make an ext3 FS on each of the 10 volumes o Mount & unmount each volume + The unmounting generates a tremendous amount of writes to the disks - thus stressing the intended storage devices (10 volumes) plus the separate volume for all the blktrace data (when blk tracing is enabled). + Note the times reported below only cover the make/mount/unmount time - the actual blktrace runs extended beyond the times measured (took quite a while for the blk trace data to be output). We're only concerned with the impact on the "application" performance in this instance. Results are: Kernel w/out BT STDDEV w/ BT STDDEV ------------------------------------- --------- ------ --------- ------ 2.6.23-rc6 + 2.6.23-rc6-mm1 14.679982 0.34 27.754796 2.09 2.6.23-rc6 + 2.6.23-rc6-mm1 + markers 14.993041 0.59 26.694993 3.23 It looks to be about 2.1% increase in time to do the make/mount/unmount operations with the marker patches in place and no blktrace operations. With the blktrace operations in place we see about a 3.8% decrease in time to do the same ops. When our Oracle benchmarking machine frees up, and when the marker/blktrace patches are more stable, we'll try to get some "real" Oracle benchmark runs done to gage the impact of the markers changes to performance... Alan D. Brunelle Hewlett-Packard / Open Source and Linux Organization / Scalability and Performance Group