From: Steven Pratt <slpratt@austin.ibm.com>
To: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Cc: linux-btrfs <linux-btrfs@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: New performance results
Date: Tue, 07 Apr 2009 15:53:41 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <49DBBD55.50300@austin.ibm.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <49DB7511.5020008@austin.ibm.com>
Steven Pratt wrote:
> Chris Mason wrote:
>> On Mon, 2009-04-06 at 17:01 -0500, Steven Pratt wrote:
>>
>>> I am continuing to do runs to provide more data on the random write
>>> issues with btrfs. I have just posted 2 sets of runs here:
>>> http://btrfs.boxacle.net/repository/raid/longrun/
>>>
>>> these are on a pull of the btrfs-unstable experimental branch from 4/3.
>>>
>>> These are 100 minute runs of the 128 thread random write workload on
>>> the raid system (1 for btrfs and 1 for ext3). Included in these
>>> runs are graphs of all the iostat, sar and mpstat data (see analysis
>>> directories).
>>>
>>> A couple of interesting things. First, we see the choppiness of the
>>> IO in btrfs compared to ext3.
>>> http://btrfs.boxacle.net/repository/raid/longrun/btrfs-longrun/btrfs1.ffsb.random_writes__threads_0128.09-04-06_10.25.03/analysis/iostat-processed.001/chart.html
>>>
>>> http://btrfs.boxacle.net/repository/raid/longrun/ext3-longrun/btrfs1.ffsb.random_writes__threads_0128.09-04-06_13.44.49/analysis/iostat-processed.001/chart.html
>>>
>>>
>>> In particular look at graphs 7 and 11 which show write iops and
>>> throughput. Ext3 is nice and smooth, while btrfs has a repeating
>>> pattern of dips and spikes, with IO going to 0 on a regular basis.
>>>
>>>
>>
>> The dips and spikes may be from the allocator. Basically what happens
>> is after each commit we end up with a bunch of small blocks available
>> for filling again. Could you please try with -o ssd?
>>
>>
> Will give it a shot.
Results with -o ssd were not much different. 2.85MB/sec vs 2.5MB/sec.
Also, the spiky behavior still exists. All 3 runs at:
http://btrfs.boxacle.net/repository/raid/longrun/
Also, finally have the blktrace runs you wanted. A 128thread odirect
random write workload is tarred up at:
http://btrfs.boxacle.net/repository/raid/blktrcrun.tar.bz
blktrace is inteh analysis/blktrace.001 dir.
Steve
>>
>>> Another interesting observation is what looks a lot like a memory
>>> leak. Looking at chart 6 Memory at :
>>> http://btrfs.boxacle.net/repository/raid/longrun/btrfs-longrun/btrfs1.ffsb.random_writes__threads_0128.09-04-06_10.25.03/analysis/sar-processed.001/chart.html
>>>
>>> we see that the amount of page cache drops slowly throughout the
>>> entire run. Starting up around 3.5GB and dropping to about 2.3GB by
>>> the end of the run. The memory seems to have moved to the slab
>>> which grew to 1.5GB. Doing a repeat of the run while watching
>>> slabtop, we see that size-2048 is responsible for the majority of
>>> the slab usage (over 1GB).
>>>
>>>
>>
>> size-2048? That's probably the csums. I'll give it a shot when I get
>> back next week
>
> Ok.
>
> One other thing I noticed that is really bad. For ext3, we see
> 115MB/sec both from the benchmark reporting and from iostat write
> throughput. However, for btrfs, we see a benchmark throughput of
> 2.5MB/sec while iostat shows a whopping 35MB/sec of writes. That to
> me implies that btrfs is doing an additional 32-33MB/sec of metadata
> or journal writes. More than 10x the amount of actual data being
> written. Can that be right?
>
> Steve
>> .
>>
>> -chris
>>
>>
>
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-04-07 20:53 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2009-04-06 22:01 New performance results Steven Pratt
2009-04-06 22:19 ` Josef Bacik
2009-04-06 22:31 ` Josef Bacik
2009-04-07 3:37 ` Chris Mason
2009-04-07 15:45 ` Steven Pratt
2009-04-07 20:53 ` Steven Pratt [this message]
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2010-04-23 22:31 Steven Pratt
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