* Re: io-scheduler tuning for better read/write ratio [not found] ` <x49hby8jbrd.fsf@segfault.boston.devel.redhat.com> @ 2009-06-26 2:19 ` Wu Fengguang 2009-06-26 10:44 ` Jens Axboe 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Wu Fengguang @ 2009-06-26 2:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jeff Moyer Cc: Ralf Gross, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-fsdevel, Jens Axboe On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 03:42:46AM +0800, Jeff Moyer wrote: > Ralf Gross <rg@STZ-Softwaretechnik.com> writes: > > > Jeff Moyer schrieb: > >> Jeff Moyer <jmoyer@redhat.com> writes: > >> > >> > Ralf Gross <rg@stz-softwaretechnik.com> writes: > >> > > >> >> Casey Dahlin schrieb: > >> >>> On 06/16/2009 02:40 PM, Ralf Gross wrote: > >> >>> > David Newall schrieb: > >> >>> >> Ralf Gross wrote: > >> >>> >>> write throughput is much higher than the read throughput (40 MB/s > >> >>> >>> read, 90 MB/s write). > >> >>> > > >> >>> > Hm, but I get higher read throughput (160-200 MB/s) if I don't write > >> >>> > to the device at the same time. > >> >>> > > >> >>> > Ralf > >> >>> > >> >>> How specifically are you testing? It could depend a lot on the > >> >>> particular access patterns you're using to test. > >> >> > >> >> I did the basic tests with tiobench. The real test is a test backup > >> >> (bacula) with 2 jobs that create 2 30 GB spool files on that device. > >> >> The jobs partially write to the device in parallel. Depending which > >> >> spool file reaches the 30 GB first, one starts reading from that file > >> >> and writing to tape, while to other is still spooling. > >> > > >> > We are missing a lot of details, here. I guess the first thing I'd try > >> > would be bumping up the max_readahead_kb parameter, since I'm guessing > >> > that your backup application isn't driving very deep queue depths. If > >> > that doesn't work, then please provide exact invocations of tiobench > >> > that reprduce the problem or some blktrace output for your real test. > >> > >> Any news, Ralf? > > > > sorry for the delay. atm there are large backups running and using the > > raid device for spooling. So I can't do any tests. > > > > Re. read ahead: I tested different settings from 8Kb to 65Kb, this > > didn't help. > > > > I'll do some more tests when the backups are done (3-4 more days). > > The default is 128KB, I believe, so it's strange that you would test > smaller values. ;) I would try something along the lines of 1 or 2 MB. > > I'm CCing Fengguang in case he has any suggestions. Jeff, thank you for the forwarding (and sorry for the long delay)! The read:write (or rather sync:async) ratio control is an IO scheduler feature. CFQ has parameters slice_sync and slice_async for that. What's more, CFQ will let async IO wait if there are any in flight sync IO. This is good, but not quite enough. Normally sync IOs come one by one, with some small idle time window in between. If we only start dispatching async IOs after the last sync IO has completed for eg. 1ms, then we may stop the async background write IOs when there are active sync foreground read IO stream. This simple patch aims to address the writes-push-aside-reads problem. Ralf, you can try applying this patch and run your workload with this (huge) CFQ parameter: echo 1000 > /sys/block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_sync The patch is based on 2.6.30, but can be trivially backported if you want to use some old kernel. It may impact overall (sync+async) IO throughput when there are one or more ongoing sync IO streams, so requires considerable benchmarks and adjustments. Thanks, Fengguang --- diff --git a/block/cfq-iosched.c b/block/cfq-iosched.c index a55a9bd..14011b7 100644 --- a/block/cfq-iosched.c +++ b/block/cfq-iosched.c @@ -1064,7 +1064,6 @@ static void cfq_arm_slice_timer(struct cfq_data *cfqd) if (blk_queue_nonrot(cfqd->queue) && cfqd->hw_tag) return; - WARN_ON(!RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&cfqq->sort_list)); WARN_ON(cfq_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq)); /* @@ -2175,8 +2174,6 @@ static void cfq_completed_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq) * or if we want to idle in case it has no pending requests. */ if (cfqd->active_queue == cfqq) { - const bool cfqq_empty = RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&cfqq->sort_list); - if (cfq_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq)) { cfq_set_prio_slice(cfqd, cfqq); cfq_clear_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq); @@ -2190,8 +2187,8 @@ static void cfq_completed_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq) */ if (cfq_slice_used(cfqq) || cfq_class_idle(cfqq)) cfq_slice_expired(cfqd, 1); - else if (cfqq_empty && !cfq_close_cooperator(cfqd, cfqq, 1) && - sync && !rq_noidle(rq)) + else if (sync && !rq_noidle(rq) && + !cfq_close_cooperator(cfqd, cfqq, 1)) cfq_arm_slice_timer(cfqd); } ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: io-scheduler tuning for better read/write ratio 2009-06-26 2:19 ` io-scheduler tuning for better read/write ratio Wu Fengguang @ 2009-06-26 10:44 ` Jens Axboe 2009-06-27 3:46 ` Wu Fengguang 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Jens Axboe @ 2009-06-26 10:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Wu Fengguang Cc: Jeff Moyer, Ralf Gross, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-fsdevel On Fri, Jun 26 2009, Wu Fengguang wrote: > On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 03:42:46AM +0800, Jeff Moyer wrote: > > Ralf Gross <rg@STZ-Softwaretechnik.com> writes: > > > > > Jeff Moyer schrieb: > > >> Jeff Moyer <jmoyer@redhat.com> writes: > > >> > > >> > Ralf Gross <rg@stz-softwaretechnik.com> writes: > > >> > > > >> >> Casey Dahlin schrieb: > > >> >>> On 06/16/2009 02:40 PM, Ralf Gross wrote: > > >> >>> > David Newall schrieb: > > >> >>> >> Ralf Gross wrote: > > >> >>> >>> write throughput is much higher than the read throughput (40 MB/s > > >> >>> >>> read, 90 MB/s write). > > >> >>> > > > >> >>> > Hm, but I get higher read throughput (160-200 MB/s) if I don't write > > >> >>> > to the device at the same time. > > >> >>> > > > >> >>> > Ralf > > >> >>> > > >> >>> How specifically are you testing? It could depend a lot on the > > >> >>> particular access patterns you're using to test. > > >> >> > > >> >> I did the basic tests with tiobench. The real test is a test backup > > >> >> (bacula) with 2 jobs that create 2 30 GB spool files on that device. > > >> >> The jobs partially write to the device in parallel. Depending which > > >> >> spool file reaches the 30 GB first, one starts reading from that file > > >> >> and writing to tape, while to other is still spooling. > > >> > > > >> > We are missing a lot of details, here. I guess the first thing I'd try > > >> > would be bumping up the max_readahead_kb parameter, since I'm guessing > > >> > that your backup application isn't driving very deep queue depths. If > > >> > that doesn't work, then please provide exact invocations of tiobench > > >> > that reprduce the problem or some blktrace output for your real test. > > >> > > >> Any news, Ralf? > > > > > > sorry for the delay. atm there are large backups running and using the > > > raid device for spooling. So I can't do any tests. > > > > > > Re. read ahead: I tested different settings from 8Kb to 65Kb, this > > > didn't help. > > > > > > I'll do some more tests when the backups are done (3-4 more days). > > > > The default is 128KB, I believe, so it's strange that you would test > > smaller values. ;) I would try something along the lines of 1 or 2 MB. > > > > I'm CCing Fengguang in case he has any suggestions. > > Jeff, thank you for the forwarding (and sorry for the long delay)! > > The read:write (or rather sync:async) ratio control is an IO scheduler > feature. CFQ has parameters slice_sync and slice_async for that. > What's more, CFQ will let async IO wait if there are any in flight > sync IO. This is good, but not quite enough. Normally sync IOs come > one by one, with some small idle time window in between. If we only > start dispatching async IOs after the last sync IO has completed for > eg. 1ms, then we may stop the async background write IOs when there > are active sync foreground read IO stream. > > This simple patch aims to address the writes-push-aside-reads problem. > Ralf, you can try applying this patch and run your workload with this > (huge) CFQ parameter: > > echo 1000 > /sys/block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_sync > > The patch is based on 2.6.30, but can be trivially backported if you > want to use some old kernel. > > It may impact overall (sync+async) IO throughput when there are one or > more ongoing sync IO streams, so requires considerable benchmarks and > adjustments. > > Thanks, > Fengguang > --- > > diff --git a/block/cfq-iosched.c b/block/cfq-iosched.c > index a55a9bd..14011b7 100644 > --- a/block/cfq-iosched.c > +++ b/block/cfq-iosched.c > @@ -1064,7 +1064,6 @@ static void cfq_arm_slice_timer(struct cfq_data *cfqd) > if (blk_queue_nonrot(cfqd->queue) && cfqd->hw_tag) > return; > > - WARN_ON(!RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&cfqq->sort_list)); > WARN_ON(cfq_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq)); > > /* > @@ -2175,8 +2174,6 @@ static void cfq_completed_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq) > * or if we want to idle in case it has no pending requests. > */ > if (cfqd->active_queue == cfqq) { > - const bool cfqq_empty = RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&cfqq->sort_list); > - > if (cfq_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq)) { > cfq_set_prio_slice(cfqd, cfqq); > cfq_clear_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq); > @@ -2190,8 +2187,8 @@ static void cfq_completed_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq) > */ > if (cfq_slice_used(cfqq) || cfq_class_idle(cfqq)) > cfq_slice_expired(cfqd, 1); > - else if (cfqq_empty && !cfq_close_cooperator(cfqd, cfqq, 1) && > - sync && !rq_noidle(rq)) > + else if (sync && !rq_noidle(rq) && > + !cfq_close_cooperator(cfqd, cfqq, 1)) > cfq_arm_slice_timer(cfqd); > } What's the purpose of this patch? If you have requests pending you don't want to arm the idle timer and wait, you want to dispatch those. -- Jens Axboe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: io-scheduler tuning for better read/write ratio 2009-06-26 10:44 ` Jens Axboe @ 2009-06-27 3:46 ` Wu Fengguang 2009-06-29 9:47 ` Ralf Gross 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Wu Fengguang @ 2009-06-27 3:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jens Axboe Cc: Jeff Moyer, Ralf Gross, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org On Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 06:44:06PM +0800, Jens Axboe wrote: > On Fri, Jun 26 2009, Wu Fengguang wrote: > > On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 03:42:46AM +0800, Jeff Moyer wrote: > > > Ralf Gross <rg@STZ-Softwaretechnik.com> writes: > > > > > > > Jeff Moyer schrieb: > > > >> Jeff Moyer <jmoyer@redhat.com> writes: > > > >> > > > >> > Ralf Gross <rg@stz-softwaretechnik.com> writes: > > > >> > > > > >> >> Casey Dahlin schrieb: > > > >> >>> On 06/16/2009 02:40 PM, Ralf Gross wrote: > > > >> >>> > David Newall schrieb: > > > >> >>> >> Ralf Gross wrote: > > > >> >>> >>> write throughput is much higher than the read throughput (40 MB/s > > > >> >>> >>> read, 90 MB/s write). > > > >> >>> > > > > >> >>> > Hm, but I get higher read throughput (160-200 MB/s) if I don't write > > > >> >>> > to the device at the same time. > > > >> >>> > > > > >> >>> > Ralf > > > >> >>> > > > >> >>> How specifically are you testing? It could depend a lot on the > > > >> >>> particular access patterns you're using to test. > > > >> >> > > > >> >> I did the basic tests with tiobench. The real test is a test backup > > > >> >> (bacula) with 2 jobs that create 2 30 GB spool files on that device. > > > >> >> The jobs partially write to the device in parallel. Depending which > > > >> >> spool file reaches the 30 GB first, one starts reading from that file > > > >> >> and writing to tape, while to other is still spooling. > > > >> > > > > >> > We are missing a lot of details, here. I guess the first thing I'd try > > > >> > would be bumping up the max_readahead_kb parameter, since I'm guessing > > > >> > that your backup application isn't driving very deep queue depths. If > > > >> > that doesn't work, then please provide exact invocations of tiobench > > > >> > that reprduce the problem or some blktrace output for your real test. > > > >> > > > >> Any news, Ralf? > > > > > > > > sorry for the delay. atm there are large backups running and using the > > > > raid device for spooling. So I can't do any tests. > > > > > > > > Re. read ahead: I tested different settings from 8Kb to 65Kb, this > > > > didn't help. > > > > > > > > I'll do some more tests when the backups are done (3-4 more days). > > > > > > The default is 128KB, I believe, so it's strange that you would test > > > smaller values. ;) I would try something along the lines of 1 or 2 MB. > > > > > > I'm CCing Fengguang in case he has any suggestions. > > > > Jeff, thank you for the forwarding (and sorry for the long delay)! > > > > The read:write (or rather sync:async) ratio control is an IO scheduler > > feature. CFQ has parameters slice_sync and slice_async for that. > > What's more, CFQ will let async IO wait if there are any in flight > > sync IO. This is good, but not quite enough. Normally sync IOs come > > one by one, with some small idle time window in between. If we only > > start dispatching async IOs after the last sync IO has completed for > > eg. 1ms, then we may stop the async background write IOs when there > > are active sync foreground read IO stream. > > > > This simple patch aims to address the writes-push-aside-reads problem. > > Ralf, you can try applying this patch and run your workload with this > > (huge) CFQ parameter: > > > > echo 1000 > /sys/block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_sync > > > > The patch is based on 2.6.30, but can be trivially backported if you > > want to use some old kernel. > > > > It may impact overall (sync+async) IO throughput when there are one or > > more ongoing sync IO streams, so requires considerable benchmarks and > > adjustments. > > > > Thanks, > > Fengguang > > --- > > > > diff --git a/block/cfq-iosched.c b/block/cfq-iosched.c > > index a55a9bd..14011b7 100644 > > --- a/block/cfq-iosched.c > > +++ b/block/cfq-iosched.c > > @@ -1064,7 +1064,6 @@ static void cfq_arm_slice_timer(struct cfq_data *cfqd) > > if (blk_queue_nonrot(cfqd->queue) && cfqd->hw_tag) > > return; > > > > - WARN_ON(!RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&cfqq->sort_list)); > > WARN_ON(cfq_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq)); > > > > /* > > @@ -2175,8 +2174,6 @@ static void cfq_completed_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq) > > * or if we want to idle in case it has no pending requests. > > */ > > if (cfqd->active_queue == cfqq) { > > - const bool cfqq_empty = RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&cfqq->sort_list); > > - > > if (cfq_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq)) { > > cfq_set_prio_slice(cfqd, cfqq); > > cfq_clear_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq); > > @@ -2190,8 +2187,8 @@ static void cfq_completed_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq) > > */ > > if (cfq_slice_used(cfqq) || cfq_class_idle(cfqq)) > > cfq_slice_expired(cfqd, 1); > > - else if (cfqq_empty && !cfq_close_cooperator(cfqd, cfqq, 1) && > > - sync && !rq_noidle(rq)) > > + else if (sync && !rq_noidle(rq) && > > + !cfq_close_cooperator(cfqd, cfqq, 1)) > > cfq_arm_slice_timer(cfqd); > > } > > What's the purpose of this patch? If you have requests pending you don't > want to arm the idle timer and wait, you want to dispatch those. You are right, please ignore this mindless hacking patch. Ralf, you can do the read/write ratio in the CFQ scheduler by tuning the slice_sync/slice_async parameters. For example, echo 10 > /sys//block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_async echo 100 > /sys//block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_sync gives -dsk/total- read writ 66M 25M 65M 20M 49M 32M 84M 19M 46M 28M 61M 23M 55M 25M 67M 23M 76M 18M 46M 31M 56M 29M 54M 23M 76M 20M while echo 10 > /sys//block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_async echo 300 > /sys//block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_sync gives -dsk/total- read writ 102M 11M 82M 10M 100M 12M 86M 10M 95M 11M 102M 3168k 96M 11M 88M 10M 96M 12M However too large slice_sync may not be desirable. Thanks, Fengguang ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: io-scheduler tuning for better read/write ratio 2009-06-27 3:46 ` Wu Fengguang @ 2009-06-29 9:47 ` Ralf Gross 0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Ralf Gross @ 2009-06-29 9:47 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Wu Fengguang Cc: Jens Axboe, Jeff Moyer, Ralf Gross, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org Wu Fengguang schrieb: > On Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 06:44:06PM +0800, Jens Axboe wrote: > > On Fri, Jun 26 2009, Wu Fengguang wrote: > > > On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 03:42:46AM +0800, Jeff Moyer wrote: > > > > Ralf Gross <rg@STZ-Softwaretechnik.com> writes: > > > > > > > > > Jeff Moyer schrieb: > > > > >> Jeff Moyer <jmoyer@redhat.com> writes: > > > > >> > > > > >> > Ralf Gross <rg@stz-softwaretechnik.com> writes: > > > > >> > > > > > >> >> Casey Dahlin schrieb: > > > > >> >>> On 06/16/2009 02:40 PM, Ralf Gross wrote: > > > > >> >>> > David Newall schrieb: > > > > >> >>> >> Ralf Gross wrote: > > > > >> >>> >>> write throughput is much higher than the read throughput (40 MB/s > > > > >> >>> >>> read, 90 MB/s write). > > > > >> >>> > > > > > >> >>> > Hm, but I get higher read throughput (160-200 MB/s) if I don't write > > > > >> >>> > to the device at the same time. > > > > >> >>> > > > > > >> >>> > Ralf > > > > >> >>> > > > > >> >>> How specifically are you testing? It could depend a lot on the > > > > >> >>> particular access patterns you're using to test. > > > > >> >> > > > > >> >> I did the basic tests with tiobench. The real test is a test backup > > > > >> >> (bacula) with 2 jobs that create 2 30 GB spool files on that device. > > > > >> >> The jobs partially write to the device in parallel. Depending which > > > > >> >> spool file reaches the 30 GB first, one starts reading from that file > > > > >> >> and writing to tape, while to other is still spooling. > > > > >> > > > > > >> > We are missing a lot of details, here. I guess the first thing I'd try > > > > >> > would be bumping up the max_readahead_kb parameter, since I'm guessing > > > > >> > that your backup application isn't driving very deep queue depths. If > > > > >> > that doesn't work, then please provide exact invocations of tiobench > > > > >> > that reprduce the problem or some blktrace output for your real test. > > > > >> > > > > >> Any news, Ralf? > > > > > > > > > > sorry for the delay. atm there are large backups running and using the > > > > > raid device for spooling. So I can't do any tests. > > > > > > > > > > Re. read ahead: I tested different settings from 8Kb to 65Kb, this > > > > > didn't help. > > > > > > > > > > I'll do some more tests when the backups are done (3-4 more days). > > > > > > > > The default is 128KB, I believe, so it's strange that you would test > > > > smaller values. ;) I would try something along the lines of 1 or 2 MB. > > > > > > > > I'm CCing Fengguang in case he has any suggestions. > > > > > > Jeff, thank you for the forwarding (and sorry for the long delay)! > > > > > > The read:write (or rather sync:async) ratio control is an IO scheduler > > > feature. CFQ has parameters slice_sync and slice_async for that. > > > What's more, CFQ will let async IO wait if there are any in flight > > > sync IO. This is good, but not quite enough. Normally sync IOs come > > > one by one, with some small idle time window in between. If we only > > > start dispatching async IOs after the last sync IO has completed for > > > eg. 1ms, then we may stop the async background write IOs when there > > > are active sync foreground read IO stream. > > > > > > This simple patch aims to address the writes-push-aside-reads problem. > > > Ralf, you can try applying this patch and run your workload with this > > > (huge) CFQ parameter: > > > > > > echo 1000 > /sys/block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_sync > > > > > > The patch is based on 2.6.30, but can be trivially backported if you > > > want to use some old kernel. > > > > > > It may impact overall (sync+async) IO throughput when there are one or > > > more ongoing sync IO streams, so requires considerable benchmarks and > > > adjustments. > > > > > > Thanks, > > > Fengguang > > > --- > > > > > > diff --git a/block/cfq-iosched.c b/block/cfq-iosched.c > > > index a55a9bd..14011b7 100644 > > > --- a/block/cfq-iosched.c > > > +++ b/block/cfq-iosched.c > > > @@ -1064,7 +1064,6 @@ static void cfq_arm_slice_timer(struct cfq_data *cfqd) > > > if (blk_queue_nonrot(cfqd->queue) && cfqd->hw_tag) > > > return; > > > > > > - WARN_ON(!RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&cfqq->sort_list)); > > > WARN_ON(cfq_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq)); > > > > > > /* > > > @@ -2175,8 +2174,6 @@ static void cfq_completed_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq) > > > * or if we want to idle in case it has no pending requests. > > > */ > > > if (cfqd->active_queue == cfqq) { > > > - const bool cfqq_empty = RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&cfqq->sort_list); > > > - > > > if (cfq_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq)) { > > > cfq_set_prio_slice(cfqd, cfqq); > > > cfq_clear_cfqq_slice_new(cfqq); > > > @@ -2190,8 +2187,8 @@ static void cfq_completed_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq) > > > */ > > > if (cfq_slice_used(cfqq) || cfq_class_idle(cfqq)) > > > cfq_slice_expired(cfqd, 1); > > > - else if (cfqq_empty && !cfq_close_cooperator(cfqd, cfqq, 1) && > > > - sync && !rq_noidle(rq)) > > > + else if (sync && !rq_noidle(rq) && > > > + !cfq_close_cooperator(cfqd, cfqq, 1)) > > > cfq_arm_slice_timer(cfqd); > > > } > > > > What's the purpose of this patch? If you have requests pending you don't > > want to arm the idle timer and wait, you want to dispatch those. > > You are right, please ignore this mindless hacking patch. > > Ralf, you can do the read/write ratio in the CFQ scheduler by tuning > the slice_sync/slice_async parameters. > > For example, > > echo 10 > /sys//block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_async > echo 100 > /sys//block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_sync > > gives > > -dsk/total- > read writ > 66M 25M > 65M 20M > 49M 32M > 84M 19M > 46M 28M > 61M 23M > 55M 25M > 67M 23M > 76M 18M > 46M 31M > 56M 29M > 54M 23M > 76M 20M writing: --dsk/md1-- _read _writ 0 150M 0 142M 0 143M 0 112M 0 141M 0 152M 0 132M 0 123M 0 149M reading: --dsk/md1-- _read _writ 143M 0 145M 0 160M 0 128M 0 148M 0 140M 0 158M 0 130M 0 122M 0 reading + writing: --dsk/md1-- _read _writ 55M 76M 41M 83M 64M 81M 64M 83M 63M 68M 56M 117M 41M 61M 64M 87M 64M 69M 61M 87M 67M 81M 64M 33M 63M 68M 56M 76M > while > > echo 10 > /sys//block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_async > echo 300 > /sys//block/sda/queue/iosched/slice_sync > > gives > > -dsk/total- > read writ > 102M 11M > 82M 10M > 100M 12M > 86M 10M > 95M 11M > 102M 3168k > 96M 11M > 88M 10M > 96M 12M > > However too large slice_sync may not be desirable. writing: --dsk/md1-- _read _writ 0 131M 0 136M 0 145M 0 136M 0 128M 0 150M 0 127M 0 149M 0 127M 0 156M 0 125M 0 142M reading: --dsk/md1-- _read _writ 128M 0 160M 0 128M 0 128M 0 160M 0 128M 0 109M 0 128M 0 128M 0 160M 0 128M 0 writing: --dsk/md1-- _read _writ 0 183M 0 142M 0 137M 0 147M 0 135M 0 147M 0 117M 0 135M 0 156M 0 120M 0 147M 0 135M reading + writing: --dsk/md1-- _read _writ 96M 40M 64M 38M 96M 29M 96M 24M 96M 31M 95M 35M 97M 26M 96M 23M 96M 33M 95M 73M 91M 25M Thanks, this seem to be what I was looking for. I'll change the scheduler parameter for all spool devices and will run a backup with two concurrent backups. This will show me if bacula behaves the same as the simple dd test does. Ralf ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
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2009-06-26 2:19 ` io-scheduler tuning for better read/write ratio Wu Fengguang
2009-06-26 10:44 ` Jens Axboe
2009-06-27 3:46 ` Wu Fengguang
2009-06-29 9:47 ` Ralf Gross
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