From: Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>
To: Steve Byan <smb@egenera.com>
Cc: Jens Axboe <axboe@suse.de>, Mark Lord <liml@rtr.ca>,
Gentoopower <gentoopower@yahoo.de>,
"Raz Ben-Jehuda(caro)" <raziebe@gmail.com>,
Linux RAID Mailing List <linux-raid@vger.kernel.org>,
"linux-ide@vger.kernel.org" <linux-ide@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: NCQ general question
Date: Fri, 03 Mar 2006 17:19:05 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4408C0D9.4010202@garzik.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <C6838977-5411-400F-9548-2F22598DC2AE@egenera.com>
Steve Byan wrote:
> On Mar 1, 2006, at 8:55 AM, Jens Axboe wrote:
> The problem with TCQ is that the host can't disconnect on writes after
> sending the data to the drive but before receiving the status. The host
> can only disconnect between sending the command and moving the data.
That, but also: The standard PCI IDE hardware interface prevents the
device from selecting command $N's DMA data out of $M active write commands.
With reads, the device has more freedom to process the requests
asynchronously.
> Consequently TCQ is useless for writes, which is where you really need
Agreed.
> it. It works OK for reads. TCQ was really invented as a way to allow
> CD-ROM drives to play nice on the same ATA bus as disks.
Disagree, you are probably thinking about bus disconnect associated with
the overlapped command set? AFAIK TCQ has -never- applied to ATAPI.
> The reason you need write queuing is for data integrity reasons, not
> for performance. ATA disks effectively get command-queuing on writes
> even without TCQ and NCQ - they simply park the data in a volatile RAM
> cache, tell the host that the data is saved on persistent storage, and
> then asynchronously write the queued data to the physical media. The
> drive reorders those writes and will gather sequential writes.
Data integrity -and- performance. Performance increases for all the
standard reasons that an asynchronous pipeline increases performance
over a synchronous one.
The write cache means that requests on the device can be processed
asynchronously, but without NCQ there is still a synchronous bottleneck:
the device<->controller pipe.
> However, note that all filesystems that make even a pretense of trying
> to maintain filesystem integrity after a power failure (note that the
> Windows NT implementation of FAT32 does not attempt to maintain
> filesystem integrity after a power failure) depend on knowing when data
> makes it to persistent storage, so they can order their writes
True.
> correctly. ATA disk write caching breaks this guarantee. To restore
> filesystem integrity on a careful-write filesystem like most unix
> filesystems, you have to disable write-caching in the drive. This
False, as Linux has proven: barriers can be implemented with
flush-cache commands.
Disabling write cache is not your only choice, and using flush-cache
gives you better performance than flat-out disabling the write cache.
Jeff
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2006-03-03 22:19 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 26+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-03-01 7:04 NCQ general question Raz Ben-Jehuda(caro)
2006-03-01 8:56 ` Gentoopower
2006-03-01 13:49 ` Mark Lord
2006-03-01 13:55 ` Jens Axboe
2006-03-03 21:55 ` Steve Byan
2006-03-03 22:19 ` Jeff Garzik [this message]
2006-03-04 18:56 ` Steve Byan
2006-03-04 19:10 ` Jeff Garzik
2006-03-04 20:23 ` Steve Byan
2006-03-04 23:56 ` Eric D. Mudama
2006-03-05 7:19 ` Raz Ben-Jehuda(caro)
2006-03-05 7:29 ` Jeff Garzik
2006-03-01 15:56 ` Gentoopower
2006-03-01 16:05 ` Jens Axboe
2006-03-01 16:20 ` Jeff Garzik
2006-03-01 18:53 ` Jens Axboe
2006-03-02 8:14 ` Raz Ben-Jehuda(caro)
2006-03-02 8:18 ` Jens Axboe
2006-03-02 11:20 ` Jeff Garzik
2006-03-02 13:34 ` Raz Ben-Jehuda(caro)
2006-03-02 13:37 ` Jeff Garzik
2006-03-02 8:18 ` Rafal Krzewski
2006-03-02 11:35 ` Jeff Garzik
2006-03-02 14:29 ` Rafal Krzewski
2006-03-01 16:48 ` Gentoopower
2006-03-01 18:34 ` Mark Lord
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