From: Ric Wheeler <rwheeler@redhat.com>
To: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>
Cc: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>,
"linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
"linux-ide@vger.kernel.org" <linux-ide@vger.kernel.org>,
"lsf-pc@lists.linux-foundation.org"
<lsf-pc@lists.linux-foundation.org>,
"linux-mm@kvack.org" <linux-mm@kvack.org>,
"linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org" <linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org>,
"akpm@linux-foundation.org" <akpm@linux-foundation.org>,
"linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org" <linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org>,
"mgorman@suse.de" <mgorman@suse.de>
Subject: Re: [Lsf-pc] [LSF/MM TOPIC] really large storage sectors - going beyond 4096 bytes
Date: Wed, 22 Jan 2014 13:39:39 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <52E0106B.5010604@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1390415703.2372.62.camel@dabdike.int.hansenpartnership.com>
On 01/22/2014 01:35 PM, James Bottomley wrote:
> On Wed, 2014-01-22 at 13:17 -0500, Ric Wheeler wrote:
>> On 01/22/2014 01:13 PM, James Bottomley wrote:
>>> On Wed, 2014-01-22 at 18:02 +0000, Chris Mason wrote:
>>>> On Wed, 2014-01-22 at 09:21 -0800, James Bottomley wrote:
>>>>> On Wed, 2014-01-22 at 17:02 +0000, Chris Mason wrote:
>>>> [ I like big sectors and I cannot lie ]
>>> I think I might be sceptical, but I don't think that's showing in my
>>> concerns ...
>>>
>>>>>> I really think that if we want to make progress on this one, we need
>>>>>> code and someone that owns it. Nick's work was impressive, but it was
>>>>>> mostly there for getting rid of buffer heads. If we have a device that
>>>>>> needs it and someone working to enable that device, we'll go forward
>>>>>> much faster.
>>>>> Do we even need to do that (eliminate buffer heads)? We cope with 4k
>>>>> sector only devices just fine today because the bh mechanisms now
>>>>> operate on top of the page cache and can do the RMW necessary to update
>>>>> a bh in the page cache itself which allows us to do only 4k chunked
>>>>> writes, so we could keep the bh system and just alter the granularity of
>>>>> the page cache.
>>>>>
>>>> We're likely to have people mixing 4K drives and <fill in some other
>>>> size here> on the same box. We could just go with the biggest size and
>>>> use the existing bh code for the sub-pagesized blocks, but I really
>>>> hesitate to change VM fundamentals for this.
>>> If the page cache had a variable granularity per device, that would cope
>>> with this. It's the variable granularity that's the VM problem.
>>>
>>>> From a pure code point of view, it may be less work to change it once in
>>>> the VM. But from an overall system impact point of view, it's a big
>>>> change in how the system behaves just for filesystem metadata.
>>> Agreed, but only if we don't do RMW in the buffer cache ... which may be
>>> a good reason to keep it.
>>>
>>>>> The other question is if the drive does RMW between 4k and whatever its
>>>>> physical sector size, do we need to do anything to take advantage of
>>>>> it ... as in what would altering the granularity of the page cache buy
>>>>> us?
>>>> The real benefit is when and how the reads get scheduled. We're able to
>>>> do a much better job pipelining the reads, controlling our caches and
>>>> reducing write latency by having the reads done up in the OS instead of
>>>> the drive.
>>> I agree with all of that, but my question is still can we do this by
>>> propagating alignment and chunk size information (i.e. the physical
>>> sector size) like we do today. If the FS knows the optimal I/O patterns
>>> and tries to follow them, the odd cockup won't impact performance
>>> dramatically. The real question is can the FS make use of this layout
>>> information *without* changing the page cache granularity? Only if you
>>> answer me "no" to this do I think we need to worry about changing page
>>> cache granularity.
>>>
>>> Realistically, if you look at what the I/O schedulers output on a
>>> standard (spinning rust) workload, it's mostly large transfers.
>>> Obviously these are misalgned at the ends, but we can fix some of that
>>> in the scheduler. Particularly if the FS helps us with layout. My
>>> instinct tells me that we can fix 99% of this with layout on the FS + io
>>> schedulers ... the remaining 1% goes to the drive as needing to do RMW
>>> in the device, but the net impact to our throughput shouldn't be that
>>> great.
>>>
>>> James
>>>
>> I think that the key to having the file system work with larger
>> sectors is to
>> create them properly aligned and use the actual, native sector size as
>> their FS
>> block size. Which is pretty much back the original challenge.
> Only if you think laying out stuff requires block size changes. If a 4k
> block filesystem's allocation algorithm tried to allocate on a 16k
> boundary for instance, that gets us a lot of the performance without
> needing a lot of alteration.
The key here is that we cannot assume that writes happen only during
allocation/append mode.
Unless the block size enforces it, we will have non-aligned, small block IO done
to allocated regions that won't get coalesced.
>
> It's not even obvious that an ignorant 4k layout is going to be so
> bad ... the RMW occurs only at the ends of the transfers, not in the
> middle. If we say 16k physical block and average 128k transfers,
> probabalistically we misalign on 6 out of 31 sectors (or 19% of the
> time). We can make that better by increasing the transfer size (it
> comes down to 10% for 256k transfers.
This really depends on the nature of the device. Some devices could produce very
erratic performance or even (not today, but some day) reject the IO.
>
>> Teaching each and every file system to be aligned at the storage
>> granularity/minimum IO size when that is larger than the physical
>> sector size is
>> harder I think.
> But you're making assumptions about needing larger block sizes. I'm
> asking what can we do with what we currently have? Increasing the
> transfer size is a way of mitigating the problem with no FS support
> whatever. Adding alignment to the FS layout algorithm is another. When
> you've done both of those, I think you're already at the 99% aligned
> case, which is "do we need to bother any more" territory for me.
>
I would say no, we will eventually need larger file system block sizes.
Tuning and getting 95% (98%?) of the way there with alignment and IO scheduler
does help a lot. That is what we do today and it is important when looking for
high performance.
However, this is more of a short term work around for a lack of a fundamental
ability to do the right sized file system block for a specific class of device.
As such, not a crisis that must be solved today, but rather something that I
think is definitely worth looking at so we can figure this out over the next
year or so.
Ric
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2014-01-22 18:40 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 59+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2013-12-20 9:30 LSF/MM 2014 Call For Proposals Mel Gorman
2014-01-06 22:20 ` [LSF/MM TOPIC] [ATTEND] persistent memory progress, management of storage & file systems Ric Wheeler
2014-01-06 22:32 ` faibish, sorin
2014-01-07 19:44 ` Joel Becker
2014-01-21 7:00 ` LSF/MM 2014 Call For Proposals Michel Lespinasse
2014-01-22 3:04 ` [LSF/MM TOPIC] really large storage sectors - going beyond 4096 bytes Ric Wheeler
2014-01-22 5:20 ` Joel Becker
2014-01-22 7:14 ` Hannes Reinecke
2014-01-22 9:34 ` [Lsf-pc] " Mel Gorman
2014-01-22 14:10 ` Ric Wheeler
2014-01-22 14:34 ` Mel Gorman
2014-01-22 14:58 ` Ric Wheeler
2014-01-22 15:19 ` Mel Gorman
2014-01-22 17:02 ` Chris Mason
2014-01-22 17:21 ` James Bottomley
2014-01-22 18:02 ` Chris Mason
2014-01-22 18:13 ` James Bottomley
2014-01-22 18:17 ` Ric Wheeler
2014-01-22 18:35 ` James Bottomley
2014-01-22 18:39 ` Ric Wheeler [this message]
2014-01-22 19:30 ` James Bottomley
2014-01-22 19:50 ` Andrew Morton
2014-01-22 20:13 ` Chris Mason
2014-01-23 2:46 ` David Lang
2014-01-23 5:21 ` Theodore Ts'o
2014-01-23 8:35 ` Dave Chinner
2014-01-23 12:55 ` Theodore Ts'o
2014-01-23 19:49 ` Dave Chinner
2014-01-23 21:21 ` Joel Becker
2014-01-22 20:57 ` Martin K. Petersen
2014-01-22 18:37 ` Chris Mason
2014-01-22 18:40 ` Ric Wheeler
2014-01-22 18:47 ` James Bottomley
2014-01-23 21:27 ` Joel Becker
2014-01-23 21:34 ` Chris Mason
2014-01-23 8:27 ` Dave Chinner
2014-01-23 15:47 ` James Bottomley
2014-01-23 16:44 ` Mel Gorman
2014-01-23 19:55 ` James Bottomley
2014-01-24 10:57 ` Mel Gorman
2014-01-30 4:52 ` Matthew Wilcox
2014-01-30 6:01 ` Dave Chinner
2014-01-30 10:50 ` Mel Gorman
2014-01-23 20:34 ` Dave Chinner
2014-01-23 20:54 ` Christoph Lameter
2014-01-23 8:24 ` Dave Chinner
2014-01-23 20:48 ` Christoph Lameter
2014-01-22 20:47 ` Martin K. Petersen
2014-01-23 8:21 ` Dave Chinner
2014-01-22 15:14 ` Chris Mason
2014-01-22 16:03 ` James Bottomley
2014-01-22 16:45 ` Ric Wheeler
2014-01-22 17:00 ` James Bottomley
2014-01-22 21:05 ` Jan Kara
2014-01-23 20:47 ` Christoph Lameter
2014-01-24 11:09 ` Mel Gorman
2014-01-24 15:44 ` Christoph Lameter
2014-01-22 15:54 ` James Bottomley
2014-03-14 9:02 ` Update on LSF/MM [was Re: LSF/MM 2014 Call For Proposals] James Bottomley
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