From: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de>
To: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>
Cc: Shyam_Iyer@dell.com, linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org,
lsf@lists.linux-foundation.org, dm-devel@redhat.com,
linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org, rwheeler@redhat.com
Subject: Re: [Lsf] Preliminary Agenda and Activities for LSF
Date: Wed, 30 Mar 2011 16:10:27 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4D9339D3.50500@suse.de> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1301493722.2618.1.camel@mulgrave.site>
On 03/30/2011 04:02 PM, James Bottomley wrote:
> On Wed, 2011-03-30 at 07:58 +0200, Hannes Reinecke wrote:
>> On 03/30/2011 01:09 AM, Shyam_Iyer@dell.com wrote:
>>>
>>> Let me back up here.. this has to be thought in not only the traditional Ethernet
>> > sense but also in a Data Centre Bridged environment. I shouldn't
>> have wandered
>> > into the multipath constructs..
>>>
>>> I think the statement on not going to the same LUN was a little erroneous. I meant
>> > different /dev/sdXs.. and hence different block I/O queues.
>>>
>>> Each I/O queue could be thought of as a bandwidth queue class being serviced through
>> > a corresponding network adapter's queue(assuming a multiqueue
>> capable adapter)
>>>
>>> Let us say /dev/sda(Through eth0) and /dev/sdb(eth1) are a cgroup bandwidth group
>> > corresponding to a weightage of 20% of the I/O bandwidth the user
>> has configured
>> > this weight thinking that this will correspond to say 200Mb of
>> bandwidth.
>>>
>>> Let us say the network bandwidth on the corresponding network queues corresponding
>> > was reduced by the DCB capable switch...
>>> We still need an SLA of 200Mb of I/O bandwidth but the underlying dynamics have changed.
>>>
>>> In such a scenario the option is to move I/O to a different bandwidth priority queue
>> > in the network adapter. This could be moving I/O to a new network
>> queue in eth0 or
>> > another queue in eth1 ..
>>>
>>> This requires mapping the block queue to the new network queue.
>>>
>>> One way of solving this is what is getting into the open-iscsi world i.e. creating
>> > a session tagged to the relevant DCB priority and thus the
>> session gets mapped
>> > to the relevant tc queue which ultimately maps to one of the
>> network adapters multiqueue..
>>>
>>> But when multipath fails over to the different session path then the DCB bandwidth
>> > priority will not move with it..
>>>
>>> Ok one could argue that is a user mistake to have configured bandwidth priorities
>> > differently but it may so happen that the bandwidth priority was
>> just dynamically
>> > changed by the switch for the particular queue.
>>>
>>> Although I gave an example of a DCB environment but we could definitely look at
>> > doing a 1:n map of block queues to network adapter queues for
>> non-DCB environments too..
>>>
>> That sounds quite convoluted enough to warrant it's own slot :-)
>>
>> No, seriously. I think it would be good to have a separate slot
>> discussing DCB (be it FCoE or iSCSI) and cgroups.
>> And how to best align these things.
>
> OK, I'll go for that ... Data Centre Bridging; experiences, technologies
> and needs ... something like that. What about virtualisation and open
> vSwitch?
>
Hmm. Not qualified enough to talk about the latter; I was more
envisioning the storage-related aspects here (multiqueue mapping,
QoS classes etc). With virtualisation and open vSwitch we're more in
the network side of things; doubt open vSwitch can do DCB.
And even if it could, virtio certainly can't :-)
Cheers,
Hannes
--
Dr. Hannes Reinecke zSeries & Storage
hare@suse.de +49 911 74053 688
SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5, 90409 Nürnberg
GF: Markus Rex, HRB 16746 (AG Nürnberg)
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2011-03-30 14:10 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 43+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
[not found] <1301373398.2590.20.camel@mulgrave.site>
2011-03-29 11:16 ` [Lsf] Preliminary Agenda and Activities for LSF Ric Wheeler
2011-03-29 11:22 ` Matthew Wilcox
2011-03-29 12:17 ` Jens Axboe
2011-03-29 13:09 ` Martin K. Petersen
2011-03-29 13:12 ` Ric Wheeler
2011-03-29 13:38 ` James Bottomley
2011-03-29 17:20 ` Shyam_Iyer
2011-03-29 17:33 ` Vivek Goyal
2011-03-29 18:10 ` Shyam_Iyer
2011-03-29 18:45 ` Vivek Goyal
2011-03-29 19:13 ` Shyam_Iyer
2011-03-29 19:57 ` Vivek Goyal
2011-03-29 19:59 ` Mike Snitzer
2011-03-29 20:12 ` Shyam_Iyer
2011-03-29 20:23 ` Mike Snitzer
2011-03-29 23:09 ` Shyam_Iyer
2011-03-30 5:58 ` [Lsf] " Hannes Reinecke
2011-03-30 14:02 ` James Bottomley
2011-03-30 14:10 ` Hannes Reinecke [this message]
2011-03-30 14:26 ` James Bottomley
2011-03-30 14:55 ` Hannes Reinecke
2011-03-30 15:33 ` James Bottomley
2011-03-30 15:46 ` Shyam_Iyer
2011-03-30 20:32 ` Giridhar Malavali
2011-03-30 20:45 ` James Bottomley
2011-03-29 19:47 ` Nicholas A. Bellinger
2011-03-29 20:29 ` Jan Kara
2011-03-29 20:31 ` Ric Wheeler
2011-03-30 0:33 ` Mingming Cao
2011-03-30 2:17 ` Dave Chinner
2011-03-30 11:13 ` Theodore Tso
2011-03-30 11:28 ` Ric Wheeler
2011-03-30 14:07 ` Chris Mason
2011-04-01 15:19 ` Ted Ts'o
2011-04-01 16:30 ` Amir Goldstein
2011-04-01 21:46 ` Joel Becker
2011-04-02 3:26 ` Amir Goldstein
2011-04-01 21:43 ` Joel Becker
2011-03-30 21:49 ` Mingming Cao
2011-03-31 0:05 ` Matthew Wilcox
2011-03-31 1:00 ` Joel Becker
2011-04-01 21:34 ` Mingming Cao
2011-04-01 21:49 ` Joel Becker
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