From: Nikanth Karthikesan <knikanth@suse.de>
To: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Cc: LKML <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
jens.axboe@oracle.com, jmoyer@redhat.com
Subject: Re: CFQ slower than NOOP with pgbench
Date: Thu, 11 Feb 2010 09:40:33 +0530 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <201002110940.33303.knikanth@suse.de> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20100210223255.GC3367@quack.suse.cz>
On Thursday 11 February 2010 04:02:55 Jan Kara wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I was playing with a pgbench benchmark - it runs a series of operations
> on top of PostgreSQL database. I was using:
> pgbench -c 8 -t 2000 pgbench
> which runs 8 threads and each thread does 2000 transactions over the
> database. The funny thing is that the benchmark does ~70 tps (transactions
> per second) with CFQ and ~90 tps with a NOOP io scheduler. This is with
> 2.6.32 kernel.
> The load on the IO subsystem basically looks like lots of random reads
> interleaved with occasional short synchronous sequential writes (the
> database does write immediately followed by fdatasync) to the database
> logs. I was pondering for quite some time why CFQ is slower and I've tried
> tuning it in various ways without success. What I found is that with NOOP
> scheduler, the fdatasync is like 20-times faster on average than with CFQ.
> Looking at the block traces (available on request) this is usually because
> when fdatasync is called, it takes time before the timeslice of the process
> doing the sync comes (other processes are using their timeslices for reads)
> and writes are dispatched... The question is: Can we do something about
> that? Because I'm currently out of ideas except for hacks like "run this
> queue immediately if it's fsync" or such...
I guess, noop would be hurting those reads which is also a synchronous
operation like fsync. But it doesn't seem to have a huge negative impact on
the pgbench. Is it because reads are random in this benchmark and delaying
them might even help by getting new requests for sectors in between two random
reads? If that is the case, I dont think fsync should be given higher priority
than reads based on this benchmark.
Can you make the blktrace available?
Thanks
Nikanth
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-02-11 4:09 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-02-10 22:32 CFQ slower than NOOP with pgbench Jan Kara
2010-02-11 4:10 ` Nikanth Karthikesan [this message]
2010-02-11 13:14 ` Jan Kara
2010-02-11 19:30 ` Vivek Goyal
2010-02-18 18:56 ` Jan Kara
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