* Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL [not found] <1401486037-25609-1-git-send-email-pl@kamp.de> @ 2014-06-04 15:12 ` Stefan Hajnoczi 2014-06-04 15:31 ` Peter Lieven 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Stefan Hajnoczi @ 2014-06-04 15:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Lieven; +Cc: kwolf, famz, qemu-devel, stefanha, shadowsor, pbonzini On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 11:40:37PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: > this patch introduces a new flag to indicate that we are going to sequentially > read from a file and do not plan to reread/reuse the data after it has been read. > > The current use of this flag is to open the source(s) of a qemu-img convert > process. If a protocol from block/raw-posix.c is used posix_fadvise is utilized > to advise to the kernel that we are going to read sequentially from the > file and a POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED advise is issued after each write to indicate > that there is no advantage keeping the blocks in the buffers. > > Consider the following test case that was created to confirm the behaviour of > the new flag: > > A 10G logical volume was created and filled with random data. > Then the logical volume was exported via qemu-img convert to an iscsi target. > Before the export was started all caches of the linux kernel where dropped. > > Old behavior: > - The convert process took 3m45s and the buffer cache grew up to 9.67 GB close > to the end of the conversion. After qemu-img terminated all the buffers were > freed by the kernel. > > New behavior with the -N switch: > - The convert process took 3m43s and the buffer cache grew up to 15.48 MB close > to the end with some small peaks up to 30 MB during the conversion. FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL can be good since it doubles read-ahead on Linux. I'm skeptical of the effort to avoid buffer cache usage using FADVISE_DONTNEED. The performance results tell me that less buffer cache was used but that number doesn't have a direct effect on application performance. Let's check GNU coreutils: $ cd coreutils $ git grep FADVISE_DONTNEED gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED = POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED, gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED, $ GNU cp(1) does not care about minimizing impact on buffer cache using FADVISE_DONTNEED. It just sets FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL on the source file and calls read() (plus uses FIEMAP to check extents for sparseness). I want to avoid adding code just for the heck of it. We need a deeper understanding: Please drop FADVISE_DONTNEED and compare again to see if it changes the benchmark. By the way, did you perform several runs to check the variance of the running time? I don't know if the 2 seconds difference were noise or because FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL or because FADVISE_DONTNEED or because both. > diff --git a/block/raw-posix.c b/block/raw-posix.c > index 6586a0c..9768cc4 100644 > --- a/block/raw-posix.c > +++ b/block/raw-posix.c > @@ -447,6 +447,13 @@ static int raw_open_common(BlockDriverState *bs, QDict *options, > } > #endif > > +#ifdef POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL > + if (bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL && > + !(bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_NOCACHE)) { > + posix_fadvise(s->fd, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL); > + } > +#endif This is only true if the image format is raw. If the image format on top of this raw-posix BDS is non-raw then the read pattern may not be sequential. Perhaps the extra I/O in that case doesn't matter but conceptually it's wrong to think that a raw-posix file will have a sequential access pattern just because bdrv_read() is called sequentially. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL 2014-06-04 15:12 ` [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL Stefan Hajnoczi @ 2014-06-04 15:31 ` Peter Lieven 2014-06-05 7:53 ` Stefan Hajnoczi 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Peter Lieven @ 2014-06-04 15:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Hajnoczi; +Cc: kwolf, famz, qemu-devel, stefanha, shadowsor, pbonzini Am 04.06.2014 17:12, schrieb Stefan Hajnoczi: > On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 11:40:37PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: >> this patch introduces a new flag to indicate that we are going to sequentially >> read from a file and do not plan to reread/reuse the data after it has been read. >> >> The current use of this flag is to open the source(s) of a qemu-img convert >> process. If a protocol from block/raw-posix.c is used posix_fadvise is utilized >> to advise to the kernel that we are going to read sequentially from the >> file and a POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED advise is issued after each write to indicate >> that there is no advantage keeping the blocks in the buffers. >> >> Consider the following test case that was created to confirm the behaviour of >> the new flag: >> >> A 10G logical volume was created and filled with random data. >> Then the logical volume was exported via qemu-img convert to an iscsi target. >> Before the export was started all caches of the linux kernel where dropped. >> >> Old behavior: >> - The convert process took 3m45s and the buffer cache grew up to 9.67 GB close >> to the end of the conversion. After qemu-img terminated all the buffers were >> freed by the kernel. >> >> New behavior with the -N switch: >> - The convert process took 3m43s and the buffer cache grew up to 15.48 MB close >> to the end with some small peaks up to 30 MB during the conversion. > FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL can be good since it doubles read-ahead on Linux. > > I'm skeptical of the effort to avoid buffer cache usage using > FADVISE_DONTNEED. The performance results tell me that less buffer > cache was used but that number doesn't have a direct effect on > application performance. > > Let's check GNU coreutils: > > $ cd coreutils > $ git grep FADVISE_DONTNEED > gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED = POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED, > gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED, > $ > > GNU cp(1) does not care about minimizing impact on buffer cache using > FADVISE_DONTNEED. It just sets FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL on the source file > and calls read() (plus uses FIEMAP to check extents for sparseness). > > I want to avoid adding code just for the heck of it. We need a deeper > understanding: > > Please drop FADVISE_DONTNEED and compare again to see if it changes the > benchmark. > > By the way, did you perform several runs to check the variance of the > running time? I don't know if the 2 seconds difference were noise or > because FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL or because FADVISE_DONTNEED or because both. There was no effect on the runtime as far as I remember. I ran some tests, but not a number large enough to filter out the noise. I created this one because we saw it helps under memory pressure. Maybe its too specific to add it into mainline qemu, but I wanted to avoid to have too much individual changes we need to maintain. > >> diff --git a/block/raw-posix.c b/block/raw-posix.c >> index 6586a0c..9768cc4 100644 >> --- a/block/raw-posix.c >> +++ b/block/raw-posix.c >> @@ -447,6 +447,13 @@ static int raw_open_common(BlockDriverState *bs, QDict *options, >> } >> #endif >> >> +#ifdef POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL >> + if (bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL && >> + !(bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_NOCACHE)) { >> + posix_fadvise(s->fd, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL); >> + } >> +#endif > This is only true if the image format is raw. If the image format on > top of this raw-posix BDS is non-raw then the read pattern may not be > sequential. You are right, but will the other formats set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL? > > Perhaps the extra I/O in that case doesn't matter but conceptually it's > wrong to think that a raw-posix file will have a sequential access > pattern just because bdrv_read() is called sequentially. Peter ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL 2014-06-04 15:31 ` Peter Lieven @ 2014-06-05 7:53 ` Stefan Hajnoczi 2014-06-05 8:09 ` Peter Lieven 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Stefan Hajnoczi @ 2014-06-05 7:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Lieven Cc: kwolf, famz, Stefan Hajnoczi, qemu-devel, shadowsor, pbonzini On Wed, Jun 04, 2014 at 05:31:48PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: > Am 04.06.2014 17:12, schrieb Stefan Hajnoczi: > > On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 11:40:37PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: > >> this patch introduces a new flag to indicate that we are going to sequentially > >> read from a file and do not plan to reread/reuse the data after it has been read. > >> > >> The current use of this flag is to open the source(s) of a qemu-img convert > >> process. If a protocol from block/raw-posix.c is used posix_fadvise is utilized > >> to advise to the kernel that we are going to read sequentially from the > >> file and a POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED advise is issued after each write to indicate > >> that there is no advantage keeping the blocks in the buffers. > >> > >> Consider the following test case that was created to confirm the behaviour of > >> the new flag: > >> > >> A 10G logical volume was created and filled with random data. > >> Then the logical volume was exported via qemu-img convert to an iscsi target. > >> Before the export was started all caches of the linux kernel where dropped. > >> > >> Old behavior: > >> - The convert process took 3m45s and the buffer cache grew up to 9.67 GB close > >> to the end of the conversion. After qemu-img terminated all the buffers were > >> freed by the kernel. > >> > >> New behavior with the -N switch: > >> - The convert process took 3m43s and the buffer cache grew up to 15.48 MB close > >> to the end with some small peaks up to 30 MB during the conversion. > > FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL can be good since it doubles read-ahead on Linux. > > > > I'm skeptical of the effort to avoid buffer cache usage using > > FADVISE_DONTNEED. The performance results tell me that less buffer > > cache was used but that number doesn't have a direct effect on > > application performance. > > > > Let's check GNU coreutils: > > > > $ cd coreutils > > $ git grep FADVISE_DONTNEED > > gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED = POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED, > > gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED, > > $ > > > > GNU cp(1) does not care about minimizing impact on buffer cache using > > FADVISE_DONTNEED. It just sets FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL on the source file > > and calls read() (plus uses FIEMAP to check extents for sparseness). > > > > I want to avoid adding code just for the heck of it. We need a deeper > > understanding: > > > > Please drop FADVISE_DONTNEED and compare again to see if it changes the > > benchmark. > > > > By the way, did you perform several runs to check the variance of the > > running time? I don't know if the 2 seconds difference were noise or > > because FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL or because FADVISE_DONTNEED or because both. > > There was no effect on the runtime as far as I remember. I ran > some tests, but not a number large enough to filter out the noise. > > I created this one because we saw it helps under memory pressure. > Maybe its too specific to add it into mainline qemu, but I wanted to > avoid to have too much individual changes we need to maintain. I'm open to merging it if the improvement can be quantified. Right now this might be a workaround for Linux memory management heuristics or it might not have any effect, I don't know. > > > >> diff --git a/block/raw-posix.c b/block/raw-posix.c > >> index 6586a0c..9768cc4 100644 > >> --- a/block/raw-posix.c > >> +++ b/block/raw-posix.c > >> @@ -447,6 +447,13 @@ static int raw_open_common(BlockDriverState *bs, QDict *options, > >> } > >> #endif > >> > >> +#ifdef POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL > >> + if (bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL && > >> + !(bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_NOCACHE)) { > >> + posix_fadvise(s->fd, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL); > >> + } > >> +#endif > > This is only true if the image format is raw. If the image format on > > top of this raw-posix BDS is non-raw then the read pattern may not be > > sequential. > > You are right, but will the other formats set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL? If the user specifies qemu-img convert -N then it will be set for any image format. Maybe qemu-img convert can always set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL and the have the raw_bsd.c format propagate it to bs->file while other formats do not. Then the user doesn't have to specify a command-line option and we don't set it for non-raw image formats. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL 2014-06-05 7:53 ` Stefan Hajnoczi @ 2014-06-05 8:09 ` Peter Lieven 2014-06-05 8:13 ` Kevin Wolf 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Peter Lieven @ 2014-06-05 8:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Hajnoczi Cc: kwolf, famz, Stefan Hajnoczi, qemu-devel, shadowsor, pbonzini On 05.06.2014 09:53, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote: > On Wed, Jun 04, 2014 at 05:31:48PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: >> Am 04.06.2014 17:12, schrieb Stefan Hajnoczi: >>> On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 11:40:37PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: >>>> this patch introduces a new flag to indicate that we are going to sequentially >>>> read from a file and do not plan to reread/reuse the data after it has been read. >>>> >>>> The current use of this flag is to open the source(s) of a qemu-img convert >>>> process. If a protocol from block/raw-posix.c is used posix_fadvise is utilized >>>> to advise to the kernel that we are going to read sequentially from the >>>> file and a POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED advise is issued after each write to indicate >>>> that there is no advantage keeping the blocks in the buffers. >>>> >>>> Consider the following test case that was created to confirm the behaviour of >>>> the new flag: >>>> >>>> A 10G logical volume was created and filled with random data. >>>> Then the logical volume was exported via qemu-img convert to an iscsi target. >>>> Before the export was started all caches of the linux kernel where dropped. >>>> >>>> Old behavior: >>>> - The convert process took 3m45s and the buffer cache grew up to 9.67 GB close >>>> to the end of the conversion. After qemu-img terminated all the buffers were >>>> freed by the kernel. >>>> >>>> New behavior with the -N switch: >>>> - The convert process took 3m43s and the buffer cache grew up to 15.48 MB close >>>> to the end with some small peaks up to 30 MB during the conversion. >>> FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL can be good since it doubles read-ahead on Linux. >>> >>> I'm skeptical of the effort to avoid buffer cache usage using >>> FADVISE_DONTNEED. The performance results tell me that less buffer >>> cache was used but that number doesn't have a direct effect on >>> application performance. >>> >>> Let's check GNU coreutils: >>> >>> $ cd coreutils >>> $ git grep FADVISE_DONTNEED >>> gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED = POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED, >>> gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED, >>> $ >>> >>> GNU cp(1) does not care about minimizing impact on buffer cache using >>> FADVISE_DONTNEED. It just sets FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL on the source file >>> and calls read() (plus uses FIEMAP to check extents for sparseness). >>> >>> I want to avoid adding code just for the heck of it. We need a deeper >>> understanding: >>> >>> Please drop FADVISE_DONTNEED and compare again to see if it changes the >>> benchmark. >>> >>> By the way, did you perform several runs to check the variance of the >>> running time? I don't know if the 2 seconds difference were noise or >>> because FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL or because FADVISE_DONTNEED or because both. >> There was no effect on the runtime as far as I remember. I ran >> some tests, but not a number large enough to filter out the noise. >> >> I created this one because we saw it helps under memory pressure. >> Maybe its too specific to add it into mainline qemu, but I wanted to >> avoid to have too much individual changes we need to maintain. > I'm open to merging it if the improvement can be quantified. Right now > this might be a workaround for Linux memory management heuristics or it > might not have any effect, I don't know. I understand that you are critical about it. I can just say it solved the problem with the specific setup, kernel version etc. I found that FADVISE_DONTNEED solves problems also in other applications. Offtopic: i have an raspberry pi running as tvheadend and observed desync of the DVBS2 signal at some times. Since I FADV_DONTNEED all written frames away it runs smothly. I this case the feeing of the page cache was CPU intensive for the small device and caused the desync. > >>>> diff --git a/block/raw-posix.c b/block/raw-posix.c >>>> index 6586a0c..9768cc4 100644 >>>> --- a/block/raw-posix.c >>>> +++ b/block/raw-posix.c >>>> @@ -447,6 +447,13 @@ static int raw_open_common(BlockDriverState *bs, QDict *options, >>>> } >>>> #endif >>>> >>>> +#ifdef POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL >>>> + if (bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL && >>>> + !(bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_NOCACHE)) { >>>> + posix_fadvise(s->fd, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL); >>>> + } >>>> +#endif >>> This is only true if the image format is raw. If the image format on >>> top of this raw-posix BDS is non-raw then the read pattern may not be >>> sequential. >> You are right, but will the other formats set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL? > If the user specifies qemu-img convert -N then it will be set for any > image format. Of course, but when e.g. qcow2 opens its underlying file, then BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL is not passed on, or is it? > > Maybe qemu-img convert can always set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL and the have the > raw_bsd.c format propagate it to bs->file while other formats do not. > Then the user doesn't have to specify a command-line option and we don't > set it for non-raw image formats. This would be an option. Peter ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL 2014-06-05 8:09 ` Peter Lieven @ 2014-06-05 8:13 ` Kevin Wolf 2014-06-05 13:54 ` Stefan Hajnoczi 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Kevin Wolf @ 2014-06-05 8:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Lieven Cc: famz, Stefan Hajnoczi, qemu-devel, Stefan Hajnoczi, shadowsor, pbonzini Am 05.06.2014 um 10:09 hat Peter Lieven geschrieben: > On 05.06.2014 09:53, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote: > >On Wed, Jun 04, 2014 at 05:31:48PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: > >>Am 04.06.2014 17:12, schrieb Stefan Hajnoczi: > >>>On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 11:40:37PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: > >>>>this patch introduces a new flag to indicate that we are going to sequentially > >>>>read from a file and do not plan to reread/reuse the data after it has been read. > >>>> > >>>>The current use of this flag is to open the source(s) of a qemu-img convert > >>>>process. If a protocol from block/raw-posix.c is used posix_fadvise is utilized > >>>>to advise to the kernel that we are going to read sequentially from the > >>>>file and a POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED advise is issued after each write to indicate > >>>>that there is no advantage keeping the blocks in the buffers. > >>>> > >>>>Consider the following test case that was created to confirm the behaviour of > >>>>the new flag: > >>>> > >>>>A 10G logical volume was created and filled with random data. > >>>>Then the logical volume was exported via qemu-img convert to an iscsi target. > >>>>Before the export was started all caches of the linux kernel where dropped. > >>>> > >>>>Old behavior: > >>>> - The convert process took 3m45s and the buffer cache grew up to 9.67 GB close > >>>> to the end of the conversion. After qemu-img terminated all the buffers were > >>>> freed by the kernel. > >>>> > >>>>New behavior with the -N switch: > >>>> - The convert process took 3m43s and the buffer cache grew up to 15.48 MB close > >>>> to the end with some small peaks up to 30 MB during the conversion. > >>>FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL can be good since it doubles read-ahead on Linux. > >>> > >>>I'm skeptical of the effort to avoid buffer cache usage using > >>>FADVISE_DONTNEED. The performance results tell me that less buffer > >>>cache was used but that number doesn't have a direct effect on > >>>application performance. > >>> > >>>Let's check GNU coreutils: > >>> > >>> $ cd coreutils > >>> $ git grep FADVISE_DONTNEED > >>> gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED = POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED, > >>> gl/lib/fadvise.h: FADVISE_DONTNEED, > >>> $ > >>> > >>>GNU cp(1) does not care about minimizing impact on buffer cache using > >>>FADVISE_DONTNEED. It just sets FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL on the source file > >>>and calls read() (plus uses FIEMAP to check extents for sparseness). > >>> > >>>I want to avoid adding code just for the heck of it. We need a deeper > >>>understanding: > >>> > >>>Please drop FADVISE_DONTNEED and compare again to see if it changes the > >>>benchmark. > >>> > >>>By the way, did you perform several runs to check the variance of the > >>>running time? I don't know if the 2 seconds difference were noise or > >>>because FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL or because FADVISE_DONTNEED or because both. > >>There was no effect on the runtime as far as I remember. I ran > >>some tests, but not a number large enough to filter out the noise. > >> > >>I created this one because we saw it helps under memory pressure. > >>Maybe its too specific to add it into mainline qemu, but I wanted to > >>avoid to have too much individual changes we need to maintain. > >I'm open to merging it if the improvement can be quantified. Right now > >this might be a workaround for Linux memory management heuristics or it > >might not have any effect, I don't know. > > I understand that you are critical about it. I can just say it solved > the problem with the specific setup, kernel version etc. > > I found that FADVISE_DONTNEED solves problems also in other applications. > Offtopic: i have an raspberry pi running as tvheadend and observed desync > of the DVBS2 signal at some times. Since I FADV_DONTNEED all written > frames away it runs smothly. I this case the feeing of the page cache was > CPU intensive for the small device and caused the desync. > > > > >>>>diff --git a/block/raw-posix.c b/block/raw-posix.c > >>>>index 6586a0c..9768cc4 100644 > >>>>--- a/block/raw-posix.c > >>>>+++ b/block/raw-posix.c > >>>>@@ -447,6 +447,13 @@ static int raw_open_common(BlockDriverState *bs, QDict *options, > >>>> } > >>>> #endif > >>>>+#ifdef POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL > >>>>+ if (bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL && > >>>>+ !(bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_NOCACHE)) { > >>>>+ posix_fadvise(s->fd, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL); > >>>>+ } > >>>>+#endif > >>>This is only true if the image format is raw. If the image format on > >>>top of this raw-posix BDS is non-raw then the read pattern may not be > >>>sequential. > >>You are right, but will the other formats set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL? > >If the user specifies qemu-img convert -N then it will be set for any > >image format. > > Of course, but when e.g. qcow2 opens its underlying file, then BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL > is not passed on, or is it? It isn't qcow2 but block.c that opens bs->file, and unless you explicitly filter out a flag, bs->file inherits it. (If it didn't do that, your patch would have no effect for raw either.) > >Maybe qemu-img convert can always set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL and the have the > >raw_bsd.c format propagate it to bs->file while other formats do not. > >Then the user doesn't have to specify a command-line option and we don't > >set it for non-raw image formats. > > This would be an option. I agree, though it's not quite clear how raw_bsd would do that. Would that involve a bdrv_reopen() for bs->file? Kevin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL 2014-06-05 8:13 ` Kevin Wolf @ 2014-06-05 13:54 ` Stefan Hajnoczi 0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Stefan Hajnoczi @ 2014-06-05 13:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Kevin Wolf Cc: famz, Peter Lieven, qemu-devel, Stefan Hajnoczi, shadowsor, pbonzini On Thu, Jun 05, 2014 at 10:13:04AM +0200, Kevin Wolf wrote: > Am 05.06.2014 um 10:09 hat Peter Lieven geschrieben: > > On 05.06.2014 09:53, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote: > > >On Wed, Jun 04, 2014 at 05:31:48PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: > > >>Am 04.06.2014 17:12, schrieb Stefan Hajnoczi: > > >>>On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 11:40:37PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote: > > >>>>diff --git a/block/raw-posix.c b/block/raw-posix.c > > >>>>index 6586a0c..9768cc4 100644 > > >>>>--- a/block/raw-posix.c > > >>>>+++ b/block/raw-posix.c > > >>>>@@ -447,6 +447,13 @@ static int raw_open_common(BlockDriverState *bs, QDict *options, > > >>>> } > > >>>> #endif > > >>>>+#ifdef POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL > > >>>>+ if (bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL && > > >>>>+ !(bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_NOCACHE)) { > > >>>>+ posix_fadvise(s->fd, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL); > > >>>>+ } > > >>>>+#endif > > >>>This is only true if the image format is raw. If the image format on > > >>>top of this raw-posix BDS is non-raw then the read pattern may not be > > >>>sequential. > > >>You are right, but will the other formats set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL? > > >If the user specifies qemu-img convert -N then it will be set for any > > >image format. > > > > Of course, but when e.g. qcow2 opens its underlying file, then BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL > > is not passed on, or is it? > > It isn't qcow2 but block.c that opens bs->file, and unless you > explicitly filter out a flag, bs->file inherits it. (If it didn't do > that, your patch would have no effect for raw either.) Yes, exactly. When a raw image file is opened there are actually two BlockDriverStates: raw_bsd ("drive0") file: raw-posix (anonymous) Since your patch affected the buffer cache counter, we know that the flag was propagated down to raw-posix (by block.c as Kevin explained). The qcow2 case looks like this: qcow2 ("drive0") file: raw-posix (anonymous) > > >Maybe qemu-img convert can always set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL and the have the > > >raw_bsd.c format propagate it to bs->file while other formats do not. > > >Then the user doesn't have to specify a command-line option and we don't > > >set it for non-raw image formats. > > > > This would be an option. > > I agree, though it's not quite clear how raw_bsd would do that. Would > that involve a bdrv_reopen() for bs->file? One way is to add a BlockDriver bitmask field for options that get propagated to its children. Only raw_bsd will include BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2014-06-05 13:54 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <1401486037-25609-1-git-send-email-pl@kamp.de> 2014-06-04 15:12 ` [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL Stefan Hajnoczi 2014-06-04 15:31 ` Peter Lieven 2014-06-05 7:53 ` Stefan Hajnoczi 2014-06-05 8:09 ` Peter Lieven 2014-06-05 8:13 ` Kevin Wolf 2014-06-05 13:54 ` Stefan Hajnoczi
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