Re: Regarding newstore performance

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On Fri, 17 Apr 2015, Haomai Wang wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 17, 2015 at 8:38 AM, Sage Weil <sage@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Thu, 16 Apr 2015, Mark Nelson wrote:
> >> On 04/16/2015 01:17 AM, Somnath Roy wrote:
> >> > Here is the data with omap separated to another SSD and after 1000GB of fio
> >> > writes (same profile)..
> >> >
> >> > omap writes:
> >> > -------------
> >> >
> >> > Total host writes in this period = 551020111 ------ ~2101 GB
> >> >
> >> > Total flash writes in this period = 1150679336
> >> >
> >> > data writes:
> >> > -----------
> >> >
> >> > Total host writes in this period = 302550388 --- ~1154 GB
> >> >
> >> > Total flash writes in this period = 600238328
> >> >
> >> > So, actual data write WA is ~1.1 but omap overhead is ~2.1 and adding those
> >> > getting ~3.2 WA overall.
> >
> > This all suggests that getting rocksdb to not rewrite the wal
> > entries at all will be the big win.  I think Xiaoxi had tunable
> > suggestions for that?  I didn't grok the rocksdb terms immediately so
> > they didn't make a lot of sense at the time.. this is probably a good
> > place to focus, though.  The rocksdb compaction stats should help out
> > there.
> >
> > But... today I ignored this entirely and put rocksdb in tmpfs and focused
> > just on the actual wal IOs done to the fragments files after the fact.
> > For simplicity I focused just on 128k random writes into 4mb objects.
> >
> > fio can get ~18 mb/sec on my disk with iodepth=1.  Interestingly, setting
> > iodepth=16 makes no different *until* I also set thinktime=10 (us, or
> > almost any value really) and thinktime_blocks=16, at which point it goes
> > up with the iodepth.  I'm not quite sure what is going on there but it
> > seems to be preventing the elevator and/or disk from reordering writes and
> > make more efficient sweeps across the disk.  In any case, though, with
> > that tweaked I can get up to ~30mb/sec with qd 16, ~40mb/sec with qd 64.
> > Similarly, with qa 1 and thinktime of 250us, it drops to like 15mb/sec,
> > which is basically what I was getting from newstore.  Here's my fio
> > config:
> >
> >         http://fpaste.org/212110/42923089/
> >
> > Conclusion: we need multiple threads (or libaio) to get lots of IOs in
> > flight so that the block layer and/or disk can reorder and be efficient.
> > I added a threadpool for doing wal work (newstore wal threads = 8 by
> > default) and it makes a big difference.  Now I am getting more like
> > 19mb/sec w/ 4 threads and client (smalliobench) qd 16.  It's not going up
> > much from there as I scale threads or qd, strangely; not sure why yet.
> 
> Do you mean this PR(https://github.com/ceph/ceph/pull/4318)? I have a
> simple benchmark at the comment of PR.

Sorry no, this is talking about the aio kernel interface (and the libaio 
wrapper for it) that newstore is/will use instead of the usual 
synchronous write(2) etc calls.

> > But... that's a big improvement over a few days ago (~8mb/sec).  And on
> > this drive filestore with journal on ssd gets ~8.5mb/sec.  So we're
> > winning, yay!
> >
> > I tabled the libaio patch for now since it was getting spurious EINVAL and
> > would consistently SIGBUG from io_getevents() when ceph-osd did dlopen()
> > on the rados plugins (weird!).
> >
> > Mark, at this point it is probably worth checking that you can reproduce
> > these results?  If so, we can redo the io size sweep.  I picked 8 wal
> > threads since that was enough to help and going higher didn't seem to make
> > much difference, but at some point we'll want to be more careful about
> > picking that number.  We could also use libaio here, but I'm not sure it's
> > worth it.  And this approach is somewhat orthogonal to the idea of
> > efficiently passing the kernel things to fdatasync.
> 
> Agreed, this time I think we need to focus data store only. Maybe I'm
> missing, what's your overlay config value in this test?

For these tests I had overlay disabled to focus on the WAL behavior 
(newstore overlay max = 0).

FWIW I think we'll need to be really careful with the overlay max extent 
size too as it tends to shovel lots of data into rocksdb that is 
inevitably write amplified.  The expected net result is that WA will be 
overall higher but latency will be lower because of fewer seeks when we go 
off to do the random io to the fragment file.

sage
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