Re: PROBLEM: read starvation during writeback

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Hi,

I have a small update on my previously posted test case. I noticed
'cryptsetup -c null' uses cipher_null in ecb mode, and in that case, I
don't observe any read starvation. I'm not sure what the default cipher
mode is (cryptsetup uses cbc-essiv:sha256), but I can reproduce the
problem using just 'cipher_null-cbc-plain'.

The revised test case is as follows:

Preparation:
  # dmsetup create dev_zero --table "0 $((1024*1024*1024)) zero"
  # dmsetup create cipher_null-cbc-plain --table "0 $((1024*1024*1024)) crypt cipher_null-cbc-plain - 0 /dev/mapper/dev_zero 0"
  # dmsetup create cipher_null-ecb --table "0 $((1024*1024*1024)) crypt cipher_null-ecb - 0 /dev/mapper/dev_zero 0"

Testing cipher_null-cbc-plain:
  # dd if=/dev/zero bs=1M of=/dev/mapper/cipher_null-cbc-plain
  # ioping -R /dev/mapper/cipher_null-cbc-plain
    1 requests completed in 9530.3 ms, 0 iops, 0.0 mb/s

Note that for some reason, dd writes extremely slow (below 100.0 MB/s on
my machine) in this test.

On the other hand, cipher_null-ecb works fine.
  # dd if=/dev/zero bs=1M of=/dev/mapper/cipher_null-ecb
  # ioping -R /dev/mapper/cipher_null-ecb
    32337 requests completed in 3000.0 ms, 54042 iops, 211.1 mb/s
    min/avg/max/mdev = 0.0/0.0/18.8/0.2 ms

dd writes at around 850 MB/s in that case (1.8 GB/s directly to the null
target).

I tried similar benchmarks using aes instead of cipher_null, but found
no bothersome spikes with aes-ecb, aes-cbc-plain, aes-cbc-essiv:sha256.
But aes-xts-plain sometimes drops down to 5 iops (over the course of 3
seconds).

So there is probably something very wrong with cipher_null-cbc-plain
being an order of magnitude slower than aes-cbc-plain, but the cbc mode
itself doesn't seem to cause the problem.

I also ran the benchmarks on an old Athlon 64 X2 3800+ box running
kernel 3.2 and could reproduce it with very first try for every cipher
spec I tried (cipher_null-cbc-plain, cipher_null-ecb, aes-cbc-plain,
aes-ecb, aes-xts-plain). Best I could achieve was 5 iops. But
interestingly, I didn't observe the really huge spikes (upwards of 20
seconds), as I do on my 1nd gen Core i5 Notebook.

On Sat, 2012-10-13 at 01:06 +0200, Michael Zugelder wrote:
> On Fri, 2012-10-12 at 22:34 +0200, Milan Broz wrote:
> > Btw there was a proposed rewrite of internal dmcrypt queues, if you have time,
> > you can try if it changes anything for your use case.
> > Patches in dm-devel archive
> > http://www.redhat.com/archives/dm-devel/2012-August/msg00210.html
> 
> Seems interesting, I'll try it out tomorrow.

I tried the patch set earlier today, but had the same issues when
reading while writing to a 'crypt_null' mapping.

Anything else I could do to diagnose this problem?


Michael

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