Coly-- Holy crap, I'm not surprised you don't see a difference if you're writing with 512K size! The potential benefit from merging is much less, and the odds of missing a merge is much smaller. 512KB is 5ms sequential by itself on a 100MB/sec disk--- lots more time to wait to get the next chunks in order, and even if you fail to merge the potential benefit is much less-- if the difference is mostly rotational latency from failing to merge then we're talking 5ms vs 5+2ms. Do you even understand what you are trying to test? Mike On Fri, Oct 6, 2017 at 3:36 AM, Coly Li <i@xxxxxxx> wrote: > On 2017/10/6 下午5:20, Michael Lyle wrote: >> Coly-- >> >> I did not say the result from the changes will be random. >> >> I said the result from your test will be random, because where the >> writeback position is making non-contiguous holes in the data is >> nondeterministic-- it depends where it is on the disk at the instant >> that writeback begins. There is a high degree of dispersion in the >> test scenario you are running that is likely to exceed the differences >> from my patch. > > Hi Mike, > > I did the test quite carefully. Here is how I ran the test, > - disable writeback by echo 0 to writeback_runing. > - write random data into cache to full or half size, then stop the I/O > immediately. > - echo 1 to writeback_runing to start writeback > - and record performance data at once > > It might be random position where the writeback starts, but there should > not be too much difference of statistical number of the continuous > blocks (on cached device). Because fio just send random 512KB blocks > onto cache device, the statistical number of contiguous blocks depends > on cache device vs. cached device size, and how full the cache device is > occupied. > > Indeed, I repeated some tests more than once (except the md raid5 and md > raid0 configurations), the results are quite sable when I see the data > charts, no big difference. > > If you feel the performance result I provided is problematic, it would > be better to let the data talk. You need to show your performance test > number to prove that the bio reorder patches are helpful for general > workloads, or at least helpful to many typical workloads. > > Let the data talk. > > Thanks. > > -- > Coly Li -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-bcache" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html