> On 8 May 2017, at 16.23, Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxx> wrote: > > On 05/08/2017 08:20 AM, Javier González wrote: >>> On 8 May 2017, at 16.13, Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> On 05/08/2017 07:44 AM, Javier González wrote: >>>>> On 8 May 2017, at 14.27, Ming Lei <ming.lei@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On Mon, May 08, 2017 at 01:54:58PM +0200, Javier González wrote: >>>>>> Hi, >>>>>> >>>>>> I find an unusual added latency(~20-30ms) on blk_queue_enter when >>>>>> allocating a request directly from the NVMe driver through >>>>>> nvme_alloc_request. I could use some help confirming that this is a bug >>>>>> and not an expected side effect due to something else. >>>>>> >>>>>> I can reproduce this latency consistently on LightNVM when mixing I/O >>>>>> from pblk and I/O sent through an ioctl using liblightnvm, but I don't >>>>>> see anything on the LightNVM side that could impact the request >>>>>> allocation. >>>>>> >>>>>> When I have a 100% read workload sent from pblk, the max. latency is >>>>>> constant throughout several runs at ~80us (which is normal for the media >>>>>> we are using at bs=4k, qd=1). All pblk I/Os reach the nvme_nvm_submit_io >>>>>> function on lightnvm.c., which uses nvme_alloc_request. When we send a >>>>>> command from user space through an ioctl, then the max latency goes up >>>>>> to ~20-30ms. This happens independently from the actual command >>>>>> (IN/OUT). I tracked down the added latency down to the call >>>>>> percpu_ref_tryget_live in blk_queue_enter. Seems that the queue >>>>>> reference counter is not released as it should through blk_queue_exit in >>>>>> blk_mq_alloc_request. For reference, all ioctl I/Os reach the >>>>>> nvme_nvm_submit_user_cmd on lightnvm.c >>>>>> >>>>>> Do you have any idea about why this might happen? I can dig more into >>>>>> it, but first I wanted to make sure that I am not missing any obvious >>>>>> assumption, which would explain the reference counter to be held for a >>>>>> longer time. >>>>> >>>>> You need to check if the .q_usage_counter is working at atomic mode. >>>>> This counter is initialized as atomic mode, and finally switchs to >>>>> percpu mode via percpu_ref_switch_to_percpu() in blk_register_queue(). >>>> >>>> Thanks for commenting Ming. >>>> >>>> The .q_usage_counter is not working on atomic mode. The queue is >>>> initialized normally through blk_register_queue() and the counter is >>>> switched to percpu mode, as you mentioned. As I understand it, this is >>>> how it should be, right? >>> >>> That is how it should be, yes. You're not running with any heavy >>> debugging options, like lockdep or anything like that? >> >> No lockdep, KASAN, kmemleak or any of the other usual suspects. >> >> What's interesting is that it only happens when one of the I/Os comes >> from user space through the ioctl. If I have several pblk instances on >> the same device (which would end up allocating a new request in >> parallel, potentially on the same core), the latency spike does not >> trigger. >> >> I also tried to bind the read thread and the liblightnvm thread issuing >> the ioctl to different cores, but it does not help... > > How do I reproduce this? Off the top of my head, and looking at the code, > I have no idea what is going on here. Using LightNVM and liblightnvm [1] you can reproduce it by: 1. Instantiate a pblk instance on the first channel (luns 0 - 7): sudo nvme lnvm create -d nvme0n1 -n test0 -t pblk -b 0 -e 7 -f 2. Write 5GB to the test0 block device with a normal fio script 3. Read 5GB to verify that latencies are good (max. ~80-90us at bs=4k, qd=1) 4. Re-run 3. and in parallel send a command through liblightnvm to a different channel. A simple command is an erase (erase block 900 on channel 2, lun 0): sudo nvm_vblk line_erase /dev/nvme0n1 2 2 0 0 900 After 4. you should see a ~25-30ms latency on the read workload. I tried to reproduce the ioctl in a more generic way to reach __nvme_submit_user_cmd(), but SPDK steals the whole device. Also, qemu is not reliable for this kind of performance testing. If you have a suggestion on how I can mix an ioctl with normal block I/O read on a standard NVMe device, I'm happy to try it and see if I can reproduce the issue. [1] https://github.com/OpenChannelSSD/liblightnvm Thanks! Javier
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