On 12/11/18 11:02 AM, Jeff Moyer wrote: > Matthew Wilcox <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> On Tue, Dec 11, 2018 at 12:21:52PM -0500, Jeff Moyer wrote: >>> I'm going to submit this version formally. If you're interested in >>> converting the ioctx_table to xarray, you can do that separately from a >>> security fix. I would include a performance analysis with that patch, >>> though. The idea of using a radix tree for the ioctx table was >>> discarded due to performance reasons--see commit db446a08c23d5 ("aio: >>> convert the ioctx list to table lookup v3"). I suspect using the xarray >>> will perform similarly. >> >> There's a big difference between Octavian's patch and mine. That patch >> indexed into the radix tree by 'ctx_id' directly, which was pretty >> much guaranteed to exhibit some close-to-worst-case behaviour from the >> radix tree due to IDs being sparsely assigned. My patch uses the ring >> ID which _we_ assigned, and so is nicely behaved, being usually a very >> small integer. > > OK, good to know. I obviously didn't look too closely at the two. > >> What performance analysis would you find compelling? Octavian's original >> fio script: >> >>> rw=randrw; size=256k ;directory=/mnt/fio; ioengine=libaio; iodepth=1 >>> blocksize=1024; numjobs=512; thread; loops=100 >>> >>> on an EXT2 filesystem mounted on top of a ramdisk >> >> or something else? > > I think the most common use case is a small number of ioctx-s, so I'd > like to see that use case not regress (that should be easy, right?). > Kent, what were the tests you were using when doing this work? Jens, > since you're doing performance work in this area now, are there any > particular test cases you care about? I can give it a spin, ioctx lookup is in the fast path, and for "classic" aio we do it twice for each IO... -- Jens Axboe