Hisashi Hifumi wrote:
At 09:36 09/06/01, Andrew Morton wrote:
On Fri, 29 May 2009 14:35:55 +0900 Hisashi Hifumi
<hifumi.hisashi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I added blk_run_backing_dev on page_cache_async_readahead
so readahead I/O is unpluged to improve throughput on
especially RAID environment.
I skipped the last version of this because KOSAKI Motohiro
<kosaki.motohiro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> said "Please attach blktrace analysis ;)".
I'm not sure why he asked for that, but he's a smart chap and
presumably had his reasons.
If you think that such an analysis is unneeded, or isn't worth the time
to generate then please tell us that. But please don't just ignore the
request!
Hi Andrew.
Sorry for this.
I did not ignore KOSAKI Motohiro's request.
I've got blktrace output for both with and without the patch,
but I just did not clarify the reason for throuput improvement
from this result.
I do not notice any difference except around unplug behavior by dd.
Comments?
Pardon my ignorance on the global issues concerning the patch, but
specifically looking at the traces generated by blktrace leads one to
also note that the patched version may generate inefficiencies in other
places in the kernel by reducing the merging going on. In the unpatched
version it looks like (generally) that two incoming bio's are able to be
merged to generate a single I/O request. In the patched version -
because of the quicker unplug(?) - no such merging is going on. This
leads to more work lower in the stack (twice as many I/O operations
being managed), perhaps increased interrupts & handling &c. [This may be
acceptable if the goal is to decrease latencies on a per-bio basis...]
Do you have a place where the raw blktrace data can be retrieved for
more in-depth analysis?
Regards,
Alan D. Brunelle
Hewlett-Packard
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