selective block polling and preadv2/pwritev2 revisited V2

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



This series allows to selectively enable/disable polling for completions
in the block layer on a per-I/O basis.  For this it resurrects the
preadv2/pwritev2 syscalls that Milosz prepared a while ago (and which
are much simpler now due to VFS changes that happened in the meantime).
That approach also had a man page update prepared, which I will resubmit
with the current flags once this series makes it in.

Polling for block I/O is important to reduce the latency on flash and
post-flash storage technologies.  On the fastest NVMe controller I have
access to it almost halves latencies from over 7 microseconds to about 4
microseonds.  But it only is usesful if we actually care for the latency
of this particular I/O, and generally is a waste if enabled for all I/O
to a given device.  This series uses the per-I/O flags in preadv2/pwritev2
to control this behavior.  The alternative would be a new O_* flag set
at open time or using fcntl, but this is still to corse-grained for some
applications and we're starting to run out out of open flags.

Note that there are plenty of other use cases for preadv2/pwritev2 as well,
but I'd like to concentrate on this one for now.  Example are: non-blocking
reads (the original purpose), per-I/O O_SYNC, user space support for T10
DIF/DIX applications tags and probably some more.

Changes since V1:
  - rebased on top of Linux 4.5-rc5

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html



[Index of Archives]     [Linux Ext4 Filesystem]     [Union Filesystem]     [Filesystem Testing]     [Ceph Users]     [Ecryptfs]     [AutoFS]     [Kernel Newbies]     [Share Photos]     [Security]     [Netfilter]     [Bugtraq]     [Yosemite News]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux Cachefs]     [Reiser Filesystem]     [Linux RAID]     [Samba]     [Device Mapper]     [CEPH Development]
  Powered by Linux