On Wed 03-10-18 08:53:37, Linus Walleij wrote: > On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 8:29 AM Paolo Valente <paolo.valente@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > So, I do understand your need for conservativeness, but, after so much > > evidence on single-queue devices, and so many years! :), what's the > > point in keeping Linux worse for virtually everybody, by default? > > I understand if we need to ease things in as well, I don't intend this > change for the current merge window or anything, since v4.19 > will notably have this patch: > > commit d5038a13eca72fb216c07eb717169092e92284f1 > Author: Johannes Thumshirn <jthumshirn@xxxxxxx> > Date: Wed Jul 4 10:53:56 2018 +0200 > > scsi: core: switch to scsi-mq by default > > It has been more than one year since we tried to change the default from > legacy to multi queue in SCSI with commit c279bd9e406 ("scsi: default to > scsi-mq"). But due to issues with suspend/resume and performance problems > it had been reverted again with commit cbe7dfa26eee ("Revert "scsi: default > to scsi-mq""). > > In the meantime there have been a substantial amount of performance > improvements and suspend/resume got fixed as well, thus we can re-enable > scsi-mq without a significant performance penalty. > > Signed-off-by: Johannes Thumshirn <jthumshirn@xxxxxxx> > Reviewed-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@xxxxxxxx> > Reviewed-by: Ming Lei <ming.lei@xxxxxxxxxx> > Acked-by: John Garry <john.garry@xxxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@xxxxxxxxxx> > > I guess that patch can be a bit scary by itself. But IIUC it all went > fine this time! > > But hey, if that works, that means $SUBJECT patch will enable BFQ on all > libata devices and any SCSI that is single queue as well, not just > "obscure" stuff like MMC/SD and UBI, and that is > indeed a massive crowd of legacy devices. But we're talking > v4.21 here. > > Johannes, you might be interested in $SUBJECT patch. > It'd be nice to hear what SUSE people have to add, since they > are pretty proactive in this area. So we do have a udev rules in our distro which sets the IO scheduler based on device parameters (rotational at least, with blk-mq we might start considering number of queues as well, plus we have some exceptions like virtio, loop, etc.). So the kernel default doesn't concern us too much as a distro. I personally would consider bfq a safer default for single-queue devices (loop probably needs exception) but I don't feel too strongly about it. Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR