On Fri, Jul 27, 2018 at 08:22:25AM +0800, Ye Xiaolong wrote: > On 07/16, Ye Xiaolong wrote: > >On 07/04, Huang, Ying wrote: > >>"J. Bruce Fields" <bfields@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> > >>> Thanks! > >>> > >>> On Wed, Jun 20, 2018 at 02:52:43PM +0800, kernel test robot wrote: > >>>> FYI, we noticed a 32.4% improvement of fsmark.files_per_sec due to commit: > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> commit: 517dc52baa2a508c82f68bbc7219b48169e6b29f ("nfsd4: shortern default lease period") > >>>> https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/next/linux-next.git master > >>> > >>> That doesn't make any sense.... > >>> > >>> OK, I think I see the problem: > >>> > >>>> in testcase: fsmark > >>>> on test machine: 48 threads Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2697 v2 @ 2.70GHz with 64G memory > >>>> with following parameters: > >>>> > >>>> iterations: 1x > >>>> nr_threads: 1t > >>>> disk: 1BRD_48G > >>>> fs: f2fs > >>>> fs2: nfsv4 > >>>> filesize: 4M > >>>> test_size: 40G > >>>> sync_method: fsyncBeforeClose > >>>> cpufreq_governor: performance > >>>> > >>>> test-description: The fsmark is a file system benchmark to test synchronous write workloads, for example, mail servers workload. > >>>> test-url: https://sourceforge.net/projects/fsmark/ > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> Details are as below: > >>>> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------> > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> To reproduce: > >>>> > >>>> git clone https://github.com/intel/lkp-tests.git > >>>> cd lkp-tests > >>>> bin/lkp install job.yaml # job file is attached in this email > >>>> bin/lkp run job.yaml > >>>> > >>>> ========================================================================================= > >>>> compiler/cpufreq_governor/disk/filesize/fs2/fs/iterations/kconfig/nr_threads/rootfs/sync_method/tbox_group/test_size/testcase: > >>>> gcc-7/performance/1BRD_48G/4M/nfsv4/f2fs/1x/x86_64-rhel-7.2/1t/debian-x86_64-2016-08-31.cgz/fsyncBeforeClose/ivb44/40G/fsmark > >>>> > >>>> commit: > >>>> c2993a1d7d ("nfsd4: extend reclaim period for reclaiming clients") > >>>> 517dc52baa ("nfsd4: shortern default lease period") > >>>> > >>>> c2993a1d7d6687fd 517dc52baa2a508c82f68bbc72 > >>>> ---------------- -------------------------- > >>>> %stddev %change %stddev > >>>> \ | \ > >>>> 53.60 +32.4% 70.95 fsmark.files_per_sec > >>>> 191.89 -24.4% 145.16 fsmark.time.elapsed_time > >>>> 191.89 -24.4% 145.16 fsmark.time.elapsed_time.max > >>> > >>> So what happened is the test took about 45 seconds less. > >>> > >>> I suspect you're starting the nfs server and then immediately running > >>> this test. > >> > >>Yes. > >> > >>> The problem is that if there's a grace period on startup, any open will > >>> just hang until the grace period ends. > >>> > >>> This patch changed the default grace period from 90 seconds to 45, so > >>> that would explain the change. > >>> > >>> In my testing I usually > >>> > >>> start the nfs server > >>> on the client: > >>> mount the server > >>> touch a file > >>> > >>> When the touch returns, I know any grace period has completed, and then > >>> I can run any tests normally. > >> > > > >I've modified our test to touch a file before running the actual workload, then > >requeue tests for both commit 517dc52baa and its parent c2993a1d7d, but the > >result seems persistent which shows a ~30% improvement of fsmark.files_per_sec. > > > > Any suggestions? You're sure you only start timing after the "touch" returns? --b. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-nfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html