Re: [PATCH v3 01/18] block: introduce duration-limits priority class

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On 1/29/23 04:52, Damien Le Moal wrote:
On 1/29/23 05:25, Martin K. Petersen wrote:
[ .. ]

    As such, I don't like the "just customize your settings with
    cdltools" approach. I'd much rather see us try to define a few QoS
    classes that make sense that would apply to every app and use those
    to define the application interface. And then have the kernel program
    those CDL classes into SCSI/ATA devices by default.

Makes sense. Though I think it will be hard to define a set of QoS hints that
are useful for a wide range of applications, and even harder to convert the
defined hint classes to CDL descriptors. I fear that we may end up with the same
issues as IO hints/streams.

    Having the kernel provide an abstract interface for bio QoS and
    configuring a new disk with a sane handful of classes does not
    prevent $CLOUD_VENDOR from overriding what Linux configured. But at
    least we'd have a generic approach to block QoS in Linux. Similar to
    the existing I/O priority infrastructure which is also not tied to
    any particular hardware feature.

OK. See below about this.

    A generic implementation also allows us to do fancy things in the
    hypervisor where we would like to be able to do QoS across multiple
    devices as well. Without having ATA or SCSI with CDL involved. Or
    whatever things might look like in NVMe.

Fair point, especially given that virtio actually already forwards a guest
ioprio to the host through the virtio block command. Thinking of that particular
point together with what you said, I came up with the change show below as a
replacement for this patch 1/18.

This changes the 13-bits ioprio data into a 3-bits QOS hint + 3-bits of IO prio
level. This is consistent with the IO prio interface since IO priority levels
have to be between 0 and 7 (otherwise, errors are returned). So in fact, the
upper 10-bits of the ioprio data are ignored and we can safely use 3 of these
bits for an IO hint.

This hint applies to all priority classes and levels, that is, for the CDL case,
we can enrich any priority with a hint that specifies the CDL index to use for
an IO.

This falls short of actually defining generic IO hints, but this has the
advantage to not break anything for current applications using IO priorities,
not require any change to existing IO schedulers, while still allowing to pass
CDL indexes for IOs down to the scsi & ATA layers (which for now would be the
only layers in the kernel acting on the ioprio qos hints).

I think that this approach still allows us to enable CDL support, and on top of
it, go further and define generic QOS hints that IO scheduler can use and that
also potentially map to CDL for scsi & ata (similarly to the RT class IOs
mapping to the NCQ priority feature if the user enabled that feature).

As mentioned above, I think that defining generic IO hint classes will be
difficult. But the change below is I think a good a starting point that should
not prevent working on that.

Thoughts ?

I like the idea.
QoS is one of the recurring topic always coming up sooner or later when talking of storage networks, so having _some_ concept of QoS in the linux kernel (for storage) would be beneficial.

Maybe time for a topic at LSF?

Cheers,

Hannes




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