Re: Discard support (was Re: [PATCH] swap: send callback when swap slot is freed)

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James Bottomley wrote:
On Thu, 2009-08-13 at 14:15 -0400, Greg Freemyer wrote:
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 12:33 PM, <david@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On Thu, 13 Aug 2009, Markus Trippelsdorf wrote:

On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 08:13:12AM -0700, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
I am planning a complete overhaul of the discard work.  Users can send
down discard requests as frequently as they like.  The block layer will
cache them, and invalidate them if writes come through.  Periodically,
the block layer will send down a TRIM or an UNMAP (depending on the
underlying device) and get rid of the blocks that have remained unwanted
in the interim.
That is a very good idea. I've tested your original TRIM implementation on
my Vertex yesterday and it was awful ;-). The SSD needs hundreds of
milliseconds to digest a single TRIM command. And since your
implementation
sends a TRIM for each extent of each deleted file, the whole system is
unusable after a short while.
An optimal solution would be to consolidate the discard requests, bundle
them and send them to the drive as infrequent as possible.
or queue them up and send them when the drive is idle (you would need to
keep track to make sure the space isn't re-used)

as an example, if you would consider spinning down a drive you don't hurt
performance by sending accumulated trim commands.

David Lang
An alternate approach is the block layer maintain its own bitmap of
used unused sectors / blocks. Unmap commands from the filesystem just
cause the bitmap to be updated.  No other effect.

(Big unknown: Where will the bitmap live between reboots?  Require DM
volumes so we can have a dedicated bitmap volume in the mix to store
the bitmap to? Maybe on mount, the filesystem has to be scanned to
initially populate the bitmap?   Other options?)

I wouldn't really have it live anywhere.  Discard is best effort; it's
not required for fs integrity.  As long as we don't discard an in-use
block we're free to do anything else (including forget to discard,
rediscard a discarded block etc).

It is theoretically possible to run all of this from user space using
the fs mappings, a bit like a defrag command.
..

Already a work-in-progress -- see my wiper.sh script on the hdparm page
at sourceforge.  Trimming 50+GB of free space on a 120GB Vertex
(over 100 million sectors) takes a *single* TRIM command,
and completes in only a couple of seconds.

Cheers
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