[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH RFC v2 0/5] Multi-queue support for xen-blkfront and xen-blkback
On 08/10/2015 11:52 PM, Jens Axboe wrote: > On 08/10/2015 05:03 AM, Rafal Mielniczuk wrote: >> On 01/07/15 04:03, Jens Axboe wrote: >>> On 06/30/2015 08:21 AM, Marcus Granado wrote: >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> Our measurements for the multiqueue patch indicate a clear improvement >>>> in iops when more queues are used. >>>> >>>> The measurements were obtained under the following conditions: >>>> >>>> - using blkback as the dom0 backend with the multiqueue patch applied to >>>> a dom0 kernel 4.0 on 8 vcpus. >>>> >>>> - using a recent Ubuntu 15.04 kernel 3.19 with multiqueue frontend >>>> applied to be used as a guest on 4 vcpus >>>> >>>> - using a micron RealSSD P320h as the underlying local storage on a Dell >>>> PowerEdge R720 with 2 Xeon E5-2643 v2 cpus. >>>> >>>> - fio 2.2.7-22-g36870 as the generator of synthetic loads in the guest. >>>> We used direct_io to skip caching in the guest and ran fio for 60s >>>> reading a number of block sizes ranging from 512 bytes to 4MiB. Queue >>>> depth of 32 for each queue was used to saturate individual vcpus in the >>>> guest. >>>> >>>> We were interested in observing storage iops for different values of >>>> block sizes. Our expectation was that iops would improve when increasing >>>> the number of queues, because both the guest and dom0 would be able to >>>> make use of more vcpus to handle these requests. >>>> >>>> These are the results (as aggregate iops for all the fio threads) that >>>> we got for the conditions above with sequential reads: >>>> >>>> fio_threads io_depth block_size 1-queue_iops 8-queue_iops >>>> 8 32 512 158K 264K >>>> 8 32 1K 157K 260K >>>> 8 32 2K 157K 258K >>>> 8 32 4K 148K 257K >>>> 8 32 8K 124K 207K >>>> 8 32 16K 84K 105K >>>> 8 32 32K 50K 54K >>>> 8 32 64K 24K 27K >>>> 8 32 128K 11K 13K >>>> >>>> 8-queue iops was better than single queue iops for all the block sizes. >>>> There were very good improvements as well for sequential writes with >>>> block size 4K (from 80K iops with single queue to 230K iops with 8 >>>> queues), and no regressions were visible in any measurement performed. >>> Great results! And I don't know why this code has lingered for so long, >>> so thanks for helping get some attention to this again. >>> >>> Personally I'd be really interested in the results for the same set of >>> tests, but without the blk-mq patches. Do you have them, or could you >>> potentially run them? >>> >> Hello, >> >> We rerun the tests for sequential reads with the identical settings but with >> Bob Liu's multiqueue patches reverted from dom0 and guest kernels. >> The results we obtained were *better* than the results we got with >> multiqueue patches applied: >> >> fio_threads io_depth block_size 1-queue_iops 8-queue_iops >> *no-mq-patches_iops* >> 8 32 512 158K 264K 321K >> 8 32 1K 157K 260K 328K >> 8 32 2K 157K 258K 336K >> 8 32 4K 148K 257K 308K >> 8 32 8K 124K 207K 188K >> 8 32 16K 84K 105K 82K >> 8 32 32K 50K 54K 36K >> 8 32 64K 24K 27K 16K >> 8 32 128K 11K 13K 11K >> >> We noticed that the requests are not merged by the guest when the multiqueue >> patches are applied, >> which results in a regression for small block sizes (RealSSD P320h's optimal >> block size is around 32-64KB). >> >> We observed similar regression for the Dell MZ-5EA1000-0D3 100 GB 2.5" >> Internal SSD >> >> As I understand blk-mq layer bypasses I/O scheduler which also effectively >> disables merges. >> Could you explain why it is difficult to enable merging in the blk-mq layer? >> That could help closing the performance gap we observed. >> >> Otherwise, the tests shows that the multiqueue patches does not improve the >> performance, >> at least when it comes to sequential read/writes operations. > > blk-mq still provides merging, there should be no difference there. Does the > xen patches set BLK_MQ_F_SHOULD_MERGE? > Yes. Is it possible that xen-blkfront driver dequeue requests too fast after we have multiple hardware queues? Because new requests don't have the chance merging with old requests which were already dequeued and issued. -- Regards, -Bob _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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