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authorPaolo Valente <paolo.valente@linaro.org>2018-01-13 12:05:18 +0100
committerJens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>2018-01-18 08:21:37 -0700
commit8a8747dc01cee6f92a52c03ba686e9f60cb46c87 (patch)
treef67e62156179ca27ac54ca22efdd9d18dfdb28f6 /block/bfq-iosched.c
parenta52a69ea89dc12e6f4572f554940789c1ab23c7a (diff)
block, bfq: limit sectors served with interactive weight raising
To maximise responsiveness, BFQ raises the weight, and performs device idling, for bfq_queues associated with processes deemed as interactive. In particular, weight raising has a maximum duration, equal to the time needed to start a large application. If a weight-raised process goes on doing I/O beyond this maximum duration, it loses weight-raising. This mechanism is evidently vulnerable to the following false positives: I/O-bound applications that will go on doing I/O for much longer than the duration of weight-raising. These applications have basically no benefit from being weight-raised at the beginning of their I/O. On the opposite end, while being weight-raised, these applications a) unjustly steal throughput to applications that may truly need low latency; b) make BFQ uselessly perform device idling; device idling results in loss of device throughput with most flash-based storage, and may increase latencies when used purposelessly. This commit adds a countermeasure to reduce both the above problems. To introduce this countermeasure, we provide the following extra piece of information (full details in the comments added by this commit). During the start-up of the large application used as a reference to set the duration of weight-raising, involved processes transfer at most ~110K sectors each. Accordingly, a process initially deemed as interactive has no right to be weight-raised any longer, once transferred 110K sectors or more. Basing on this consideration, this commit early-ends weight-raising for a bfq_queue if the latter happens to have received an amount of service at least equal to 110K sectors (actually, a little bit more, to keep a safety margin). I/O-bound applications that reach a high throughput, such as file copy, get to this threshold much before the allowed weight-raising period finishes. Thus this early ending of weight-raising reduces the amount of time during which these applications cause the problems described above. Tested-by: Oleksandr Natalenko <oleksandr@natalenko.name> Tested-by: Holger Hoffstätte <holger@applied-asynchrony.com> Signed-off-by: Paolo Valente <paolo.valente@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
Diffstat (limited to 'block/bfq-iosched.c')
-rw-r--r--block/bfq-iosched.c81
1 files changed, 72 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/block/bfq-iosched.c b/block/bfq-iosched.c
index a7ab0cb50733..47e6ec7427c4 100644
--- a/block/bfq-iosched.c
+++ b/block/bfq-iosched.c
@@ -209,15 +209,17 @@ static struct kmem_cache *bfq_pool;
* interactive applications automatically, using the following formula:
* duration = (R / r) * T, where r is the peak rate of the device, and
* R and T are two reference parameters.
- * In particular, R is the peak rate of the reference device (see below),
- * and T is a reference time: given the systems that are likely to be
- * installed on the reference device according to its speed class, T is
- * about the maximum time needed, under BFQ and while reading two files in
- * parallel, to load typical large applications on these systems.
- * In practice, the slower/faster the device at hand is, the more/less it
- * takes to load applications with respect to the reference device.
- * Accordingly, the longer/shorter BFQ grants weight raising to interactive
- * applications.
+ * In particular, R is the peak rate of the reference device (see
+ * below), and T is a reference time: given the systems that are
+ * likely to be installed on the reference device according to its
+ * speed class, T is about the maximum time needed, under BFQ and
+ * while reading two files in parallel, to load typical large
+ * applications on these systems (see the comments on
+ * max_service_from_wr below, for more details on how T is obtained).
+ * In practice, the slower/faster the device at hand is, the more/less
+ * it takes to load applications with respect to the reference device.
+ * Accordingly, the longer/shorter BFQ grants weight raising to
+ * interactive applications.
*
* BFQ uses four different reference pairs (R, T), depending on:
* . whether the device is rotational or non-rotational;
@@ -254,6 +256,60 @@ static int T_slow[2];
static int T_fast[2];
static int device_speed_thresh[2];
+/*
+ * BFQ uses the above-detailed, time-based weight-raising mechanism to
+ * privilege interactive tasks. This mechanism is vulnerable to the
+ * following false positives: I/O-bound applications that will go on
+ * doing I/O for much longer than the duration of weight
+ * raising. These applications have basically no benefit from being
+ * weight-raised at the beginning of their I/O. On the opposite end,
+ * while being weight-raised, these applications
+ * a) unjustly steal throughput to applications that may actually need
+ * low latency;
+ * b) make BFQ uselessly perform device idling; device idling results
+ * in loss of device throughput with most flash-based storage, and may
+ * increase latencies when used purposelessly.
+ *
+ * BFQ tries to reduce these problems, by adopting the following
+ * countermeasure. To introduce this countermeasure, we need first to
+ * finish explaining how the duration of weight-raising for
+ * interactive tasks is computed.
+ *
+ * For a bfq_queue deemed as interactive, the duration of weight
+ * raising is dynamically adjusted, as a function of the estimated
+ * peak rate of the device, so as to be equal to the time needed to
+ * execute the 'largest' interactive task we benchmarked so far. By
+ * largest task, we mean the task for which each involved process has
+ * to do more I/O than for any of the other tasks we benchmarked. This
+ * reference interactive task is the start-up of LibreOffice Writer,
+ * and in this task each process/bfq_queue needs to have at most ~110K
+ * sectors transferred.
+ *
+ * This last piece of information enables BFQ to reduce the actual
+ * duration of weight-raising for at least one class of I/O-bound
+ * applications: those doing sequential or quasi-sequential I/O. An
+ * example is file copy. In fact, once started, the main I/O-bound
+ * processes of these applications usually consume the above 110K
+ * sectors in much less time than the processes of an application that
+ * is starting, because these I/O-bound processes will greedily devote
+ * almost all their CPU cycles only to their target,
+ * throughput-friendly I/O operations. This is even more true if BFQ
+ * happens to be underestimating the device peak rate, and thus
+ * overestimating the duration of weight raising. But, according to
+ * our measurements, once transferred 110K sectors, these processes
+ * have no right to be weight-raised any longer.
+ *
+ * Basing on the last consideration, BFQ ends weight-raising for a
+ * bfq_queue if the latter happens to have received an amount of
+ * service at least equal to the following constant. The constant is
+ * set to slightly more than 110K, to have a minimum safety margin.
+ *
+ * This early ending of weight-raising reduces the amount of time
+ * during which interactive false positives cause the two problems
+ * described at the beginning of these comments.
+ */
+static const unsigned long max_service_from_wr = 120000;
+
#define RQ_BIC(rq) icq_to_bic((rq)->elv.priv[0])
#define RQ_BFQQ(rq) ((rq)->elv.priv[1])
@@ -1352,6 +1408,7 @@ static void bfq_update_bfqq_wr_on_rq_arrival(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
if (old_wr_coeff == 1 && wr_or_deserves_wr) {
/* start a weight-raising period */
if (interactive) {
+ bfqq->service_from_wr = 0;
bfqq->wr_coeff = bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff;
bfqq->wr_cur_max_time = bfq_wr_duration(bfqd);
} else {
@@ -3665,6 +3722,12 @@ static void bfq_update_wr_data(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
}
}
+ if (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1 &&
+ bfqq->wr_cur_max_time != bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time &&
+ bfqq->service_from_wr > max_service_from_wr) {
+ /* see comments on max_service_from_wr */
+ bfq_bfqq_end_wr(bfqq);
+ }
}
/*
* To improve latency (for this or other queues), immediately