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Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL


From: Peter Lieven
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCHv3 RESEND] block: introduce BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL
Date: Thu, 05 Jun 2014 10:09:49 +0200
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:24.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/24.5.0

On 05.06.2014 09:53, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
On Wed, Jun 04, 2014 at 05:31:48PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote:
Am 04.06.2014 17:12, schrieb Stefan Hajnoczi:
On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 11:40:37PM +0200, Peter Lieven wrote:
this patch introduces a new flag to indicate that we are going to sequentially
read from a file and do not plan to reread/reuse the data after it has been 
read.

The current use of this flag is to open the source(s) of a qemu-img convert
process. If a protocol from block/raw-posix.c is used posix_fadvise is utilized
to advise to the kernel that we are going to read sequentially from the
file and a POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED advise is issued after each write to indicate
that there is no advantage keeping the blocks in the buffers.

Consider the following test case that was created to confirm the behaviour of
the new flag:

A 10G logical volume was created and filled with random data.
Then the logical volume was exported via qemu-img convert to an iscsi target.
Before the export was started all caches of the linux kernel where dropped.

Old behavior:
  - The convert process took 3m45s and the buffer cache grew up to 9.67 GB close
    to the end of the conversion. After qemu-img terminated all the buffers were
    freed by the kernel.

New behavior with the -N switch:
  - The convert process took 3m43s and the buffer cache grew up to 15.48 MB 
close
    to the end with some small peaks up to 30 MB during the conversion.
FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL can be good since it doubles read-ahead on Linux.

I'm skeptical of the effort to avoid buffer cache usage using
FADVISE_DONTNEED.  The performance results tell me that less buffer
cache was used but that number doesn't have a direct effect on
application performance.

Let's check GNU coreutils:

   $ cd coreutils
   $ git grep FADVISE_DONTNEED
   gl/lib/fadvise.h:  FADVISE_DONTNEED =   POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED,
   gl/lib/fadvise.h:  FADVISE_DONTNEED,
   $

GNU cp(1) does not care about minimizing impact on buffer cache using
FADVISE_DONTNEED.  It just sets FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL on the source file
and calls read() (plus uses FIEMAP to check extents for sparseness).

I want to avoid adding code just for the heck of it.  We need a deeper
understanding:

Please drop FADVISE_DONTNEED and compare again to see if it changes the
benchmark.

By the way, did you perform several runs to check the variance of the
running time?  I don't know if the 2 seconds difference were noise or
because FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL or because FADVISE_DONTNEED or because both.
There was no effect on the runtime as far as I remember. I ran
some tests, but not a number large enough to filter out the noise.

I created this one because we saw it helps under memory pressure.
Maybe its too specific to add it into mainline qemu, but I wanted to
avoid to have too much individual changes we need to maintain.
I'm open to merging it if the improvement can be quantified.  Right now
this might be a workaround for Linux memory management heuristics or it
might not have any effect, I don't know.

I understand that you are critical about it. I can just say it solved
the problem with the specific setup, kernel version etc.

I found that FADVISE_DONTNEED solves problems also in other applications.
Offtopic: i have an raspberry pi running as tvheadend and observed desync
of the DVBS2 signal at some times. Since I FADV_DONTNEED all written
frames away it runs smothly. I this case the feeing of the page cache was
CPU intensive for the small device and caused the desync.


diff --git a/block/raw-posix.c b/block/raw-posix.c
index 6586a0c..9768cc4 100644
--- a/block/raw-posix.c
+++ b/block/raw-posix.c
@@ -447,6 +447,13 @@ static int raw_open_common(BlockDriverState *bs, QDict 
*options,
      }
  #endif
+#ifdef POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL
+    if (bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL &&
+        !(bs->open_flags & BDRV_O_NOCACHE)) {
+        posix_fadvise(s->fd, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL);
+    }
+#endif
This is only true if the image format is raw.  If the image format on
top of this raw-posix BDS is non-raw then the read pattern may not be
sequential.
You are right, but will the other formats set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL?
If the user specifies qemu-img convert -N then it will be set for any
image format.

Of course, but when e.g. qcow2 opens its underlying file, then BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL
is not passed on, or is it?


Maybe qemu-img convert can always set BDRV_O_SEQUENTIAL and the have the
raw_bsd.c format propagate it to bs->file while other formats do not.
Then the user doesn't have to specify a command-line option and we don't
set it for non-raw image formats.

This would be an option.

Peter



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