Re: XFS lstat() _very_ slow on SMP

From: Jan Kasprzak
Date: Wed May 18 2005 - 12:47:07 EST


Christoph Hellwig wrote:
: On Mon, May 16, 2005 at 06:25:06PM +0200, Jan Kasprzak wrote:
: > Hi all,
: >
: > I have a big XFS volume on my fileserver, and I have noticed that
: > making an incremental backup of this volume is _very_ slow. The incremental
: > backup essentially checks mtime of all files on this volume, and it
: > takes ~4ms of _system_ time (i.e. no iowait or what) to do a lstat().
:
: Thanks a lot for the report, I'll investigate what's going on once I get
: a little time. (Early next week I hope)

Hmm, I feel like I am hunting ghosts - after a fresh reboot
of the 4-CPU server I did four runs of 128*128*128 files with various
sizes of the underlying filesystem (in order to eliminate the volume
size as a problematic factor). I've got the following numbers:

Volume size create time find -mtime +1000 cost of lseek()
5GB 55m77 real 52m51 sys 1m1 real 0m53 sys 19 usecs
25GB 58m15 real 55m27 sys 83m47 real 82m15 sys 2171 usecs (!!!!!!)
125GB 67m0 real 61m35 sys 0m55 real 0m48 sys 18 usecs
625GB 68m30 real 62m38 sys 0m57 real 0m49 sys 18 usecs

So the results are probably not dependent on the volume size,
but on something totally random (such as which cpu the command
ends up running on or something like that), or on the system uptime
(and implied fragmentation of memory or what).

I've tried to re-run the same test the next day (i.e. on
server with longer uptime), but the server crashed - my test script
ended locked up somewhere in kernel (probably holding some locks),
and then other processes started to lock up after accessing the file
system (my top(1) was running OK, but when I tried to "touch newfile"
in another shell, it locked up as well). So I had to reset this server
again.

I am not really sure where exactly the problem is. I think
it is related to XFS, big memory of this server (26 GB), four CPUs,
and maybe even the x86_64 architecture. I was not able to reproduce
the problem on the same HW using ext3fs, and the problem is also
a magnitude smaller on 2-way system with 4GB of RAM. Maybe I should
try to reproduce this on our Altix box to eliminate the x86_64 as the
possible source of problems.

I use the attached "bigtree.pl" to create the directory structure
("time ./bigtree.pl /new-volume 3 128" for 128*128*128 files), and then
"strace -c find /new-volume -type f -mtime +1000 -print" (the numbers
without strace are almost the same, so strace is not a problem here).

Thanks,

-Yenya

--
| Jan "Yenya" Kasprzak <kas at {fi.muni.cz - work | yenya.net - private}> |
| GPG: ID 1024/D3498839 Fingerprint 0D99A7FB206605D7 8B35FCDE05B18A5E |
| http://www.fi.muni.cz/~kas/ Czech Linux Homepage: http://www.linux.cz/ |
-- Yes. CVS is much denser. --
-- CVS is also total crap. So your point is? --Linus Torvalds --
#!/usr/bin/perl -w

use strict;

if ($#ARGV != 2) {
print STDERR "Usage: $0 prefix depth width\n\t$0 /mnt1 2 256\n";
exit 1;
}

my ($prefix, $maxdepth, $files) = @ARGV;
my $print = 10_000;
my $count = 0;
my $total = 0;

sub depth($$);

sub depth($$) {
my ($depth, $prefix) = @_;
for my $i (0..$files-1) {
my $p = $prefix . '/' . $i;
if ($depth < $maxdepth) {
mkdir $p or die "mkdir $p: $!";
depth($depth+1, $p);
} else {
open F, ">$p" or die "open $p: $!";
close F;
unless (++$count % $print) {
print STDERR "$count/$total files created\n"
if -t STDERR;
}
}
}
}

$total = $files**$maxdepth;
depth (1, $prefix);