Re: performance drop after using blkcg

From: Tejun Heo
Date: Tue Dec 11 2012 - 09:47:12 EST


Hello,

On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 09:43:36AM -0500, Vivek Goyal wrote:
> I think if one sets slice_idle=0 and group_idle=0 in CFQ, for all practical
> purposes it should become and IOPS based group scheduling.

No, I don't think it is. You can't achieve isolation without idling
between group switches. We're measuring slices in terms of iops but
what cfq actually schedules are still time slices, not IOs.

> For group accounting then CFQ uses number of requests from each cgroup
> and uses that information to schedule groups.
>
> I have not been able to figure out the practical benefits of that
> approach. At least not for the simple workloads I played with. This
> approach will not work for simple things like trying to improve dependent
> read latencies in presence of heavery writers. That's the single biggest
> use case CFQ solves, IMO.

As I wrote above, it's not about accounting. It's about scheduling
unit.

> And that happens because we stop writes and don't let them go to device
> and device is primarily dealing with reads. If some process is doing
> dependent reads and we want to improve read latencies, then either
> we need to stop flow of writes or devices are good and they always
> prioritize READs over WRITEs. If devices are good then we probably
> don't even need blkcg.
>
> So yes, iops based appraoch is fine just that number of cases where you
> will see any service differentiation should significantly less.

No, using iops to schedule time slices would lead to that. We just
need to be allocating and scheduling iops, and I don't think we should
be doing that from cfq.

Thanks.

--
tejun
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/