Re: Terrible performance of sequential O_DIRECT 4k writes in SANenvironment. ~3 times slower then Solars 10 with the same HBA/Storage.

From: Sergey Meirovich
Date: Fri Jan 10 2014 - 05:36:51 EST


Hi Jan,

On 10 January 2014 11:36, Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Thu 09-01-14 12:11:16, Sergey Meirovich wrote:
...
>> I've done preallocation on fnic/XtremIO as Christoph suggested.
>>
>> [root@dca-poc-gtsxdb3 mnt]# sysbench --max-requests=0
>> --file-extra-flags=direct --test=fileio --num-threads=4
>> --file-total-size=10G --file-io-mode=async --file-async-backlog=1024
>> --file-rw-ratio=1 --file-fsync-freq=0 --max-requests=0
>> --file-test-mode=seqwr --max-time=100 --file-block-size=4K prepare
>> sysbench 0.4.12: multi-threaded system evaluation benchmark
>>
>> 128 files, 81920Kb each, 10240Mb total
>> Creating files for the test...
>> [root@dca-poc-gtsxdb3 mnt]# du -k test_file.* | awk '{print $1}' |sort |uniq
>> 81920
>> [root@dca-poc-gtsxdb3 mnt]# fallocate -l 81920k test_file.*
>>
>> Results: 13.042Mb/sec 3338.73 Requests/sec
>>
>> Probably sysbench is still triggering append DIO scenario. Will say
>> simple wrapper over io_submit() against already preallocated (and even
>> filled with data) file provide much better throughput if your theory
>> is valid?
> So I was experimenting a bit. "sysbench prepare" seems to always do
> synchronous IO from a single thread in the 'prepare' phase regardless of
> the arguments. So there the reported throughput isn't really relevant.
>
> In the 'run' phase it obeys the arguments and indeed when I run fallocate
> to preallocate files during 'run' phase, it significantly helps the
> throughput (from 20 MB/s to 55 MB/s on my SATA drive).

Sorry, Jan. Seems that I presented my findings in a previous mail in
ambiguous style . I know that prepare phase of sysbench is
synchronous/probably buffered (because I saw 512k chunks sent down to
HBA)? IO. I played with blocktrace and have seen that myself during
prepare:

[root@dca-poc-gtsxdb3 mnt]# sysbench --max-requests=0
--file-extra-flags=direct --test=fileio --num-threads=4
--file-total-size=10G --file-io-mode=async --file-async-backlog=1024
--file-rw-ratio=1 --file-fsync-freq=0 --max-requests=0
--file-test-mode=seqwr --max-time=100 --file-block-size=4K prepare
...

Leads to:

[root@dca-poc-gtsxdb3 mnt]# blktrace -d /dev/sdg -o - | blkparse -i -
| grep 'D W'
8,96 14 604 53.129805520 28114 D WS 1116160 + 1024 [sysbench]
8,96 14 607 53.129843345 28114 D WS 1120256 + 1024 [sysbench]
8,96 14 610 53.129873782 28114 D WS 1124352 + 1024 [sysbench]
8,96 14 613 53.129903703 28114 D WS 1128448 + 1024 [sysbench]
8,96 14 616 53.130957213 28114 D WS 1132544 + 1024 [sysbench]
8,96 14 619 53.130988835 28114 D WS 1136640 + 1024 [sysbench]
8,96 14 622 53.131018854 28114 D WS 1140736 + 1024 [sysbench]
...

That result "13.042Mb/sec 3338.73 Requests/sec" was from run phase
and before it fallocate had been made.

blktrace from run phase looks very different. 4k as expected.
[root@dca-poc-gtsxdb3 ~]# blktrace -d /dev/sdg -o - | blkparse -i - |
grep 'D W'
8,96 5 3 0.000001874 28212 D WS 1847296 + 8 [sysbench]
8,96 5 7 0.001213728 28212 D WS 1847304 + 8 [sysbench]
8,96 5 11 0.002779304 28212 D WS 1847312 + 8 [sysbench]
8,96 5 15 0.004486445 28212 D WS 1847320 + 8 [sysbench]
8,96 5 19 0.006012133 28212 D WS 22691864 + 8 [sysbench]
8,96 5 23 0.007781553 28212 D WS 22691896 + 8 [sysbench]
8,96 5 27 0.009043404 28212 D WS 22691928 + 8 [sysbench]
8,96 5 31 0.010546829 28212 D WS 22691960 + 8 [sysbench]
8,96 5 35 0.012214468 28212 D WS 22691992 + 8 [sysbench]
8,96 5 39 0.013792616 28212 D WS 22692024 + 8 [sysbench]
...
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