> On Wed, Apr 07, 2010 at 05:18:12PM -0400, Jeff Moyer wrote:
> > Hi again,
> >
> > So, here's another stab at fixing this. This patch is very much an RFC,
> > so do not pull it into anything bound for Linus. ;-) For those new to
> > this topic, here is the original posting:
http://lkml.org/lkml/2010/4/1/344
> >
> > The basic problem is that, when running iozone on smallish files (up to
> > 8MB in size) and including fsync in the timings, deadline outperforms
> > CFQ by a factor of about 5 for 64KB files, and by about 10% for 8MB
> > files. From examining the blktrace data, it appears that iozone will
> > issue an fsync() call, and will have to wait until it's CFQ timeslice
> > has expired before the journal thread can run to actually commit data to
> > disk.
> >
> > The approach below puts an explicit call into the filesystem-specific
> > fsync code to yield the disk so that the jbd[2] process has a chance to
> > issue I/O. This bring performance of CFQ in line with deadline.
> >
> > There is one outstanding issue with the patch that Vivek pointed out.
> > Basically, this could starve out the sync-noidle workload if there is a
> > lot of fsync-ing going on. I'll address that in a follow-on patch. For
> > now, I wanted to get the idea out there for others to comment on.
> >
> > Thanks a ton to Vivek for spotting the problem with the initial
> > approach, and for his continued review.
> >
>
> Thanks Jeff. Conceptually this appraoch makes lot of sense to me. Higher
> layers explicitly telling CFQ not to idle/yield the slice.
>
> My firefox timing test is perfoming much better now.
>
> real 0m15.957s
> user 0m0.608s
> sys 0m0.165s
>
> real 0m12.984s
> user 0m0.602s
> sys 0m0.148s
>
> real 0m13.057s
> user 0m0.624s
> sys 0m0.145s
>
> So we got to take care of two issues now.
>
> - Make it work with dm/md devices also. Somehow shall have to propogate
> this yield semantic down the stack.