On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 2:46 PM Josef Bacik <jo...@toxicpanda.com> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Aug 26, 2019 at 05:04:36PM +0800, Anand Jain wrote:
> > Function call chain  __btrfs_map_block()->find_live_mirror() uses
> > thread pid to determine the %mirror_num when the mirror_num=0.
> >
> > This patch introduces a framework so that we can add policies to determine
> > the %mirror_num. And also adds the devid as the readmirror policy.
> >
> > The new property is stored as an item in the device tree as show below.
> >     (BTRFS_READMIRROR_OBJECTID, BTRFS_PERSISTENT_ITEM_KEY, devid)
> >
> > To be able to set and get this new property also introduces new ioctls
> > BTRFS_IOC_GET_READMIRROR and BTRFS_IOC_SET_READMIRROR. The ioctl argument
> > is defined as
> >         struct btrfs_ioctl_readmirror_args {
> >                 __u64 type; /* RW */
> >                 __u64 device_bitmap; /* RW */
> >         }
> >
> > An usage example as follows:
> >         btrfs property set /btrfs readmirror devid:1,3
> >         btrfs property get /btrfs readmirror
> >           readmirror devid:1 3
> >         btrfs property set /btrfs readmirror ""
> >         btrfs property get /btrfs readmirror
> >           readmirror default
> >
> > This patchset has been tested completely, however marked as RFC for the
> > following reasons and comments on them (or any other) are appreciated as
> > usual.
> >  . The new objectid is defined as
> >       #define BTRFS_READMIRROR_OBJECTID -1ULL
> >    Need consent we are fine to use this value, and with this value it
> >    shall be placed just before the DEV_STATS_OBJECTID item which is more
> >    frequently used only during the device errors.
> >
> > .  I am using a u64 bitmap to represent the devices id, so the max device
> >    id that we could represent is 63, its a kind of limitation which should
> >    be addressed before integration, I wonder if there is any suggestion?
> >    Kindly note that, multiple ioctls with each time representing a set of
> >    device(s) is not a choice because we need to make sure the readmirror
> >    changes happens in a commit transaction.
> >
> > v1->RFC v2:
> >   . Property is stored as a dev-tree item instead of root inode extended
> >     attribute.
> >   . Rename BTRFS_DEV_STATE_READ_OPRIMIZED to BTRFS_DEV_STATE_READ_PREFERRED.
> >   . Changed format specifier from devid1,2,3.. to devid:1,2,3..
> >
> > RFC->v1:
> >   Drops pid as one of the readmirror policy choices and as usual remains
> >   as default. And when the devid is reset the readmirror policy falls back
> >   to pid.
> >   Drops the mount -o readmirror idea, it can be added at a later point of
> >   time.
> >   Property now accepts more than 1 devid as readmirror device. As shown
> >   in the example above.
> >
>
> This is a lot of infrastructure to just change which mirror we read to based 
> on
> some arbitrary user policy.  I assume this is to solve the case where you have
> slow and fast disks, so you can always read from the fast disk?  And then it's
> only used in RAID1, so the very narrow usecase of having a RAID1 setup with a
> SSD and a normal disk?  I'm not seeing a point to this much code for one
> particular obscure setup.  Thanks,
>
> Josef

Not commenting on the code itself, but as a user I see this SSD RAID1
acceleration as a future much have feature. It's only obscure at the
moment because we don't have code to take advantage of it. But on
large btrfs filesystems with hundreds of GB of metadata, like I have
for backups, the usability of the filesystem is dramatically improved
having the metadata on an SSD( though currently only half of the time
due to the even/odd pid distribution.)

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