On Tue, Nov 03, 2015 at 10:57:57AM -0700, Ross Zwisler wrote: > On Mon, Nov 02, 2015 at 09:31:11PM -0800, Dan Williams wrote: > > On Mon, Nov 2, 2015 at 8:48 PM, Dave Chinner <da...@fromorbit.com> wrote: > > > On Mon, Nov 02, 2015 at 07:27:26PM -0800, Dan Williams wrote: > > >> On Mon, Nov 2, 2015 at 4:51 PM, Dave Chinner <da...@fromorbit.com> wrote: > > >> > On Sun, Nov 01, 2015 at 11:29:53PM -0500, Dan Williams wrote: > > >> > The zeroing (and the data, for that matter) doesn't need to be > > >> > committed to persistent store until the allocation is written and > > >> > committed to the journal - that will happen with a REQ_FLUSH|REQ_FUA > > >> > write, so it makes sense to deploy the big hammer and delay the > > >> > blocking CPU cache flushes until the last possible moment in cases > > >> > like this. > > >> > > >> In pmem terms that would be a non-temporal memset plus a delayed > > >> wmb_pmem at REQ_FLUSH time. Better to write around the cache than > > >> loop over the dirty-data issuing flushes after the fact. We'll bump > > >> the priority of the non-temporal memset implementation. > > > > > > Why is it better to do two synchronous physical writes to memory > > > within a couple of microseconds of CPU time rather than writing them > > > through the cache and, in most cases, only doing one physical write > > > to memory in a separate context that expects to wait for a flush > > > to complete? > > > > With a switch to non-temporal writes they wouldn't be synchronous, > > although it's doubtful that the subsequent writes after zeroing would > > also hit the store buffer. > > > > If we had a method to flush by physical-cache-way rather than a > > virtual address then it would indeed be better to save up for one > > final flush, but when we need to resort to looping through all the > > virtual addresses that might have touched it gets expensive. > > I agree with the idea that we should avoid the "big hammer" flushing in > response to REQ_FLUSH. Here are the steps that are needed to make sure that > something is durable on media with PMEM/DAX: > > 1) Write, either with non-temporal stores or with stores that use the > processor cache > > 2) If you wrote using the processor cache, flush or write back the processor > cache > > 3) wmb_pmem(), synchronizing all non-temporal writes and flushes durably to > media.
Right, and when you look at buffered IO, we have: 1) write to page cache, mark page dirty 2) if you have dirty cached pages, flush dirty pages to device 3) REQ_FLUSH causes everything to be durable. > PMEM does all I/O using 1 and 3 with non-temporal stores, and mmaps that go to > userspace can used cached writes, so on fsync/msync we do a bunch of flushes > for step 2. In either case I think we should have the PMEM driver just do > step 3, the wmb_pmem(), in response to REQ_FLUSH. This allows the zeroing > code to just do non-temporal writes of zeros, the DAX fsync/msync code to just > do flushes (which is what my patch set already does), and just leave the > wmb_pmem() to the PMEM driver at REQ_FLUSH time. > > This just means that the layers above the PMEM code either need to use > non-temporal writes for their I/Os, or do flushing, which I don't think is too > onerous. Agreed - it fits neatly into the existing infrastructure and algorithms and there's no evidence to suggest that using the existing infrastructure is going to cause undue burden on PMEM based workloads. Hence I really think this is the right way to proceed... Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner da...@fromorbit.com -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/