On 07/16/2012 07:58 PM, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
On Thu, Jul 12, 2012 at 4:35 PM, Asias He <as...@redhat.com> wrote:
This patchset adds vhost-blk support. vhost-blk is a in kernel virito-blk
device accelerator. Compared to userspace virtio-blk implementation, vhost-blk
gives about 5% to 15% performance improvement.

Why is it 5-15% faster?  vhost-blk and the userspace virtio-blk you
benchmarked should be doing basically the same thing:

1. An eventfd file descriptor is signalled when the vring has new
requests available from the guest.
2. A thread wakes up and processes the virtqueue.
3. Linux AIO is used to issue host I/O.
4. An interrupt is injected into the guest.

Yes. This is how both of them work. Though, there are some differences in details. e.g.

In vhost-blk, we use the vhost's work infrastructure to handle the requests. In kvm tool, we use a dedicated thread. In vhost-blk, we use irqfd to inject interrupts. In kvm tool, we use ioctl to inject interrupts.


Does the vhost-blk implementation do anything fundamentally different
from userspace?  Where is the overhead that userspace virtio-blk has?


Currently, no. But we could play with bio directly in vhost-blk as Christoph suggested which could make the IO path from guest to host's real storage even shorter in vhost-blk.

I've been trying my best to reduce the overhead of virtio-blk at kvm tool side. I do not see any significant overhead out there. Compared to vhost-blk, the overhead we have in userspace virito-blk is syscalls. In each IO request, we have

   epoll_wait() & read(): wait for the eventfd which guest notifies us
   io_submit(): submit the aio
   read(): read the aio complete eventfd
   io_getevents(): reap the aio complete result
   ioctl(): trigger the interrupt

So, vhost-blk at least saves ~6 syscalls for us in each request.

I'm asking because it would be beneficial to fix the overhead
(especially it that could speed up all userspace applications) instead
of adding a special-purpose kernel module to work around the overhead.

I guess you mean qemu here. Yes, in theory, qemu's block layer can be improved to achieve similar performance as vhost-blk or kvm tool's userspace virito-blk has. But I think it makes no sense to prevent one solution becase there is another in theory solution called: we can do similar in qemu.

What do you mean by specail-purpose here, we need general-purpose kernel
module? Is vhost-net a special purpose kernel module? Is xen-blkback a special-purpose kernel module? And I think vhost-blk is beneficial to qemu too, as well as any other kvm host side implementation.

--
Asias


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