Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
>On 2021/01/14 12:53, Ming Lei wrote: >> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:02:44PM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: >>> On 2021/01/13 20:48, Ming Lei wrote: On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 11:16:11AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: > On 2021/01/13 19:25, Ming Lei wrote: >> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 09:28:02AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: >>> On 2021/01/13 18:19, Ming Lei wrote: On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:09 PM Changheun Lee wrote: > >> On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: > From: "Changheun Lee" > > bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. > but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. > in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user > space - > all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory > address is > continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge > complete. > bio max size should be limited as a proper size. But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later automatic bio split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared to having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized and will likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this patch applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and too small considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. >>> >>> When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages >>> of 32MB >>> is merged into a bio structure. >>> And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. >>> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. >>> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit >>> is about >>> 100us by bio_full operation. >> >> bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests >> while the >> small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That >> likely explain >> the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will >> issue ALL >> requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB >> bio case >> will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual >> total latency >> difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs >> to be >> compared here. >> >> Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? >> > > 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this > patch. > But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time > too. 19ms looks too big just for preparing one 32MB sized bio, which isn't supposed to take so long. Can you investigate where the 19ms is taken just for preparing one 32MB sized bio? >>> >>> Changheun mentioned that the device side IO latency is 16.7ms out of >>> the 19ms >>> total. So the BIO handling, submission+completion takes about 2.3ms, and >>> Changheun points above to 2ms for the submission part. >> >> OK, looks I misunderstood the data. >> >>> It might be iov_iter_get_pages() for handling page fault. If yes, one suggestion is to enable THP(Transparent HugePage Support) in your application. >>> >>> But if that was due to page faults, the same large-ish time would be >>> taken for >>> the preparing the size-limited BIOs too, no ? No matter how the BIOs >>> are diced, >>> all 32MB of pages of the user IO are referenced... >> >> If bio size is reduced to 1MB, just 256 pages need to be faulted before >> submitting this >> bio, instead of 256*32 pages, that is why the following words are >> mentioned: >> >> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. >> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is >> about >> 100us by bio_full operation. > > Yes, but eventually, all pages for the 32MB IO will be faulted in, just > not in > one go. Overall number of page faults is likely the same as with the > large BIO > preparation. So I think we are back to my previous point, that is, > reducing the > device idle time by starting a BIO more quickly, even a small one, leads > to > overlap between CPU time needed for the next BIO
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On 2021/01/14 12:53, Ming Lei wrote: > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:02:44PM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: >> On 2021/01/13 20:48, Ming Lei wrote: >>> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 11:16:11AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: On 2021/01/13 19:25, Ming Lei wrote: > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 09:28:02AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: >> On 2021/01/13 18:19, Ming Lei wrote: >>> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:09 PM Changheun Lee >>> wrote: > On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: >>> On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: From: "Changheun Lee" bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address is continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. bio max size should be limited as a proper size. >>> >>> But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later >>> automatic bio >>> split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs >>> compared to >>> having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily >>> sized and will >>> likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). >>> >>> Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with >>> this patch >>> applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary >>> and too small >>> considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. >>> >> >> When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of >> 32MB >> is merged into a bio structure. >> And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. >> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. >> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is >> about >> 100us by bio_full operation. > > bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests > while the > small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That > likely explain > the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will > issue ALL > requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB > bio case > will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual > total latency > difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs > to be > compared here. > > Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? > 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time too. >>> >>> 19ms looks too big just for preparing one 32MB sized bio, which isn't >>> supposed to >>> take so long. Can you investigate where the 19ms is taken just for >>> preparing one >>> 32MB sized bio? >> >> Changheun mentioned that the device side IO latency is 16.7ms out of the >> 19ms >> total. So the BIO handling, submission+completion takes about 2.3ms, and >> Changheun points above to 2ms for the submission part. > > OK, looks I misunderstood the data. > >> >>> >>> It might be iov_iter_get_pages() for handling page fault. If yes, one >>> suggestion >>> is to enable THP(Transparent HugePage Support) in your application. >> >> But if that was due to page faults, the same large-ish time would be >> taken for >> the preparing the size-limited BIOs too, no ? No matter how the BIOs are >> diced, >> all 32MB of pages of the user IO are referenced... > > If bio size is reduced to 1MB, just 256 pages need to be faulted before > submitting this > bio, instead of 256*32 pages, that is why the following words are > mentioned: > > It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is > about > 100us by bio_full operation. Yes, but eventually, all pages for the 32MB IO will be faulted in, just not in one go. Overall number of page faults is likely the same as with the large BIO preparation. So I think we are back to my previous point, that is, reducing the device idle time by starting a BIO more quickly, even a small one, leads to overlap between CPU time needed for the next BIO preparation and previous BIO execution, reducing overall the latency for the entire 32MB user IO. >>> >>>
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:02:44PM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: > On 2021/01/13 20:48, Ming Lei wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 11:16:11AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: > >> On 2021/01/13 19:25, Ming Lei wrote: > >>> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 09:28:02AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: > On 2021/01/13 18:19, Ming Lei wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:09 PM Changheun Lee > > wrote: > >> > >>> On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: > > On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: > >> From: "Changheun Lee" > >> > >> bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. > >> but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. > >> in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space > >> - > >> all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory > >> address is > >> continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge > >> complete. > >> bio max size should be limited as a proper size. > > > > But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later > > automatic bio > > split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs > > compared to > > having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily > > sized and will > > likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). > > > > Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with > > this patch > > applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary > > and too small > > considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. > > > > When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of > 32MB > is merged into a bio structure. > And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. > It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is > about > 100us by bio_full operation. > >>> > >>> bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests > >>> while the > >>> small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That > >>> likely explain > >>> the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will > >>> issue ALL > >>> requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB > >>> bio case > >>> will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual > >>> total latency > >>> difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs > >>> to be > >>> compared here. > >>> > >>> Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? > >>> > >> > >> 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this > >> patch. > >> But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time > >> too. > > > > 19ms looks too big just for preparing one 32MB sized bio, which isn't > > supposed to > > take so long. Can you investigate where the 19ms is taken just for > > preparing one > > 32MB sized bio? > > Changheun mentioned that the device side IO latency is 16.7ms out of the > 19ms > total. So the BIO handling, submission+completion takes about 2.3ms, and > Changheun points above to 2ms for the submission part. > >>> > >>> OK, looks I misunderstood the data. > >>> > > > > > It might be iov_iter_get_pages() for handling page fault. If yes, one > > suggestion > > is to enable THP(Transparent HugePage Support) in your application. > > But if that was due to page faults, the same large-ish time would be > taken for > the preparing the size-limited BIOs too, no ? No matter how the BIOs are > diced, > all 32MB of pages of the user IO are referenced... > >>> > >>> If bio size is reduced to 1MB, just 256 pages need to be faulted before > >>> submitting this > >>> bio, instead of 256*32 pages, that is why the following words are > >>> mentioned: > >>> > >>> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > >>> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is > >>> about > >>> 100us by bio_full operation. > >> > >> Yes, but eventually, all pages for the 32MB IO will be faulted in, just > >> not in > >> one go. Overall number of page faults is likely the same as with the large > >> BIO > >> preparation. So I think we are back to my previous point, that is, > >> reducing the > >> device idle time by starting a BIO more quickly, even a small one, leads to > >> overlap between CPU time needed for the next BIO preparation and previous > >> BIO > >> execution, reducing overall the latency for the entire 32MB user IO. > > > > When bio size is reduced from 32M to 1M
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On 2021/01/13 20:48, Ming Lei wrote: > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 11:16:11AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: >> On 2021/01/13 19:25, Ming Lei wrote: >>> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 09:28:02AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: On 2021/01/13 18:19, Ming Lei wrote: > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:09 PM Changheun Lee > wrote: >> >>> On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: > On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: >> From: "Changheun Lee" >> >> bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. >> but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. >> in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - >> all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory >> address is >> continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge >> complete. >> bio max size should be limited as a proper size. > > But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later > automatic bio > split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs > compared to > having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily > sized and will > likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). > > Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with > this patch > applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary > and too small > considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. > When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB is merged into a bio structure. And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about 100us by bio_full operation. >>> >>> bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while >>> the >>> small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely >>> explain >>> the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will >>> issue ALL >>> requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB >>> bio case >>> will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total >>> latency >>> difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to >>> be >>> compared here. >>> >>> Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? >>> >> >> 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. >> But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time >> too. > > 19ms looks too big just for preparing one 32MB sized bio, which isn't > supposed to > take so long. Can you investigate where the 19ms is taken just for > preparing one > 32MB sized bio? Changheun mentioned that the device side IO latency is 16.7ms out of the 19ms total. So the BIO handling, submission+completion takes about 2.3ms, and Changheun points above to 2ms for the submission part. >>> >>> OK, looks I misunderstood the data. >>> > > It might be iov_iter_get_pages() for handling page fault. If yes, one > suggestion > is to enable THP(Transparent HugePage Support) in your application. But if that was due to page faults, the same large-ish time would be taken for the preparing the size-limited BIOs too, no ? No matter how the BIOs are diced, all 32MB of pages of the user IO are referenced... >>> >>> If bio size is reduced to 1MB, just 256 pages need to be faulted before >>> submitting this >>> bio, instead of 256*32 pages, that is why the following words are mentioned: >>> >>> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. >>> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is >>> about >>> 100us by bio_full operation. >> >> Yes, but eventually, all pages for the 32MB IO will be faulted in, just not >> in >> one go. Overall number of page faults is likely the same as with the large >> BIO >> preparation. So I think we are back to my previous point, that is, reducing >> the >> device idle time by starting a BIO more quickly, even a small one, leads to >> overlap between CPU time needed for the next BIO preparation and previous BIO >> execution, reducing overall the latency for the entire 32MB user IO. > > When bio size is reduced from 32M to 1M: > > 1MB/(P(1M) + D(1M)) may become bigger than 32MB/(P(1M) + D(1M)), so > throughput is improved. I think that the reason is that P(1M) < D(1M) and so there is overlap between P and D: P of the next BIO is done on the CPU while D of the previous BIO is ongoing on the device, assuming there is no plugging. Somew
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 11:16:11AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: > On 2021/01/13 19:25, Ming Lei wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 09:28:02AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: > >> On 2021/01/13 18:19, Ming Lei wrote: > >>> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:09 PM Changheun Lee > >>> wrote: > > > On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: > >>> On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: > From: "Changheun Lee" > > bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. > but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. > in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - > all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory > address is > continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge > complete. > bio max size should be limited as a proper size. > >>> > >>> But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later > >>> automatic bio > >>> split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs > >>> compared to > >>> having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily > >>> sized and will > >>> likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). > >>> > >>> Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with > >>> this patch > >>> applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary > >>> and too small > >>> considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. > >>> > >> > >> When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of > >> 32MB > >> is merged into a bio structure. > >> And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. > >> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > >> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is > >> about > >> 100us by bio_full operation. > > > > bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while > > the > > small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely > > explain > > the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will > > issue ALL > > requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB > > bio case > > will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total > > latency > > difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to > > be > > compared here. > > > > Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? > > > > 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. > But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time > too. > >>> > >>> 19ms looks too big just for preparing one 32MB sized bio, which isn't > >>> supposed to > >>> take so long. Can you investigate where the 19ms is taken just for > >>> preparing one > >>> 32MB sized bio? > >> > >> Changheun mentioned that the device side IO latency is 16.7ms out of the > >> 19ms > >> total. So the BIO handling, submission+completion takes about 2.3ms, and > >> Changheun points above to 2ms for the submission part. > > > > OK, looks I misunderstood the data. > > > >> > >>> > >>> It might be iov_iter_get_pages() for handling page fault. If yes, one > >>> suggestion > >>> is to enable THP(Transparent HugePage Support) in your application. > >> > >> But if that was due to page faults, the same large-ish time would be taken > >> for > >> the preparing the size-limited BIOs too, no ? No matter how the BIOs are > >> diced, > >> all 32MB of pages of the user IO are referenced... > > > > If bio size is reduced to 1MB, just 256 pages need to be faulted before > > submitting this > > bio, instead of 256*32 pages, that is why the following words are mentioned: > > > > It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > > If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is > > about > > 100us by bio_full operation. > > Yes, but eventually, all pages for the 32MB IO will be faulted in, just not in > one go. Overall number of page faults is likely the same as with the large BIO > preparation. So I think we are back to my previous point, that is, reducing > the > device idle time by starting a BIO more quickly, even a small one, leads to > overlap between CPU time needed for the next BIO preparation and previous BIO > execution, reducing overall the latency for the entire 32MB user IO. When bio size is reduced from 32M to 1M: 1MB/(P(1M) + D(1M)) may become bigger than 32MB/(P(1M) + D(1M)), so throughput is improved. P(x) means time for preparing 'x' sized IO D(x) means time for device to handle 'x' sized IO I depend on both CPU and the UFS drive. > I don't think that the reason is page faulting in itself. What I meant is that page faulting might contribute most part of the 100us(prep
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On 2021/01/13 19:25, Ming Lei wrote: > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 09:28:02AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: >> On 2021/01/13 18:19, Ming Lei wrote: >>> On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:09 PM Changheun Lee >>> wrote: > On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: >>> On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: From: "Changheun Lee" bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address is continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. bio max size should be limited as a proper size. >>> >>> But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later >>> automatic bio >>> split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs >>> compared to >>> having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized >>> and will >>> likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). >>> >>> Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this >>> patch >>> applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and >>> too small >>> considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. >>> >> >> When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB >> is merged into a bio structure. >> And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. >> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. >> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is >> about >> 100us by bio_full operation. > > bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while > the > small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely > explain > the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will issue > ALL > requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB bio > case > will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total > latency > difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to be > compared here. > > Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? > 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time too. >>> >>> 19ms looks too big just for preparing one 32MB sized bio, which isn't >>> supposed to >>> take so long. Can you investigate where the 19ms is taken just for >>> preparing one >>> 32MB sized bio? >> >> Changheun mentioned that the device side IO latency is 16.7ms out of the 19ms >> total. So the BIO handling, submission+completion takes about 2.3ms, and >> Changheun points above to 2ms for the submission part. > > OK, looks I misunderstood the data. > >> >>> >>> It might be iov_iter_get_pages() for handling page fault. If yes, one >>> suggestion >>> is to enable THP(Transparent HugePage Support) in your application. >> >> But if that was due to page faults, the same large-ish time would be taken >> for >> the preparing the size-limited BIOs too, no ? No matter how the BIOs are >> diced, >> all 32MB of pages of the user IO are referenced... > > If bio size is reduced to 1MB, just 256 pages need to be faulted before > submitting this > bio, instead of 256*32 pages, that is why the following words are mentioned: > > It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is > about > 100us by bio_full operation. Yes, but eventually, all pages for the 32MB IO will be faulted in, just not in one go. Overall number of page faults is likely the same as with the large BIO preparation. So I think we are back to my previous point, that is, reducing the device idle time by starting a BIO more quickly, even a small one, leads to overlap between CPU time needed for the next BIO preparation and previous BIO execution, reducing overall the latency for the entire 32MB user IO. I don't think that the reason is page faulting in itself. > > > Thanks, > Ming > > -- Damien Le Moal Western Digital Research
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 09:28:02AM +, Damien Le Moal wrote: > On 2021/01/13 18:19, Ming Lei wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:09 PM Changheun Lee > > wrote: > >> > >>> On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: > > On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: > >> From: "Changheun Lee" > >> > >> bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. > >> but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. > >> in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - > >> all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory > >> address is > >> continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge > >> complete. > >> bio max size should be limited as a proper size. > > > > But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later > > automatic bio > > split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs > > compared to > > having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized > > and will > > likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). > > > > Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this > > patch > > applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and > > too small > > considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. > > > > When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB > is merged into a bio structure. > And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. > It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is > about > 100us by bio_full operation. > >>> > >>> bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while > >>> the > >>> small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely > >>> explain > >>> the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will issue > >>> ALL > >>> requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB bio > >>> case > >>> will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total > >>> latency > >>> difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to be > >>> compared here. > >>> > >>> Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? > >>> > >> > >> 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. > >> But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time too. > > > > 19ms looks too big just for preparing one 32MB sized bio, which isn't > > supposed to > > take so long. Can you investigate where the 19ms is taken just for > > preparing one > > 32MB sized bio? > > Changheun mentioned that the device side IO latency is 16.7ms out of the 19ms > total. So the BIO handling, submission+completion takes about 2.3ms, and > Changheun points above to 2ms for the submission part. OK, looks I misunderstood the data. > > > > > It might be iov_iter_get_pages() for handling page fault. If yes, one > > suggestion > > is to enable THP(Transparent HugePage Support) in your application. > > But if that was due to page faults, the same large-ish time would be taken for > the preparing the size-limited BIOs too, no ? No matter how the BIOs are > diced, > all 32MB of pages of the user IO are referenced... If bio size is reduced to 1MB, just 256 pages need to be faulted before submitting this bio, instead of 256*32 pages, that is why the following words are mentioned: It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about 100us by bio_full operation. Thanks, Ming
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On 2021/01/13 18:19, Ming Lei wrote: > On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:09 PM Changheun Lee wrote: >> >>> On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: > On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: >> From: "Changheun Lee" >> >> bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. >> but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. >> in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - >> all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address >> is >> continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. >> bio max size should be limited as a proper size. > > But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later > automatic bio > split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared > to > having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized > and will > likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). > > Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this > patch > applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and > too small > considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. > When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB is merged into a bio structure. And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about 100us by bio_full operation. >>> >>> bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while the >>> small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely >>> explain >>> the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will issue >>> ALL >>> requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB bio >>> case >>> will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total >>> latency >>> difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to be >>> compared here. >>> >>> Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? >>> >> >> 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. >> But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time too. > > 19ms looks too big just for preparing one 32MB sized bio, which isn't > supposed to > take so long. Can you investigate where the 19ms is taken just for > preparing one > 32MB sized bio? Changheun mentioned that the device side IO latency is 16.7ms out of the 19ms total. So the BIO handling, submission+completion takes about 2.3ms, and Changheun points above to 2ms for the submission part. > > It might be iov_iter_get_pages() for handling page fault. If yes, one > suggestion > is to enable THP(Transparent HugePage Support) in your application. But if that was due to page faults, the same large-ish time would be taken for the preparing the size-limited BIOs too, no ? No matter how the BIOs are diced, all 32MB of pages of the user IO are referenced... > > -- Damien Le Moal Western Digital Research
Re: Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On Wed, Jan 13, 2021 at 12:09 PM Changheun Lee wrote: > > >On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: > >>> On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: > From: "Changheun Lee" > > bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. > but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. > in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - > all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address > is > continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. > bio max size should be limited as a proper size. > >>> > >>> But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later > >>> automatic bio > >>> split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared > >>> to > >>> having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized > >>> and will > >>> likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). > >>> > >>> Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this > >>> patch > >>> applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and > >>> too small > >>> considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. > >>> > >> > >> When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB > >> is merged into a bio structure. > >> And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. > >> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > >> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about > >> 100us by bio_full operation. > > > >bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while the > >small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely > >explain > >the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will issue ALL > >requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB bio case > >will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total > >latency > >difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to be > >compared here. > > > >Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? > > > > 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. > But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time too. 19ms looks too big just for preparing one 32MB sized bio, which isn't supposed to take so long. Can you investigate where the 19ms is taken just for preparing one 32MB sized bio? It might be iov_iter_get_pages() for handling page fault. If yes, one suggestion is to enable THP(Transparent HugePage Support) in your application. -- Ming Lei
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On 2021/01/13 15:54, Changheun Lee wrote: >> On 2021/01/13 13:01, Changheun Lee wrote: On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: >> On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: >>> From: "Changheun Lee" >>> >>> bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. >>> but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. >>> in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - >>> all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address >>> is >>> continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. >>> bio max size should be limited as a proper size. >> >> But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later >> automatic bio >> split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared >> to >> having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized >> and will >> likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). >> >> Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this >> patch >> applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and >> too small >> considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. >> > > When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB > is merged into a bio structure. > And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. > It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about > 100us by bio_full operation. bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while the small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely explain the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will issue ALL requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB bio case will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total latency difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to be compared here. Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? >>> >>> 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. >>> But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time too. >>> Actually 32MB read time from device is same - about 16.7ms - in driver >>> layer. >>> No need to hold more I/O than max_sectors_kb during bio merge. >>> My device is UFS. and max_sectors_kb is 1MB, queue depth is 32. >> >> This may be due to the CPU being slow: it takes time to build the 32MB BIO, >> during which the device is idling. With the 1MB BIO limit, the first BIO hits >> the drive much more quickly, reducing idle time of the device and leading to >> higher throughput. But there are 31 more BIOs to build and issue after the >> first >> one... That does create a pipeline of requests keeping the device busy, but >> that >> also likely keeps your CPU a lot more busy building these additional BIOs. >> Overall, do you see a difference in CPU load for the 32MB BIO case vs the 1MB >> max BIO case ? Any increase in CPU load with the lower BIO size limit ? >> > > CPU load is more than 32MB bio size. Because bio_sumbit progress is doing in > parallel. > But I tested it same CPU operation frequency, So there are no difference of > CPU speed. > Logically, bio max size is 4GB now. it's not realistic I know, but 4GB merge > to a bio > will takes much time even if CPU works fast. > This is why I think bio max size should be limited. I do not think that the page merging code is the real root cause here. That is fast and does not depend on the current size of the BIO. This is essentially an O(1) operation. The root cause of your performance drop is most likely the fact that your device is kept idle while the large BIO is being built, adding the 8192 pages of the large 32MB user IO. Building that large BIO is a lot more efficient, CPU wise, than building and issuing a lot of small BIOs. That gives a lot of benefits on high-end desktops and servers with fast CPUs, but is counter productive in your case with a slower CPU. I wonder: what is the user IO size when you start seeing a performance drop without the patch ? It is clear that limiting the BIO size does imporve things for the 32MB IO size you tested, but what about more realistic workloads with 128K or so IO sizes (typical IO size for an FS using the page cache) ? > >>> > It's not large delay and can't be observed with low speed device. > But it's needed to reduce merge delay for high speed device. > I improved 512MB sequential read performance from 1900MB/s to 2000MB/s > with this patch on android platform. > As you said, 1MB might be small for some device. > But method is needed to re-size, or select the bio max size. At the very least, I thin
Re: Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
>On 2021/01/13 13:01, Changheun Lee wrote: >>> On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: > On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: >> From: "Changheun Lee" >> >> bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. >> but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. >> in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - >> all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address >> is >> continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. >> bio max size should be limited as a proper size. > > But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later > automatic bio > split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared > to > having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized > and will > likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). > > Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this > patch > applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and > too small > considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. > When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB is merged into a bio structure. And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about 100us by bio_full operation. >>> >>> bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while the >>> small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely >>> explain >>> the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will issue >>> ALL >>> requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB bio >>> case >>> will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total >>> latency >>> difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to be >>> compared here. >>> >>> Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? >>> >> >> 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. >> But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time too. >> Actually 32MB read time from device is same - about 16.7ms - in driver layer. >> No need to hold more I/O than max_sectors_kb during bio merge. >> My device is UFS. and max_sectors_kb is 1MB, queue depth is 32. > >This may be due to the CPU being slow: it takes time to build the 32MB BIO, >during which the device is idling. With the 1MB BIO limit, the first BIO hits >the drive much more quickly, reducing idle time of the device and leading to >higher throughput. But there are 31 more BIOs to build and issue after the >first >one... That does create a pipeline of requests keeping the device busy, but >that >also likely keeps your CPU a lot more busy building these additional BIOs. >Overall, do you see a difference in CPU load for the 32MB BIO case vs the 1MB >max BIO case ? Any increase in CPU load with the lower BIO size limit ? > CPU load is more than 32MB bio size. Because bio_sumbit progress is doing in parallel. But I tested it same CPU operation frequency, So there are no difference of CPU speed. Logically, bio max size is 4GB now. it's not realistic I know, but 4GB merge to a bio will takes much time even if CPU works fast. This is why I think bio max size should be limited. >> It's not large delay and can't be observed with low speed device. But it's needed to reduce merge delay for high speed device. I improved 512MB sequential read performance from 1900MB/s to 2000MB/s with this patch on android platform. As you said, 1MB might be small for some device. But method is needed to re-size, or select the bio max size. >>> >>> At the very least, I think that such limit should not be arbitrary as your >>> patch >>> proposes but rely on the device characteristics (e.g. >>> max_hw_sectors_kb/max_sectors_kb and queue depth). >>> >> >> I agree with your opinion, I thought same as your idea. For that, deep >> research >> is needed, proper timing to set and bio structure modification, etc ... > >Why would you need any BIO structure modifications ? Your patch is on the right >track if limiting the BIO size is the right solution (I am not still completely >convinced). E.g., the code: > >if (page_is_mergeable(bv, page, len, off, same_page)) { >if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) { >*same_page = false; >return false; >} > >could just become: > >if (page_is_mergeable(bv, page, len, off, same_page)) { >if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > bio_max_size(bio) - len) { >*same_page = false; >return false; >} > >With bio_max_size() being something like: > >static inline size_t bio_max_size(struct bio *bio) >{ >sector_t max_sectors = blk_queue_get_max_sectors(bio->bi_disk->queue, >bio_op(bio)); > >retu
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On 2021/01/13 13:01, Changheun Lee wrote: >> On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: > From: "Changheun Lee" > > bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. > but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. > in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - > all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address is > continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. > bio max size should be limited as a proper size. But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later automatic bio split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared to having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized and will likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this patch applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and too small considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. >>> >>> When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB >>> is merged into a bio structure. >>> And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. >>> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. >>> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about >>> 100us by bio_full operation. >> >> bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while the >> small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely >> explain >> the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will issue ALL >> requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB bio case >> will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total >> latency >> difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to be >> compared here. >> >> Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? >> > > 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. > But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time too. > Actually 32MB read time from device is same - about 16.7ms - in driver layer. > No need to hold more I/O than max_sectors_kb during bio merge. > My device is UFS. and max_sectors_kb is 1MB, queue depth is 32. This may be due to the CPU being slow: it takes time to build the 32MB BIO, during which the device is idling. With the 1MB BIO limit, the first BIO hits the drive much more quickly, reducing idle time of the device and leading to higher throughput. But there are 31 more BIOs to build and issue after the first one... That does create a pipeline of requests keeping the device busy, but that also likely keeps your CPU a lot more busy building these additional BIOs. Overall, do you see a difference in CPU load for the 32MB BIO case vs the 1MB max BIO case ? Any increase in CPU load with the lower BIO size limit ? > >>> It's not large delay and can't be observed with low speed device. >>> But it's needed to reduce merge delay for high speed device. >>> I improved 512MB sequential read performance from 1900MB/s to 2000MB/s >>> with this patch on android platform. >>> As you said, 1MB might be small for some device. >>> But method is needed to re-size, or select the bio max size. >> >> At the very least, I think that such limit should not be arbitrary as your >> patch >> proposes but rely on the device characteristics (e.g. >> max_hw_sectors_kb/max_sectors_kb and queue depth). >> > > I agree with your opinion, I thought same as your idea. For that, deep > research > is needed, proper timing to set and bio structure modification, etc ... Why would you need any BIO structure modifications ? Your patch is on the right track if limiting the BIO size is the right solution (I am not still completely convinced). E.g., the code: if (page_is_mergeable(bv, page, len, off, same_page)) { if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) { *same_page = false; return false; } could just become: if (page_is_mergeable(bv, page, len, off, same_page)) { if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > bio_max_size(bio) - len) { *same_page = false; return false; } With bio_max_size() being something like: static inline size_t bio_max_size(struct bio *bio) { sector_t max_sectors = blk_queue_get_max_sectors(bio->bi_disk->queue, bio_op(bio)); return max_sectors << SECTOR_SHIFT; } Note that this is not super efficient as a BIO maximum size depends on the BIO offset too (its start sector). So writing something similar to blk_rq_get_max_sectors() would probably be better. > Current is simple patch for defa
Re: Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
>On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: >>> On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: From: "Changheun Lee" bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address is continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. bio max size should be limited as a proper size. >>> >>> But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later >>> automatic bio >>> split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared to >>> having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized and >>> will >>> likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). >>> >>> Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this patch >>> applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and too >>> small >>> considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. >>> >> >> When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB >> is merged into a bio structure. >> And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. >> It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. >> If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about >> 100us by bio_full operation. > >bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while the >small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely explain >the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will issue ALL >requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB bio case >will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total latency >difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to be >compared here. > >Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? > 32MB total latency is about 19ms including merge time without this patch. But with this patch, total latency is about 17ms including merge time too. Actually 32MB read time from device is same - about 16.7ms - in driver layer. No need to hold more I/O than max_sectors_kb during bio merge. My device is UFS. and max_sectors_kb is 1MB, queue depth is 32. >> It's not large delay and can't be observed with low speed device. >> But it's needed to reduce merge delay for high speed device. >> I improved 512MB sequential read performance from 1900MB/s to 2000MB/s >> with this patch on android platform. >> As you said, 1MB might be small for some device. >> But method is needed to re-size, or select the bio max size. > >At the very least, I think that such limit should not be arbitrary as your >patch >proposes but rely on the device characteristics (e.g. >max_hw_sectors_kb/max_sectors_kb and queue depth). > I agree with your opinion, I thought same as your idea. For that, deep research is needed, proper timing to set and bio structure modification, etc ... Current is simple patch for default bio max size. Before applying of multipage bvec, bio max size was 1MB in kernel 4.x by BIO_MAX_PAGES. So I think 1MB bio max size is reasonable as a default. >> >>> Signed-off-by: Changheun Lee --- block/bio.c | 2 +- include/linux/bio.h | 3 ++- 2 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/block/bio.c b/block/bio.c index 1f2cc1fbe283..dbe14d675f28 100644 --- a/block/bio.c +++ b/block/bio.c @@ -877,7 +877,7 @@ bool __bio_try_merge_page(struct bio *bio, struct page *page, struct bio_vec *bv = &bio->bi_io_vec[bio->bi_vcnt - 1]; if (page_is_mergeable(bv, page, len, off, same_page)) { - if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > UINT_MAX - len) { + if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) { *same_page = false; return false; } diff --git a/include/linux/bio.h b/include/linux/bio.h index 1edda614f7ce..0f49b354b1f6 100644 --- a/include/linux/bio.h +++ b/include/linux/bio.h @@ -20,6 +20,7 @@ #endif #define BIO_MAX_PAGES 256 +#define BIO_MAX_SIZE (BIO_MAX_PAGES * PAGE_SIZE) #define bio_prio(bio) (bio)->bi_ioprio #define bio_set_prio(bio, prio) ((bio)->bi_ioprio = prio) @@ -113,7 +114,7 @@ static inline bool bio_full(struct bio *bio, unsigned len) if (bio->bi_vcnt >= bio->bi_max_vecs) return true; - if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > UINT_MAX - len) + if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) return true; return false; >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Damien Le Moal >>> Western Digital Research >> > > >-- >Damien Le Moal >Western Digital
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On 2021/01/12 21:14, Changheun Lee wrote: >> On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: >>> From: "Changheun Lee" >>> >>> bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. >>> but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. >>> in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - >>> all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address is >>> continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. >>> bio max size should be limited as a proper size. >> >> But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later automatic >> bio >> split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared to >> having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized and >> will >> likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). >> >> Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this patch >> applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and too >> small >> considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. >> > > When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB > is merged into a bio structure. > And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. > It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. > If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about > 100us by bio_full operation. bio_submit() will split the large BIO case into multiple requests while the small BIO case will likely result one or two requests only. That likely explain the time difference here. However, for the large case, the 2ms will issue ALL requests needed for processing the entire 32MB user IO while the 1MB bio case will need 32 different bio_submit() calls. So what is the actual total latency difference for the entire 32MB user IO ? That is I think what needs to be compared here. Also, what is your device max_sectors_kb and max queue depth ? > It's not large delay and can't be observed with low speed device. > But it's needed to reduce merge delay for high speed device. > I improved 512MB sequential read performance from 1900MB/s to 2000MB/s > with this patch on android platform. > As you said, 1MB might be small for some device. > But method is needed to re-size, or select the bio max size. At the very least, I think that such limit should not be arbitrary as your patch proposes but rely on the device characteristics (e.g. max_hw_sectors_kb/max_sectors_kb and queue depth). > >> >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Changheun Lee >>> --- >>> block/bio.c | 2 +- >>> include/linux/bio.h | 3 ++- >>> 2 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >>> >>> diff --git a/block/bio.c b/block/bio.c >>> index 1f2cc1fbe283..dbe14d675f28 100644 >>> --- a/block/bio.c >>> +++ b/block/bio.c >>> @@ -877,7 +877,7 @@ bool __bio_try_merge_page(struct bio *bio, struct page >>> *page, >>> struct bio_vec *bv = &bio->bi_io_vec[bio->bi_vcnt - 1]; >>> >>> if (page_is_mergeable(bv, page, len, off, same_page)) { >>> - if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > UINT_MAX - len) { >>> + if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) { >>> *same_page = false; >>> return false; >>> } >>> diff --git a/include/linux/bio.h b/include/linux/bio.h >>> index 1edda614f7ce..0f49b354b1f6 100644 >>> --- a/include/linux/bio.h >>> +++ b/include/linux/bio.h >>> @@ -20,6 +20,7 @@ >>> #endif >>> >>> #define BIO_MAX_PAGES 256 >>> +#define BIO_MAX_SIZE (BIO_MAX_PAGES * PAGE_SIZE) >>> >>> #define bio_prio(bio) (bio)->bi_ioprio >>> #define bio_set_prio(bio, prio)((bio)->bi_ioprio = prio) >>> @@ -113,7 +114,7 @@ static inline bool bio_full(struct bio *bio, unsigned >>> len) >>> if (bio->bi_vcnt >= bio->bi_max_vecs) >>> return true; >>> >>> - if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > UINT_MAX - len) >>> + if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) >>> return true; >>> >>> return false; >>> >> >> >> -- >> Damien Le Moal >> Western Digital Research > -- Damien Le Moal Western Digital Research
Re: Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
>On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: >> From: "Changheun Lee" >> >> bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. >> but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. >> in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - >> all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address is >> continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. >> bio max size should be limited as a proper size. > >But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later automatic >bio >split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared to >having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized and will >likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). > >Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this patch >applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and too >small >considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. > When I tested 32MB chunk read with O_DIRECT in android, all pages of 32MB is merged into a bio structure. And elapsed time to merge complete was about 2ms. It means first bio-submit is after 2ms. If bio size is limited with 1MB with this patch, first bio-submit is about 100us by bio_full operation. It's not large delay and can't be observed with low speed device. But it's needed to reduce merge delay for high speed device. I improved 512MB sequential read performance from 1900MB/s to 2000MB/s with this patch on android platform. As you said, 1MB might be small for some device. But method is needed to re-size, or select the bio max size. > >> >> Signed-off-by: Changheun Lee >> --- >> block/bio.c | 2 +- >> include/linux/bio.h | 3 ++- >> 2 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >> >> diff --git a/block/bio.c b/block/bio.c >> index 1f2cc1fbe283..dbe14d675f28 100644 >> --- a/block/bio.c >> +++ b/block/bio.c >> @@ -877,7 +877,7 @@ bool __bio_try_merge_page(struct bio *bio, struct page >> *page, >> struct bio_vec *bv = &bio->bi_io_vec[bio->bi_vcnt - 1]; >> >> if (page_is_mergeable(bv, page, len, off, same_page)) { >> -if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > UINT_MAX - len) { >> +if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) { >> *same_page = false; >> return false; >> } >> diff --git a/include/linux/bio.h b/include/linux/bio.h >> index 1edda614f7ce..0f49b354b1f6 100644 >> --- a/include/linux/bio.h >> +++ b/include/linux/bio.h >> @@ -20,6 +20,7 @@ >> #endif >> >> #define BIO_MAX_PAGES 256 >> +#define BIO_MAX_SIZE(BIO_MAX_PAGES * PAGE_SIZE) >> >> #define bio_prio(bio) (bio)->bi_ioprio >> #define bio_set_prio(bio, prio) ((bio)->bi_ioprio = prio) >> @@ -113,7 +114,7 @@ static inline bool bio_full(struct bio *bio, unsigned >> len) >> if (bio->bi_vcnt >= bio->bi_max_vecs) >> return true; >> >> -if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > UINT_MAX - len) >> +if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) >> return true; >> >> return false; >> > > >-- >Damien Le Moal >Western Digital Research
Re: [PATCH] bio: limit bio max size.
On 2021/01/12 17:52, Changheun Lee wrote: > From: "Changheun Lee" > > bio size can grow up to 4GB when muli-page bvec is enabled. > but sometimes it would lead to inefficient behaviors. > in case of large chunk direct I/O, - 64MB chunk read in user space - > all pages for 64MB would be merged to a bio structure if memory address is > continued phsycally. it makes some delay to submit until merge complete. > bio max size should be limited as a proper size. But merging physically contiguous pages into the same bvec + later automatic bio split on submit should give you better throughput for large IOs compared to having to issue a bio chain of smaller BIOs that are arbitrarily sized and will likely need splitting anyway (because of DMA boundaries etc). Do you have a specific case where you see higher performance with this patch applied ? On Intel, BIO_MAX_SIZE would be 1MB... That is arbitrary and too small considering that many hardware can execute larger IOs than that. > > Signed-off-by: Changheun Lee > --- > block/bio.c | 2 +- > include/linux/bio.h | 3 ++- > 2 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/block/bio.c b/block/bio.c > index 1f2cc1fbe283..dbe14d675f28 100644 > --- a/block/bio.c > +++ b/block/bio.c > @@ -877,7 +877,7 @@ bool __bio_try_merge_page(struct bio *bio, struct page > *page, > struct bio_vec *bv = &bio->bi_io_vec[bio->bi_vcnt - 1]; > > if (page_is_mergeable(bv, page, len, off, same_page)) { > - if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > UINT_MAX - len) { > + if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) { > *same_page = false; > return false; > } > diff --git a/include/linux/bio.h b/include/linux/bio.h > index 1edda614f7ce..0f49b354b1f6 100644 > --- a/include/linux/bio.h > +++ b/include/linux/bio.h > @@ -20,6 +20,7 @@ > #endif > > #define BIO_MAX_PAGES256 > +#define BIO_MAX_SIZE (BIO_MAX_PAGES * PAGE_SIZE) > > #define bio_prio(bio)(bio)->bi_ioprio > #define bio_set_prio(bio, prio) ((bio)->bi_ioprio = prio) > @@ -113,7 +114,7 @@ static inline bool bio_full(struct bio *bio, unsigned len) > if (bio->bi_vcnt >= bio->bi_max_vecs) > return true; > > - if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > UINT_MAX - len) > + if (bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE - len) > return true; > > return false; > -- Damien Le Moal Western Digital Research