Mark and all, Ceph IOPS performance has definitely improved with Giant.
With this version: ceph version 0.84-940-g3215c52 
(3215c520e1306f50d0094b5646636c02456c9df4) on Debian 7.6 with Kernel 3.14-0.

I got 6340 IOPS on a single OSD SSD. (journal and data on the same partition).
So basically twice the amount of IOPS that I was getting with Firefly.

Rand reads 4k went from 12431 to 10201, so I’m a bit disappointed here.

The SSD is still under-utilised:

Device:         rrqm/s   wrqm/s     r/s     w/s    rMB/s    wMB/s avgrq-sz 
avgqu-sz   await r_await w_await  svctm  %util
sdp1              0.00   540.37    0.00 5902.30     0.00    47.14    16.36     
0.87    0.15    0.00    0.15   0.07  40.15
sdp2              0.00     0.00    0.00 4454.67     0.00    49.16    22.60     
0.31    0.07    0.00    0.07   0.07  30.61

Thanks a ton for all your comments and assistance guys :).

One last question for Sage (or other that might know), what’s the status of the 
S2FS implementation? (or maybe we are waiting for S2FS to provide atomic 
transactions?)
I tried to run the OSD on f2fs however ceph-osd mkfs got stuck on a xattr test:

fremovexattr(10, "user.test@5848273")   = 0

On 01 Sep 2014, at 11:13, Sebastien Han <sebastien....@enovance.com> wrote:

> Mark, thanks a lot for experimenting this for me.
> I’m gonna try master soon and will tell you how much I can get. 
> 
> It’s interesting to see that using 2 SSDs brings up more performance, even 
> both SSDs are under-utilized…
> They should be able to sustain both loads at the same time (journal and osd 
> data).
> 
> On 01 Sep 2014, at 09:51, Somnath Roy <somnath....@sandisk.com> wrote:
> 
>> As I said, 107K with IOs serving from memory, not hitting the disk..
>> 
>> From: Jian Zhang [mailto:amberzhan...@gmail.com] 
>> Sent: Sunday, August 31, 2014 8:54 PM
>> To: Somnath Roy
>> Cc: Haomai Wang; ceph-users@lists.ceph.com
>> Subject: Re: [ceph-users] [Single OSD performance on SSD] Can't go over 3, 
>> 2K IOPS
>> 
>> Somnath,
>> on the small workload performance, 107k is higher than the theoretical IOPS 
>> of 520, any idea why? 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>>> Single client is ~14K iops, but scaling as number of clients increases. 10 
>>>> clients ~107K iops. ~25 cpu cores are used.
>> 
>> 
>> 2014-09-01 11:52 GMT+08:00 Jian Zhang <amberzhan...@gmail.com>:
>> Somnath,
>> on the small workload performance, 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 2014-08-29 14:37 GMT+08:00 Somnath Roy <somnath....@sandisk.com>:
>> 
>> Thanks Haomai !
>> 
>> Here is some of the data from my setup.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> 
>> Set up:
>> 
>> --------
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 32 core cpu with HT enabled, 128 GB RAM, one SSD (both journal and data) -> 
>> one OSD. 5 client m/c with 12 core cpu and each running two instances of 
>> ceph_smalliobench (10 clients total). Network is 10GbE.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Workload:
>> 
>> -------------
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Small workload – 20K objects with 4K size and io_size is also 4K RR. The 
>> intent is to serve the ios from memory so that it can uncover the 
>> performance problems within single OSD.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Results from Firefly:
>> 
>> --------------------------
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Single client throughput is ~14K iops, but as the number of client increases 
>> the aggregated throughput is not increasing. 10 clients ~15K iops. ~9-10 cpu 
>> cores are used.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Result with latest master:
>> 
>> ------------------------------
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Single client is ~14K iops, but scaling as number of clients increases. 10 
>> clients ~107K iops. ~25 cpu cores are used.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> More realistic workload:
>> 
>> -----------------------------
>> 
>> Let’s see how it is performing while > 90% of the ios are served from disks
>> 
>> Setup:
>> 
>> -------
>> 
>> 40 cpu core server as a cluster node (single node cluster) with 64 GB RAM. 8 
>> SSDs -> 8 OSDs. One similar node for monitor and rgw. Another node for 
>> client running fio/vdbench. 4 rbds are configured with ‘noshare’ option. 40 
>> GbE network
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Workload:
>> 
>> ------------
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 8 SSDs are populated , so, 8 * 800GB = ~6.4 TB of data.  Io_size = 4K RR.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Results from Firefly:
>> 
>> ------------------------
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Aggregated output while 4 rbd clients stressing the cluster in parallel is 
>> ~20-25K IOPS , cpu cores used ~8-10 cores (may be less can’t remember 
>> precisely)
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Results from latest master:
>> 
>> --------------------------------
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Aggregated output while 4 rbd clients stressing the cluster in parallel is 
>> ~120K IOPS , cpu is 7% idle i.e  ~37-38 cpu cores.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Hope this helps.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Thanks & Regards
>> 
>> Somnath
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Haomai Wang [mailto:haomaiw...@gmail.com] 
>> Sent: Thursday, August 28, 2014 8:01 PM
>> To: Somnath Roy
>> Cc: Andrey Korolyov; ceph-users@lists.ceph.com
>> Subject: Re: [ceph-users] [Single OSD performance on SSD] Can't go over 3, 
>> 2K IOPS
>> 
>> 
>> Hi Roy,
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> I already scan your merged codes about "fdcache" and "optimizing for 
>> lfn_find/lfn_open", could you give some performance improvement data about 
>> it? I fully agree with your orientation, do you have any update about it?
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> As for messenger level, I have some very early works on 
>> it(https://github.com/yuyuyu101/ceph/tree/msg-event), it contains a new 
>> messenger implementation which support different event mechanism.
>> 
>> It looks like at least one more week to make it work.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On Fri, Aug 29, 2014 at 5:48 AM, Somnath Roy <somnath....@sandisk.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> Yes, what I saw the messenger level bottleneck is still huge !
>> 
>>> Hopefully RDMA messenger will resolve that and the performance gain will be 
>>> significant for Read (on SSDs). For write we need to uncover the OSD 
>>> bottlenecks first to take advantage of the improved upstream.
>> 
>>> What I experienced that till you remove the very last bottleneck the 
>>> performance improvement will not be visible and that could be confusing 
>>> because you might think that the upstream improvement you did is not valid 
>>> (which is not).
>> 
>>> 
>> 
>>> Thanks & Regards
>> 
>>> Somnath
>> 
>>> -----Original Message-----
>> 
>>> From: Andrey Korolyov [mailto:and...@xdel.ru]
>> 
>>> Sent: Thursday, August 28, 2014 12:57 PM
>> 
>>> To: Somnath Roy
>> 
>>> Cc: David Moreau Simard; Mark Nelson; ceph-users@lists.ceph.com
>> 
>>> Subject: Re: [ceph-users] [Single OSD performance on SSD] Can't go
>> 
>>> over 3, 2K IOPS
>> 
>>> 
>> 
>>> On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 10:48 PM, Somnath Roy <somnath....@sandisk.com> 
>>> wrote:
>> 
>>>> Nope, this will not be back ported to Firefly I guess.
>> 
>>>> 
>> 
>>>> Thanks & Regards
>> 
>>>> Somnath
>> 
>>>> 
>> 
>>> 
>> 
>>> Thanks for sharing this, the first thing in thought when I looked at
>> 
>>> this thread, was your patches :)
>> 
>>> 
>> 
>>> If Giant will incorporate them, both the RDMA support and those should give 
>>> a huge performance boost for RDMA-enabled Ceph backnets.
>> 
>>> 
>> 
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>> 
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>> 
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>> 
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>> 
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>> 
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>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> --
>> 
>> Best Regards,
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Wheat
>> 
>> 
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> 
> 
> Cheers.
> –––– 
> Sébastien Han 
> Cloud Architect 
> 
> "Always give 100%. Unless you're giving blood."
> 
> Phone: +33 (0)1 49 70 99 72 
> Mail: sebastien....@enovance.com 
> Address : 11 bis, rue Roquépine - 75008 Paris
> Web : www.enovance.com - Twitter : @enovance 
> 
> _______________________________________________
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Cheers.
–––– 
Sébastien Han 
Cloud Architect 

"Always give 100%. Unless you're giving blood."

Phone: +33 (0)1 49 70 99 72 
Mail: sebastien....@enovance.com 
Address : 11 bis, rue Roquépine - 75008 Paris
Web : www.enovance.com - Twitter : @enovance 

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