On 16.08.2013 04:12, Adrian Chadd wrote:
Cool!
I assume you've run this with full witness debugging enabled, to catch
lock ordering issues?
Of course! I've endless times switched between debug and normal builds
to test both correctness and performance after each change. But more
external tests are welcome.
This is great. I look forward to per-CPU, pinned, completion threads
that I can do interesting things with (like schedule aio-sendfile
completions..)
On 15 August 2013 14:40, Alexander Motin <m...@freebsd.org
<mailto:m...@freebsd.org>> wrote:
Hi.
Last weeks I've made substantial progress on my CAM locking work. In
fact, at this moment I think I've tied all loose ends good enough to
consider the new design viable and implementation worth further
testing and bug fixing. So I would like to ask for review of my work
from everybody who interested in CAM internals.
In short, my idea was to split single per-SIM lock, that creates
huge congestion under high IOPS, into several smaller ones. So
design I've finally chosen includes such locks:
1) New per-device (per-LUN) locks to protect state of the devices
and respective periphs. In most cases peripheral drivers just use
that lock instead of SIM lock used before, so code modification is
minimal and straightforward.
2) New per-target lock to protect list of LUNs fetched from the
device.
3) Old single per-SIM lock to protect SIM driver internals, but
only that. No parts of CAM itself use that lock. Keeping it for SIMs
allows to keep API and hopefully ABI compatibility. Reducing its
scope allows to reduce congestion.
4) New per-SIM lock to protect SIM and device command queues. That
allows execute queued commands from any context unrelated to other
locks. Also this lock serializes accesses to sim_action() method for
the most of commands, this allows to mostly avoid busy spilling on
SIM lock collision.
5) New per-bus locks to protect target, device and periphs
reference counters. It allows to create and destroy paths unrelated
to other locks in any possible context.
Numbers above also define supposed lock ordering: while holding
per-device lock 1) is allowed to request SIM lock 3), but not
backward. Cases where opposite is required (command completions and
async events) are handled via queuing events via several completion
threads. The rest of locks are self-contained and does not really
suppose cascading.
All these changes combined with GEOM direct dispatch (it will be
next separate project) allow to double system performance in disk
I/O microbenchmarks, comparing to present head, same as it was
announced on 2013-05 DevSummit:
http://people.freebsd.org/~__mav/camlock.pdf
<http://people.freebsd.org/~mav/camlock.pdf> . Tests without GEOM
changes also show performance improvement, but limited by heavy
bottleneck at the GEOM g_up/g_down threads at the level of 5-20%.
Project sources could be found at SVN projects/camlock branch:
http://svnweb.freebsd.org/__base/projects/camlock/
<http://svnweb.freebsd.org/base/projects/camlock/> . Many early
changes from that branch are already integrated to head, so to
simplify review the rest patches for changes before r254059 were
manually remade and could be found here:
http://people.freebsd.org/~__mav/camlock_patches/
<http://people.freebsd.org/~mav/camlock_patches/> .
These changes do not require controller driver modifications,
keeping KPIs and hopefully KBIs intact, but create base for later
work to use multiqueue capabilities of new controllers.
This work is sponsored by iXsystems, Inc.
--
Alexander Motin
_______________________________________________
freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hackers-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"