Mel Gorman <mgor...@suse.de> writes:

> The existing CFQ default target_latency results in very poor performance
> for larger numbers of threads doing sequential reads.  While this can be
> easily described as a tuning problem for users, it is one that is tricky
> to detect. This patch the default on the assumption that people with access
> to expensive fast storage also know how to tune their IO scheduler.
>
> The following is from tiobench run on a mid-range desktop with a single
> spinning disk.
>
>                                       3.16.0-rc1            3.16.0-rc1        
>          3.0.0
>                                          vanilla          cfq600              
>        vanilla
> Mean   SeqRead-MB/sec-1         121.88 (  0.00%)      121.60 ( -0.23%)      
> 134.59 ( 10.42%)
> Mean   SeqRead-MB/sec-2         101.99 (  0.00%)      102.35 (  0.36%)      
> 122.59 ( 20.20%)
> Mean   SeqRead-MB/sec-4          97.42 (  0.00%)       99.71 (  2.35%)      
> 114.78 ( 17.82%)
> Mean   SeqRead-MB/sec-8          83.39 (  0.00%)       90.39 (  8.39%)      
> 100.14 ( 20.09%)
> Mean   SeqRead-MB/sec-16         68.90 (  0.00%)       77.29 ( 12.18%)       
> 81.64 ( 18.50%)

Did you test any workloads other than this?  Also, what normal workload
has 8 or more threads doing sequential reads?  (That's an honest
question.)

Cheers,
Jeff
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