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authorJoe Thornber <ejt@redhat.com>2016-02-10 10:18:10 +0000
committerMike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>2016-03-10 17:12:08 -0500
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dm cache: make the 'mq' policy an alias for 'smq'
smq seems to be performing better than the old mq policy in all situations, as well as using a quarter of the memory. Make 'mq' an alias for 'smq' when choosing a cache policy. The tunables that were present for the old mq are faked, and have no effect. mq should be considered deprecated now. Signed-off-by: Joe Thornber <ejt@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/device-mapper')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/device-mapper/cache-policies.txt39
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 37 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/device-mapper/cache-policies.txt b/Documentation/device-mapper/cache-policies.txt
index d9246a32e673..e5062ad18717 100644
--- a/Documentation/device-mapper/cache-policies.txt
+++ b/Documentation/device-mapper/cache-policies.txt
@@ -28,51 +28,16 @@ Overview of supplied cache replacement policies
multiqueue (mq)
---------------
-This policy has been deprecated in favor of the smq policy (see below).
+This policy is now an alias for smq (see below).
-The multiqueue policy has three sets of 16 queues: one set for entries
-waiting for the cache and another two for those in the cache (a set for
-clean entries and a set for dirty entries).
+The following tunables are accepted, but have no effect:
-Cache entries in the queues are aged based on logical time. Entry into
-the cache is based on variable thresholds and queue selection is based
-on hit count on entry. The policy aims to take different cache miss
-costs into account and to adjust to varying load patterns automatically.
-
-Message and constructor argument pairs are:
'sequential_threshold <#nr_sequential_ios>'
'random_threshold <#nr_random_ios>'
'read_promote_adjustment <value>'
'write_promote_adjustment <value>'
'discard_promote_adjustment <value>'
-The sequential threshold indicates the number of contiguous I/Os
-required before a stream is treated as sequential. Once a stream is
-considered sequential it will bypass the cache. The random threshold
-is the number of intervening non-contiguous I/Os that must be seen
-before the stream is treated as random again.
-
-The sequential and random thresholds default to 512 and 4 respectively.
-
-Large, sequential I/Os are probably better left on the origin device
-since spindles tend to have good sequential I/O bandwidth. The
-io_tracker counts contiguous I/Os to try to spot when the I/O is in one
-of these sequential modes. But there are use-cases for wanting to
-promote sequential blocks to the cache (e.g. fast application startup).
-If sequential threshold is set to 0 the sequential I/O detection is
-disabled and sequential I/O will no longer implicitly bypass the cache.
-Setting the random threshold to 0 does _not_ disable the random I/O
-stream detection.
-
-Internally the mq policy determines a promotion threshold. If the hit
-count of a block not in the cache goes above this threshold it gets
-promoted to the cache. The read, write and discard promote adjustment
-tunables allow you to tweak the promotion threshold by adding a small
-value based on the io type. They default to 4, 8 and 1 respectively.
-If you're trying to quickly warm a new cache device you may wish to
-reduce these to encourage promotion. Remember to switch them back to
-their defaults after the cache fills though.
-
Stochastic multiqueue (smq)
---------------------------