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author | Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com> | 2018-07-03 11:15:01 -0400 |
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committer | Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk> | 2018-07-09 09:07:54 -0600 |
commit | d70675121546c35feaceebf7ed9caed8716640f3 (patch) | |
tree | 66a4546af8921f4298d9d411c6f71f40c78a4807 /block/blk.h | |
parent | 67b42d0bf7a8fd1ec0cf1acdc9550e688d7c8578 (diff) | |
download | linux-d70675121546c35feaceebf7ed9caed8716640f3.tar.gz linux-d70675121546c35feaceebf7ed9caed8716640f3.tar.bz2 linux-d70675121546c35feaceebf7ed9caed8716640f3.zip |
block: introduce blk-iolatency io controller
Current IO controllers for the block layer are less than ideal for our
use case. The io.max controller is great at hard limiting, but it is
not work conserving. This patch introduces io.latency. You provide a
latency target for your group and we monitor the io in short windows to
make sure we are not exceeding those latency targets. This makes use of
the rq-qos infrastructure and works much like the wbt stuff. There are
a few differences from wbt
- It's bio based, so the latency covers the whole block layer in addition to
the actual io.
- We will throttle all IO types that comes in here if we need to.
- We use the mean latency over the 100ms window. This is because writes can
be particularly fast, which could give us a false sense of the impact of
other workloads on our protected workload.
- By default there's no throttling, we set the queue_depth to INT_MAX so that
we can have as many outstanding bio's as we're allowed to. Only at
throttle time do we pay attention to the actual queue depth.
- We backcharge cgroups for root cg issued IO and induce artificial
delays in order to deal with cases like metadata only or swap heavy
workloads.
In testing this has worked out relatively well. Protected workloads
will throttle noisy workloads down to 1 io at time if they are doing
normal IO on their own, or induce up to a 1 second delay per syscall if
they are doing a lot of root issued IO (metadata/swap IO).
Our testing has revolved mostly around our production web servers where
we have hhvm (the web server application) in a protected group and
everything else in another group. We see slightly higher requests per
second (RPS) on the test tier vs the control tier, and much more stable
RPS across all machines in the test tier vs the control tier.
Another test we run is a slow memory allocator in the unprotected group.
Before this would eventually push us into swap and cause the whole box
to die and not recover at all. With these patches we see slight RPS
drops (usually 10-15%) before the memory consumer is properly killed and
things recover within seconds.
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Acked-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
Diffstat (limited to 'block/blk.h')
-rw-r--r-- | block/blk.h | 6 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/block/blk.h b/block/blk.h index 8d23aea96ce9..69b14cd2bb22 100644 --- a/block/blk.h +++ b/block/blk.h @@ -412,4 +412,10 @@ static inline void blk_queue_bounce(struct request_queue *q, struct bio **bio) extern void blk_drain_queue(struct request_queue *q); +#ifdef CONFIG_BLK_CGROUP_IOLATENCY +extern int blk_iolatency_init(struct request_queue *q); +#else +static inline int blk_iolatency_init(struct request_queue *q) { return 0; } +#endif + #endif /* BLK_INTERNAL_H */ |