Re: [patch 6/12] hold atomic kmaps across generic_file_read

From: Andrew Morton (akpm@zip.com.au)
Date: Sun Aug 11 2002 - 05:28:28 EST


Simon Kirby wrote:
>
> ...
> What's happening with my MP3 streaming is:
>
> 1. read(4k) gets data after a delay. xmms starts playing.
> 2. read(4k) gets some more data, right way, because readahead worked.
> xmms continues.
> ...
> 3. read(4k) blocks for a long time while readahead starts up again and
> reads a huge block of data. read() then returns the 4k. meanwhile,
> xmms has underrun. xmms starts again.
> 4. goto 2.
>
> It's really easy to see this behavior with the xmms-crossfade plugin and
> a large buffer with "buffer debugging" display on.

I happen to have a little test app for this stuff:
http://www.zip.com.au/~akpm/linux/stream.tar.gz

You can use it to slowly read or write a file.

        ./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 23 1000

will read 1000k from floppy at 23k per second. It's a bit
useless at those rates on 2.4 because of the coarse timer
resolution. But in 1000Hz 2.5 it works a treat.

./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 20 1000 0.00s user 0.01s system 0% cpu 51.896 total
./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 21 1000 0.00s user 0.02s system 0% cpu 49.825 total
./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 22 1000 0.00s user 0.02s system 0% cpu 47.843 total
./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 23 1000 0.00s user 0.01s system 0% cpu 45.853 total
./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 24 1000 0.01s user 0.02s system 0% cpu 44.077 total
./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 25 1000 0.00s user 0.02s system 0% cpu 42.307 total
./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 26 1000 0.00s user 0.01s system 0% cpu 41.305 total
./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 27 1000 0.00s user 0.02s system 0% cpu 40.493 total
./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 28 1000 0.01s user 0.02s system 0% cpu 39.122 total
./stream -i /dev/fd0h1440 29 1000 0.00s user 0.01s system 0% cpu 39.118 total

What we see here is perfect readahead behaviour. The kernel is keeping the
read streaming ahead of the application's read cursor all the way out to the
point where the device is saturated. (The numbers are all off by three
seconds because of the initial spinup delay).

If you strace it, the reads are smooth on 2.4 and 2.5.

So it may be an NFS peculiarity. That's a bit hard for me to test over
100bT.
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu Aug 15 2002 - 22:00:24 EST