Re: -rt dbench scalabiltiy issue

From: john stultz
Date: Fri Oct 16 2009 - 21:04:03 EST


On Fri, 2009-10-16 at 17:45 -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 16, 2009 at 01:05:19PM -0700, john stultz wrote:
> > See http://lwn.net/Articles/354690/ for a bit of background here.
> >
> > I've been looking at scalability regressions in the -rt kernel. One easy
> > place to see regressions is with the dbench benchmark. While dbench can
> > be painfully noisy from run to run, it does clearly show some severe
> > regressions with -rt.
> >
> > There's a chart in the article above that illustrates this, but here's
> > some specific numbers on an 8-way box running dbench-3.04 as follows:
> >
> > ./dbench 8 -t 10 -D . -c client.txt 2>&1
> >
> > I ran both on an ext3 disk and a ramfs mounted directory.
> >
> > (Again, the numbers are VERY rough due to the run-to-run variance seen)
> >
> > ext3 ramfs
> > 2.6.32-rc3: ~1800 MB/sec ~1600 MB/sec
> > 2.6.31.2-rt13: ~300 MB/sec ~66 MB/sec
> >
> > Ouch. Similar to the charts in the LWN article.
> >
> > Dino pointed out that using lockstat with -rt, we can see the
> > dcache_lock is fairly hot with the -rt kernel. One of the issues with
> > the -rt tree is that the change from spinlocks to sleeping-spinlocks
> > doesn't effect the un-contended case very much, but when there is
> > contention on the lock, the overhead is much worse then with vanilla.
> >
> > And as noted at the realtime mini-conf, Ingo saw this dcache_lock
> > bottleneck as well and suggested trying Nick Piggin's dcache_lock
> > removal patches.
> >
> > So over the last week, I've ported Nick's fs-scale patches to -rt.
> >
> > Specifically the tarball found here:
> > ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/npiggin/patches/fs-scale/06102009.tar.gz
> >
> >
> > Due to the 2.6.32 2.6.31-rt split, the port wasn't exactly straight
> > forward, but I believe I managed to do a decent job. Once I had the
> > patchset applied, building and booted, I eagerly ran dbench to see the
> > new results, aaaaaand.....
> >
> > ext3 ramfs
> > 2.6.31.2-rt13-nick: ~80 MB/sec ~126 MB/sec
> >
> >
> > So yea, mixed bag there. The ramfs got a little bit better but not that
> > much, and the ext3 numbers regressed further.
>
> OK, I will ask the stupid question... What happens if you run on ext2?

Yep. That was next on my list. Basically its faster, but the regressions
are similar % wise with each patchset.

ext3 ext2
2.6.32-rc3: ~1800 MB/sec ~2900 MB/sec
2.6.31.2-rt13: ~300 MB/sec ~600 MB/sec
2.6.31.2-rt13-nick: ~80 MB/sec ~130 MB/sec

thanks
-john

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