Re: Performance regression in IO scheduler still there

From: Jan Kara
Date: Mon Nov 16 2009 - 05:47:55 EST


On Thu 12-11-09 15:44:02, Jeff Moyer wrote:
> Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> writes:
>
> > On Wed 11-11-09 12:43:30, Jeff Moyer wrote:
> >> Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> writes:
> >>
> >> > Sadly, I don't see the improvement you can see :(. The numbers are the
> >> > same regardless low_latency set to 0:
> >> > 2.6.32-rc5 low_latency = 0:
> >> > 37.39 36.43 36.51 -> 36.776667 0.434920
> >> > But my testing environment is a plain SATA drive so that probably
> >> > explains the difference...
> >>
> >> I just retested (10 runs for each kernel) on a SATA disk with no NCQ
> >> support and I could not see a difference. I'll try to dig up a disk
> >> that support NCQ. Is that what you're using for testing?
> > I don't think I am. How do I find out?
>
> Good question. ;-) I grep for NCQ in dmesg output and make sure it's
> greater than 0/32. There may be a better way, though.
Message in the logs:
ata1: SATA link up 1.5 Gbps (SStatus 113 SControl 300)
ata1.00: ATA-8: Hitachi HTS722016K9SA00, DCDOC54P, max UDMA/133
ata1.00: 312581808 sectors, multi 16: LBA48 NCQ (depth 0/32)
ata1.00: configured for UDMA/133
So apparently no NCQ. /sys/block/sda/device/queue_depth shows 1 but I
guess that's just it's way of saying "no NCQ".

What I thought might make a difference why I'm seeing the drop and you
are not is size of RAM or number of CPUs vs the tiobench file size or
number of threads. I'm running on a machine with 2 GB of RAM, using 4 GB
filesize. The machine has 2 cores and I'm using 16 tiobench threads. I'm
now rerunning tests with various numbers of threads to see how big
difference it makes.

Honza

Honza
--
Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx>
SUSE Labs, CR
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