Re: [PATCH] iosched: Add i10 I/O Scheduler

From: Sagi Grimberg
Date: Fri Nov 13 2020 - 15:58:15 EST



blk-mq actually has built-in batching(or sort of) mechanism, which is enabled
if the hw queue is busy(hctx->dispatch_busy is > 0). We use EWMA to compute
hctx->dispatch_busy, and it is adaptive, even though the implementation is quite
coarse. But there should be much space to improve, IMO.

You are correct, however nvme-tcp should be getting to dispatch_busy > 0
IIUC.

It is reported that this way improves SQ high-end SCSI SSD very much[1],
and MMC performance gets improved too[2].

[1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-block/3cc3e03901dc1a63ef32e036182521af@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
[2] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-block/CADBw62o9eTQDJ9RvNgEqSpXmg6Xcq=2TxH0Hfxhp29uF2W=TXA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/

Yes, the guys paid attention to the MMC related improvements that you
made.

The i10 I/O scheduler builds upon recent work on [6]. We have tested the i10 I/O
scheduler with nvme-tcp optimizaitons [2,3] and batching dispatch [4], varying number
of cores, varying read/write ratios, and varying request sizes, and with NVMe SSD and
RAM block device. For NVMe SSDs, the i10 I/O scheduler achieves ~60% improvements in
terms of IOPS per core over "noop" I/O scheduler. These results are available at [5],
and many additional results are presented in [6].

In case of none scheduler, basically nvme driver won't provide any queue busy
feedback, so the built-in batching dispatch doesn't work simply.

Exactly.

kyber scheduler uses io latency feedback to throttle and build io batch,
can you compare i10 with kyber on nvme/nvme-tcp?

I assume it should be simple to get, I'll let Rachit/Jaehyun comment.

While other schedulers may also batch I/O (e.g., mq-deadline), the optimization target
in the i10 I/O scheduler is throughput maximization. Hence there is no latency target
nor a need for a global tracking context, so a new scheduler is needed rather than
to build this functionality to an existing scheduler.

We currently use fixed default values as batching thresholds (e.g., 16 for #requests,
64KB for #bytes, and 50us for timeout). These default values are based on sensitivity
tests in [6]. For our future work, we plan to support adaptive batching according to

Frankly speaking, hardcode 16 #rquests or 64KB may not work everywhere,
and product environment could be much complicated than your sensitivity
tests. If possible, please start with adaptive batching.

That was my feedback as well for sure. But given that this is a
scheduler one would opt-in to anyway, that won't be a must-have
initially. I'm not sure if the guys made progress with this yet, I'll
let them comment.