Hi David,
David Chinner wrote:
>> Block I/O performance degradation was very serious.
>
> That was unexpected. :/
>
>> Now, I am trying to ease the degradation.
>> Do you have any idea for resolving the degradation?
>
> Did you see a degradation with your original fix? I suspect
> not.
No, I don't see any degradation with my patch.
But my patch is not perfect.
Because xfs_log_force() don't guarantee to write the log in run time.
>
> Can you test this patch (on top of the last patch I sent)
> and see if it fixes the degradation?
I tried your patch, but it seems degradation was not resolved.
procs -----------memory---------- ---swap-- -----io---- -system-- -----cpu------
r b swpd free buff cache si so bi bo in cs us sy id wa st
1 0 0 15585968 21856 151696 0 0 73 273 258 298 1 3 94 2
0
0 0 0 15585968 21856 151840 0 0 0 2270 2156 2693 0 2 98 0
0
1 0 0 15585744 21856 151920 0 0 0 2362 2161 2797 0 2 98 0
0
0 0 0 15585408 21856 151824 0 0 0 2291 2156 2732 0 2 98 0
0
0 0 0 15584848 21856 152288 0 0 0 2300 2156 2765 0 2 98 0
0
2 0 0 15584848 21856 151952 0 0 0 2346 2161 2809 0 2 98 0
0
Ummmm, I think schedule() was called many times by wait_event().
Best Regards,
--
Takenori Nagano, NEC
t-nagano@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
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